RE: RE: RE: Re: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] Places You Can't Afford to Live

2013-10-18 Thread doctordumbass
Thanks for this, Xeno - I read it once, but then had to mow the lawn, so now I 
am back:
 

 Dr - 
 

 I think this is pretty much a compact way of saying what I was talking about. 
In a later post Share made a hazy remark about taking it seriously or not 
seriously. I am not sure that would work. I would interpret seriously as a 
steady focus on what one wants to accomplish, even though accomplishment is not 
a particularly good way to describe what happens. 
 

 Once awakening happens, one can relax a bit because now the goal is clearly 
experienced, one has to discover how stable the result is, and it usually does 
not take long before that is known, and the true challenge of living what one 
has experienced becomes more and more evident because you now know nothing is 
going to save your ass. Unless lucky enough to come clean all at once, what 
spreads out before one is the prospect of the ego's final dismantling which 
might turn out to be a much more protracted and unpleasant experience than one 
could ever imagine, and this is where some might balk and turn back. This is 
the point where having someone around who knows or at least information around 
about how this process unfolds which helps one from stumbling too much. 

 

 All well described. Yes, I found that other people nudged me along, as needed.

 

 This information did not seem to be available from TM teachers who drone on 
about getting checked etc., or talking about absolute and relative when none of 
that makes any practical sense anymore. Here one is really at that point where 
techniques do not work consistently or at all, mostly one has to pick one's way 
along and see what happens or does not happen. The main thing, if you 
experience a stumble, is not to turn back. It's OK to take a breather once in a 
while if it gets too intense. If lucky it might be easy. It certainly has not 
been for me, so I can only speak for people who have had some really rough 
moments. 

 

 Yes, I also went through the dismantling of everything, including the 
limitations of what the TM movement could offer me, beyond the checking, etc. 
Going back is really not possible - I assume you mean somehow reverting to 
previous values - especially with continuation of the TM technique, because the 
shape of the container [of consciousness] keeps changing. 

 

 While it seems like one is doing things, as unity consolidates, there really 
is not much choice in the matter. M's 'take it as it comes' is actually good 
advice here, but now it is applied to everything in one's life, not just a tiny 
mantra during a short meditation. 'Handling' a mantra in meditation is really a 
microcosm version, a small scale model version, of how one deals with settling 
into unity on a macroscopic scale. But now instead of the mantra disappearing, 
it's YOU; everything that makes you think you are unique and special is on the 
chopping block.
 

 Yes, the once limited identity becomes far more fluid, as unity is approached 
and integrated.

 

 As for Dark Nights of the Soul (assuming there is a soul) mentioned in later 
posts on this thread, for me, at any rate, was before awakening; everything 
just went dead for a long, long time. Strangely, massive releases following 
some years after awakening were not dark, even if miserable, as I knew what was 
happening, and I had enough stability to wait it out without seriously running 
from it (although at times the desire to act on 'this is not for me' certainly 
arose), and that paid big dividends in subsequent stability. 

 

 Yeah, the established silence within us, once we wake up, is an amazing 
buffer, able to bring us through a lot of turbulence.

 

 Delusional thinking and acting on that thinking can arise at any time; as time 
goes one, one gets more centred in deflecting it and letting it pass quickly; 
it's not an activity that is done as if one is an agent in command of one's 
life, it just becomes more and more automatic, as life as a whole, rather than 
some aspect of life acting on the rest of life settles into this mode. It is 
kind of strange really. 
 

 Yeah, moving towards Unity.

 

 Someone with Alzheimer's is present centred, they have no memory of the past, 
and cannot think of the future.
 

 Not my experience with them, that they are 'present centered' - Their mind is 
disordered, so that linear chains of thought cannot be formed. The relationship 
to current time and space is lost.

 

 As unity settles in, past and future seem to converge into the present - you 
still remember things from the past, and can plan, but the sense of time is 
crippled, one might say, in that past remembered events do not seem distant as 
a reminiscence, and planning for future happenings is very minimalist, because 
you don't know what is going to happen that might change, you plan and if 
something else happens you just switch course. Be my guest if you want to 
consult an astrologer. As far as I can see their predictions ar

Re: RE: Re: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] Places You Can't Afford to Live

2013-10-18 Thread Share Long
Xeno I also made an unhazy remark about taking it seriously in terms of action 
but not in terms of thinking about it. By which I meant just what you're 
talking about: continuing on no matter what!





On Friday, October 18, 2013 1:20 PM, "anartax...@yahoo.com" 
 wrote:
 
  
Share wrote:
Xeno, you say that people stop short of enlightenment because it seems that no 
progress is happening. And in the paragraph above that, you say that at some 
point the words have to go. And yet it is the words, or the knowledge and 
understanding that can help a person continue when all is flat and seemingly 
non progressive. Even Maharishi's analogy of going around an iceberg, seeming 
to go backwards has helped me continue. Am I a fool? Or am I persistent? Both? 
And does it even matter?

Dr Dumbass wrote:
The thing Xeno is talking about, is when all ideas, concepts, recited phrases, 
etc. go dry. No more juice or encouragement from them. The seeker feels shitty 
- end of story. This phase illustrates for the seeker, the futility of living 
in the future, where we want to get enlightened, or in the past, remembering a 
flashy spiritual experience. Even though the isolation one feels is the 
strongest, yet, it prepares us for a final surrender, a shift of identity, away 
from this isolated form. Whether, or not, a seeker decides to go through with 
the whole enchilada, is an exact reflection, of the degree to which a seeker 
takes spiritual liberation seriously.


Dr - 

I think this is pretty much a compact way of saying what I was talking about. 
In a later post Share made a hazy remark about taking it seriously or not 
seriously. I am not sure that would work. I would interpret seriously as a 
steady focus on what one wants to accomplish, even though accomplishment is not 
a particularly good way to describe what happens. 

Once awakening happens, one can relax a bit because now the goal is clearly 
experienced, one has to discover how stable the result is, and it usually does 
not take long before that is known, and the true challenge of living what one 
has experienced becomes more and more evident because you now know nothing is 
going to save your ass. Unless lucky enough to come clean all at once, what 
spreads out before one is the prospect of the ego's final dismantling which 
might turn out to be a much more protracted and unpleasant experience than one 
could ever imagine, and this is where some might balk and turn back. This is 
the point where having someone around who knows or at least information around 
about how this process unfolds which helps one from stumbling too much. 

This information did not seem to be available from TM teachers who drone on 
about getting checked etc., or talking about absolute and relative when none of 
that makes any practical sense anymore. Here one is really at that point where 
techniques do not work consistently or at all, mostly one has to pick one's way 
along and see what happens or does not happen. The main thing, if you 
experience a stumble, is not to turn back. It's OK to take a breather once in a 
while if it gets too intense. If lucky it might be easy. It certainly has not 
been for me, so I can only speak for people who have had some really rough 
moments. 

While it seems like one is doing things, as unity consolidates, there really is 
not much choice in the matter. M's 'take it as it comes' is actually good 
advice here, but now it is applied to everything in one's life, not just a tiny 
mantra during a short meditation. 'Handling' a mantra in meditation is really a 
microcosm version, a small scale model version, of how one deals with settling 
into unity on a macroscopic scale. But now instead of the mantra disappearing, 
it's YOU; everything that makes you think you are unique and special is on the 
chopping block.

As for Dark Nights of the Soul (assuming there is a soul) mentioned in later 
posts on this thread, for me, at any rate, was before awakening; everything 
just went dead for a long, long time. Strangely, massive releases following 
some years after awakening were not dark, even if miserable, as I knew what was 
happening, and I had enough stability to wait it out without seriously running 
from it (although at times the desire to act on 'this is not for me' certainly 
arose), and that paid big dividends in subsequent stability. 

Delusional thinking and acting on that thinking can arise at any time; as time 
goes one, one gets more centred in deflecting it and letting it pass quickly; 
it's not an activity that is done as if one is an agent in command of one's 
life, it just becomes more and more automatic, as life as a whole, rather than 
some aspect of life acting on the rest of life settles into this mode. It is 
kind of strange really. Someone with Alzheimer's is present centred, they have 
no memory of the past, and cannot think of the future. As unity settles in, 
past and future seem to converge into the present - you still 

RE: RE: Re: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] Places You Can't Afford to Live

2013-10-18 Thread anartaxius
Share wrote:
 Xeno, you say that people stop short of enlightenment because it seems that no 
progress is happening. And in the paragraph above that, you say that at some 
point the words have to go. And yet it is the words, or the knowledge and 
understanding that can help a person continue when all is flat and seemingly 
non progressive. Even Maharishi's analogy of going around an iceberg, seeming 
to go backwards has helped me continue. Am I a fool? Or am I persistent? Both? 
And does it even matter?
 

 Dr Dumbass wrote:
 The thing Xeno is talking about, is when all ideas, concepts, recited phrases, 
etc. go dry. No more juice or encouragement from them. The seeker feels shitty 
- end of story. This phase illustrates for the seeker, the futility of living 
in the future, where we want to get enlightened, or in the past, remembering a 
flashy spiritual experience. Even though the isolation one feels is the 
strongest, yet, it prepares us for a final surrender, a shift of identity, away 
from this isolated form. Whether, or not, a seeker decides to go through with 
the whole enchilada, is an exact reflection, of the degree to which a seeker 
takes spiritual liberation seriously.
 
 

 Dr - 
 

 I think this is pretty much a compact way of saying what I was talking about. 
In a later post Share made a hazy remark about taking it seriously or not 
seriously. I am not sure that would work. I would interpret seriously as a 
steady focus on what one wants to accomplish, even though accomplishment is not 
a particularly good way to describe what happens. 
 

 Once awakening happens, one can relax a bit because now the goal is clearly 
experienced, one has to discover how stable the result is, and it usually does 
not take long before that is known, and the true challenge of living what one 
has experienced becomes more and more evident because you now know nothing is 
going to save your ass. Unless lucky enough to come clean all at once, what 
spreads out before one is the prospect of the ego's final dismantling which 
might turn out to be a much more protracted and unpleasant experience than one 
could ever imagine, and this is where some might balk and turn back. This is 
the point where having someone around who knows or at least information around 
about how this process unfolds which helps one from stumbling too much. 
 

 This information did not seem to be available from TM teachers who drone on 
about getting checked etc., or talking about absolute and relative when none of 
that makes any practical sense anymore. Here one is really at that point where 
techniques do not work consistently or at all, mostly one has to pick one's way 
along and see what happens or does not happen. The main thing, if you 
experience a stumble, is not to turn back. It's OK to take a breather once in a 
while if it gets too intense. If lucky it might be easy. It certainly has not 
been for me, so I can only speak for people who have had some really rough 
moments. 
 

 While it seems like one is doing things, as unity consolidates, there really 
is not much choice in the matter. M's 'take it as it comes' is actually good 
advice here, but now it is applied to everything in one's life, not just a tiny 
mantra during a short meditation. 'Handling' a mantra in meditation is really a 
microcosm version, a small scale model version, of how one deals with settling 
into unity on a macroscopic scale. But now instead of the mantra disappearing, 
it's YOU; everything that makes you think you are unique and special is on the 
chopping block.
 

 As for Dark Nights of the Soul (assuming there is a soul) mentioned in later 
posts on this thread, for me, at any rate, was before awakening; everything 
just went dead for a long, long time. Strangely, massive releases following 
some years after awakening were not dark, even if miserable, as I knew what was 
happening, and I had enough stability to wait it out without seriously running 
from it (although at times the desire to act on 'this is not for me' certainly 
arose), and that paid big dividends in subsequent stability. 
 

 Delusional thinking and acting on that thinking can arise at any time; as time 
goes one, one gets more centred in deflecting it and letting it pass quickly; 
it's not an activity that is done as if one is an agent in command of one's 
life, it just becomes more and more automatic, as life as a whole, rather than 
some aspect of life acting on the rest of life settles into this mode. It is 
kind of strange really. Someone with Alzheimer's is present centred, they have 
no memory of the past, and cannot think of the future. As unity settles in, 
past and future seem to converge into the present - you still remember things 
from the past, and can plan, but the sense of time is crippled, one might say, 
in that past remembered events do not seem distant as a reminiscence, and 
planning for future happenings is very minimalist, because you don't know what 

RE: Re: Re: Re: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] Places You Can't Afford to Live

2013-10-16 Thread doctordumbass
Got it - yeah, too much self-auditing can drive a person crazy. Thanks for 
clearing that up.
  
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:

 
 Doc, I take it seriously on the level of action, but not on the level of 
thinking about it (-:

 
 
 On Wednesday, October 16, 2013 12:44 PM, "doctordumbass@..." 
 wrote:
 
"Wonderful, Doc, I agree. Except I don't think we have to take it seriously 
or unseriously or any certain way at all. Life is flowing along however we take 
it."
 

 Hey Share, this response of yours caught my eye, again, because it is a good 
example of usurping Brahman. "Life is flowing along however we take it", is an 
intellectual understanding, but it is not the experience of the seeker. So, to 
say that the intention for spiritual liberation needn't be taken seriously by 
the seeker, is basically bullshit. It had better be taken seriously by the 
seeker, or else nothing permanent happens. No big deal, if nothing happens, but 
it is simply a reflection of the seeker not being ready for a complete 
surrender, not being committed to it.

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:

 Wonderful, Doc, I agree. Except I don't think we have to take it seriously or 
unseriously or any certain way at all. Life is flowing along however we take it.
 

 
 
 On Wednesday, October 16, 2013 8:53 AM, "doctordumbass@..." 
 wrote:
 
Xeno, you say that people stop short of enlightenment because it seems that 
no progress is happening. And in the paragraph above that, you say that at some 
point the words have to go. And yet it is the words, or the knowledge and 
understanding that can help a person continue when all is flat and seemingly 
non progressive. Even Maharishi's analogy of going around an iceberg, seeming 
to go backwards has helped me continue. Am I a fool? Or am I persistent? Both? 
And does it even matter?
 

 The thing Xeno is talking about, is when all ideas, concepts, recited phrases, 
etc. go dry. No more juice or encouragement from them. The seeker feels shitty 
- end of story. This phase illustrates for the seeker, the futility of living 
in the future, where we want to get enlightened, or in the past, remembering a 
flashy spiritual experience. Even though the isolation one feels is the 
strongest, yet, it prepares us for a final surrender, a shift of identity, away 
from this isolated form. Whether, or not, a seeker decides to go through with 
the whole enchilada, is an exact reflection, of the degree to which a seeker 
takes spiritual liberation seriously.

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:

 Xeno, you say that people stop short of enlightenment because it seems that no 
progress is happening. And in the paragraph above that, you say that at some 
point the words have to go. And yet it is the words, or the knowledge and 
understanding that can help a person continue when all is flat and seemingly 
non progressive. Even Maharishi's analogy of going around an iceberg, seeming 
to go backwards has helped me continue. Am I a fool? Or am I persistent? Both? 
And does it even matter?

 

 
 
 On Tuesday, October 15, 2013 10:06 PM, "anartaxius@..."  wrote:
 
---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:
 
  Dear MJ; Yes, working people back in that day of $3.35 an hour wages got a 
great deal then. However it is true the conservative meditator I here speak for 
feels deeply that people are not paying anywhere close to enough to learn TM at 
$1,500. And, the slacker kids living at home with their parents neither too. 
The TM movement could squeeze at least another thousand out of the new people 
coming to our Peace Palaces. It is extremely important to have commitment from 
new people as they start or you end up like some of the quitters we see here.
 -Buck  
 

 I think you may be missing something Buck. I am meditating in my fifth decade. 
Even after adjusting for inflation by current U.S. Government measures, the 
price I paid for TM was less than US$500 in current value. To continue with 
meditation, you have to have some kind of deep desire beyond simply thinking 
that some mental technique is going to solve all your problems, because it does 
not work out that way.
 

 Something has to motivate beyond feeling better because some situations may 
arise where you simply do not feel well at all, and one can go through periods 
where it really does not seem to be doing anything at all. When somebody is 
taught a technique I would say there is a 10 to 20 percent chance they will 
continue. This happened in my family, and in the family of friends, and in the 
few research papers that mentioned such data. It is not that people are 
slackers. For one thing our culture does not support meditation that well in 
spite of its being more in common awareness than previously.
 

 Another factor is the illusions the mind has. It affects groups and groups 
that teach meditation inevitably become weird in some way, particularly if 
religiosity is a part of the philosophy o

Re: Re: Re: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] Places You Can't Afford to Live

2013-10-16 Thread Share Long
Doc, I take it seriously on the level of action, but not on the level of 
thinking about it (-:




On Wednesday, October 16, 2013 12:44 PM, "doctordumb...@rocketmail.com" 
 wrote:
 
  
 "Wonderful, Doc, I agree. Except I don't think we have to take it 
seriously or unseriously or any certain way at all. Life is flowing 
along however we take it."

Hey Share, this response of yours caught my eye, again, because it is a good 
example of usurping Brahman. "Life is flowing along however we take it", is an 
intellectual understanding, but it is not the experience of the seeker. So, to 
say that the intention for spiritual liberation needn't be taken seriously by 
the seeker, is basically bullshit. It had better be taken seriously by the 
seeker, or else nothing permanent happens. No big deal, if nothing happens, but 
it is simply a reflection of the seeker not being ready for a complete 
surrender, not being committed to it.



---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:


Wonderful, Doc, I agree. Except I don't think we have to take it seriously or 
unseriously or any certain way at all. Life is flowing along however we take it.





On Wednesday, October 16, 2013 8:53 AM, "doctordumbass@..."  
wrote:
 
  
 Xeno, you say that people stop short of enlightenment because it seems that 
no progress is happening. And in the paragraph above that, you say that 
at some point the words have to go. And yet it is the words, or the 
knowledge and understanding that can help a person continue when all is 
flat and seemingly non progressive. Even Maharishi's analogy of going 
around an iceberg, seeming to go backwards has helped me continue. Am I a fool? 
Or am I persistent? Both? And does it even matter?

The thing Xeno is talking about, is when all ideas, concepts, recited phrases, 
etc. go dry. No more juice or encouragement from them. The seeker feels shitty 
- end of story. This phase illustrates for the seeker, the futility of living 
in the future, where we want to get enlightened, or in the past, remembering a 
flashy spiritual experience. Even though the isolation one feels is the 
strongest, yet, it prepares us for a final surrender, a shift of identity, away 
from this isolated form. Whether, or not, a seeker decides to go through with 
the whole enchilada, is an exact reflection, of the degree to which a seeker 
takes spiritual liberation seriously.



---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:


Xeno, you say that people stop short of enlightenment because it seems that no 
progress is happening. And in the paragraph above that, you say that at some 
point the words have to go. And yet it is the words, or the knowledge and 
understanding that can help a person continue when all is flat and seemingly 
non progressive. Even Maharishi's analogy of going around an iceberg, seeming 
to go backwards has helped me continue. Am I a fool? Or am I persistent? Both? 
And does it even matter?






On Tuesday, October 15, 2013 10:06 PM, "anartaxius@..."  wrote:
 
  
 ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:


 Dear MJ;  Yes, working people back
in that day of  $3.35 an hour wages got a great deal then. However
it is true the conservative meditator I here speak for feels deeply
that people are not paying anywhere close to enough to learn TM at
$1,500.  And, the slacker kids living at home with their parents
neither too.  The TM movement could squeeze at least another thousand
out of the new people coming to our Peace Palaces.  It is extremely
important to have commitment from new people as they start or you end
up like some of the quitters we see here.
-Buck  

I think you may be missing something Buck. I am meditating in my fifth decade. 
Even after adjusting for inflation by current U.S. Government measures, the 
price I paid for TM was less than US$500 in current value. To continue with 
meditation, you have to have some kind of deep desire beyond simply thinking 
that some mental technique is going to solve all your problems, because it does 
not work out that way.

Something has to motivate beyond feeling better because some situations may 
arise where you simply do not feel well at all, and one can go through periods 
where it really does not seem to be doing anything at all. When somebody is 
taught a technique I would say there is a 10 to 20 percent chance they will 
continue. This happened in my family, and in the family of friends, and in the 
few research papers that mentioned such data. It is not that people are 
slackers. For one thing our culture does not support meditation that well in 
spite of its being more in common awareness than previously.

Another factor is the illusions the mind has. It affects groups and groups that 
teach meditation inevitably become weird in some way, particularly if 
religiosity is a part of the philosophy of the group. TM has always tried to 
hide its religiosity, but it oozes through the cracks so much you can almost 
drown in it. People have very strong religious delu

RE: Re: Re: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] Places You Can't Afford to Live

2013-10-16 Thread doctordumbass
 "Wonderful, Doc, I agree. Except I don't think we have to take it seriously or 
unseriously or any certain way at all. Life is flowing along however we take 
it."
 

 Hey Share, this response of yours caught my eye, again, because it is a good 
example of usurping Brahman. "Life is flowing along however we take it", is an 
intellectual understanding, but it is not the experience of the seeker. So, to 
say that the intention for spiritual liberation needn't be taken seriously by 
the seeker, is basically bullshit. It had better be taken seriously by the 
seeker, or else nothing permanent happens. No big deal, if nothing happens, but 
it is simply a reflection of the seeker not being ready for a complete 
surrender, not being committed to it.

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:

 Wonderful, Doc, I agree. Except I don't think we have to take it seriously or 
unseriously or any certain way at all. Life is flowing along however we take it.
 

 
 
 On Wednesday, October 16, 2013 8:53 AM, "doctordumbass@..." 
 wrote:
 
Xeno, you say that people stop short of enlightenment because it seems that 
no progress is happening. And in the paragraph above that, you say that at some 
point the words have to go. And yet it is the words, or the knowledge and 
understanding that can help a person continue when all is flat and seemingly 
non progressive. Even Maharishi's analogy of going around an iceberg, seeming 
to go backwards has helped me continue. Am I a fool? Or am I persistent? Both? 
And does it even matter?
 

 The thing Xeno is talking about, is when all ideas, concepts, recited phrases, 
etc. go dry. No more juice or encouragement from them. The seeker feels shitty 
- end of story. This phase illustrates for the seeker, the futility of living 
in the future, where we want to get enlightened, or in the past, remembering a 
flashy spiritual experience. Even though the isolation one feels is the 
strongest, yet, it prepares us for a final surrender, a shift of identity, away 
from this isolated form. Whether, or not, a seeker decides to go through with 
the whole enchilada, is an exact reflection, of the degree to which a seeker 
takes spiritual liberation seriously.

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:

 Xeno, you say that people stop short of enlightenment because it seems that no 
progress is happening. And in the paragraph above that, you say that at some 
point the words have to go. And yet it is the words, or the knowledge and 
understanding that can help a person continue when all is flat and seemingly 
non progressive. Even Maharishi's analogy of going around an iceberg, seeming 
to go backwards has helped me continue. Am I a fool? Or am I persistent? Both? 
And does it even matter?

 

 
 
 On Tuesday, October 15, 2013 10:06 PM, "anartaxius@..."  wrote:
 
---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:
 
  Dear MJ; Yes, working people back in that day of $3.35 an hour wages got a 
great deal then. However it is true the conservative meditator I here speak for 
feels deeply that people are not paying anywhere close to enough to learn TM at 
$1,500. And, the slacker kids living at home with their parents neither too. 
The TM movement could squeeze at least another thousand out of the new people 
coming to our Peace Palaces. It is extremely important to have commitment from 
new people as they start or you end up like some of the quitters we see here.
 -Buck  
 

 I think you may be missing something Buck. I am meditating in my fifth decade. 
Even after adjusting for inflation by current U.S. Government measures, the 
price I paid for TM was less than US$500 in current value. To continue with 
meditation, you have to have some kind of deep desire beyond simply thinking 
that some mental technique is going to solve all your problems, because it does 
not work out that way.
 

 Something has to motivate beyond feeling better because some situations may 
arise where you simply do not feel well at all, and one can go through periods 
where it really does not seem to be doing anything at all. When somebody is 
taught a technique I would say there is a 10 to 20 percent chance they will 
continue. This happened in my family, and in the family of friends, and in the 
few research papers that mentioned such data. It is not that people are 
slackers. For one thing our culture does not support meditation that well in 
spite of its being more in common awareness than previously.
 

 Another factor is the illusions the mind has. It affects groups and groups 
that teach meditation inevitably become weird in some way, particularly if 
religiosity is a part of the philosophy of the group. TM has always tried to 
hide its religiosity, but it oozes through the cracks so much you can almost 
drown in it. People have very strong religious delusions and when faced with a 
religiosity that is contrary to what they are emotionally programmed with, they 
may quit just for that reason alone.
 

 Basically

RE: Re: Re: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] Places You Can't Afford to Live

2013-10-16 Thread doctordumbass
Yeah, we can have lots of them. Should be called the dark night of the ego. 
Seriously. 

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:

 PS, Doc, this sounds like dark night of the soul. I wonder how many on FFL 
have experienced that. Is it possible to have more than one? I think so!
 
 
 
 On Wednesday, October 16, 2013 8:53 AM, "doctordumbass@..." 
 wrote:
 
Xeno, you say that people stop short of enlightenment because it seems that 
no progress is happening. And in the paragraph above that, you say that at some 
point the words have to go. And yet it is the words, or the knowledge and 
understanding that can help a person continue when all is flat and seemingly 
non progressive. Even Maharishi's analogy of going around an iceberg, seeming 
to go backwards has helped me continue. Am I a fool? Or am I persistent? Both? 
And does it even matter?
 

 The thing Xeno is talking about, is when all ideas, concepts, recited phrases, 
etc. go dry. No more juice or encouragement from them. The seeker feels shitty 
- end of story. This phase illustrates for the seeker, the futility of living 
in the future, where we want to get enlightened, or in the past, remembering a 
flashy spiritual experience. Even though the isolation one feels is the 
strongest, yet, it prepares us for a final surrender, a shift of identity, away 
from this isolated form. Whether, or not, a seeker decides to go through with 
the whole enchilada, is an exact reflection, of the degree to which a seeker 
takes spiritual liberation seriously.

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:

 Xeno, you say that people stop short of enlightenment because it seems that no 
progress is happening. And in the paragraph above that, you say that at some 
point the words have to go. And yet it is the words, or the knowledge and 
understanding that can help a person continue when all is flat and seemingly 
non progressive. Even Maharishi's analogy of going around an iceberg, seeming 
to go backwards has helped me continue. Am I a fool? Or am I persistent? Both? 
And does it even matter?

 

 
 
 On Tuesday, October 15, 2013 10:06 PM, "anartaxius@..."  wrote:
 
---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:
 
  Dear MJ; Yes, working people back in that day of $3.35 an hour wages got a 
great deal then. However it is true the conservative meditator I here speak for 
feels deeply that people are not paying anywhere close to enough to learn TM at 
$1,500. And, the slacker kids living at home with their parents neither too. 
The TM movement could squeeze at least another thousand out of the new people 
coming to our Peace Palaces. It is extremely important to have commitment from 
new people as they start or you end up like some of the quitters we see here.
 -Buck  
 

 I think you may be missing something Buck. I am meditating in my fifth decade. 
Even after adjusting for inflation by current U.S. Government measures, the 
price I paid for TM was less than US$500 in current value. To continue with 
meditation, you have to have some kind of deep desire beyond simply thinking 
that some mental technique is going to solve all your problems, because it does 
not work out that way.
 

 Something has to motivate beyond feeling better because some situations may 
arise where you simply do not feel well at all, and one can go through periods 
where it really does not seem to be doing anything at all. When somebody is 
taught a technique I would say there is a 10 to 20 percent chance they will 
continue. This happened in my family, and in the family of friends, and in the 
few research papers that mentioned such data. It is not that people are 
slackers. For one thing our culture does not support meditation that well in 
spite of its being more in common awareness than previously.
 

 Another factor is the illusions the mind has. It affects groups and groups 
that teach meditation inevitably become weird in some way, particularly if 
religiosity is a part of the philosophy of the group. TM has always tried to 
hide its religiosity, but it oozes through the cracks so much you can almost 
drown in it. People have very strong religious delusions and when faced with a 
religiosity that is contrary to what they are emotionally programmed with, they 
may quit just for that reason alone.
 

 Basically you have to be kind of crazy to continue with meditation, there has 
to be something that pushes you forward, something you sense behind the bizarre 
character of the whatever system of 'enlightenment' you have fallen into that 
seems somehow 'true'. It is not something that can be quantified. There is a 
curiosity that one needs about this, not an entrenched belief that one is on a 
royal path to a nirvana. No belief can stand in the face of this curiosity if 
one is to 'succeed'; all beliefs will eventually be blown away. As Maharishi 
said, words of ignorance to remove ignorance. All the verbal knowledge in the 
movement are words of ignorance.
 

 Rightly applie

RE: Re: Re: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] Places You Can't Afford to Live

2013-10-16 Thread doctordumbass
Intention counts. A lot.
  
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:

 Wonderful, Doc, I agree. Except I don't think we have to take it seriously or 
unseriously or any certain way at all. Life is flowing along however we take it.
 

 
 
 On Wednesday, October 16, 2013 8:53 AM, "doctordumbass@..." 
 wrote:
 
Xeno, you say that people stop short of enlightenment because it seems that 
no progress is happening. And in the paragraph above that, you say that at some 
point the words have to go. And yet it is the words, or the knowledge and 
understanding that can help a person continue when all is flat and seemingly 
non progressive. Even Maharishi's analogy of going around an iceberg, seeming 
to go backwards has helped me continue. Am I a fool? Or am I persistent? Both? 
And does it even matter?
 

 The thing Xeno is talking about, is when all ideas, concepts, recited phrases, 
etc. go dry. No more juice or encouragement from them. The seeker feels shitty 
- end of story. This phase illustrates for the seeker, the futility of living 
in the future, where we want to get enlightened, or in the past, remembering a 
flashy spiritual experience. Even though the isolation one feels is the 
strongest, yet, it prepares us for a final surrender, a shift of identity, away 
from this isolated form. Whether, or not, a seeker decides to go through with 
the whole enchilada, is an exact reflection, of the degree to which a seeker 
takes spiritual liberation seriously.

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:

 Xeno, you say that people stop short of enlightenment because it seems that no 
progress is happening. And in the paragraph above that, you say that at some 
point the words have to go. And yet it is the words, or the knowledge and 
understanding that can help a person continue when all is flat and seemingly 
non progressive. Even Maharishi's analogy of going around an iceberg, seeming 
to go backwards has helped me continue. Am I a fool? Or am I persistent? Both? 
And does it even matter?

 

 
 
 On Tuesday, October 15, 2013 10:06 PM, "anartaxius@..."  wrote:
 
---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:
 
  Dear MJ; Yes, working people back in that day of $3.35 an hour wages got a 
great deal then. However it is true the conservative meditator I here speak for 
feels deeply that people are not paying anywhere close to enough to learn TM at 
$1,500. And, the slacker kids living at home with their parents neither too. 
The TM movement could squeeze at least another thousand out of the new people 
coming to our Peace Palaces. It is extremely important to have commitment from 
new people as they start or you end up like some of the quitters we see here.
 -Buck  
 

 I think you may be missing something Buck. I am meditating in my fifth decade. 
Even after adjusting for inflation by current U.S. Government measures, the 
price I paid for TM was less than US$500 in current value. To continue with 
meditation, you have to have some kind of deep desire beyond simply thinking 
that some mental technique is going to solve all your problems, because it does 
not work out that way.
 

 Something has to motivate beyond feeling better because some situations may 
arise where you simply do not feel well at all, and one can go through periods 
where it really does not seem to be doing anything at all. When somebody is 
taught a technique I would say there is a 10 to 20 percent chance they will 
continue. This happened in my family, and in the family of friends, and in the 
few research papers that mentioned such data. It is not that people are 
slackers. For one thing our culture does not support meditation that well in 
spite of its being more in common awareness than previously.
 

 Another factor is the illusions the mind has. It affects groups and groups 
that teach meditation inevitably become weird in some way, particularly if 
religiosity is a part of the philosophy of the group. TM has always tried to 
hide its religiosity, but it oozes through the cracks so much you can almost 
drown in it. People have very strong religious delusions and when faced with a 
religiosity that is contrary to what they are emotionally programmed with, they 
may quit just for that reason alone.
 

 Basically you have to be kind of crazy to continue with meditation, there has 
to be something that pushes you forward, something you sense behind the bizarre 
character of the whatever system of 'enlightenment' you have fallen into that 
seems somehow 'true'. It is not something that can be quantified. There is a 
curiosity that one needs about this, not an entrenched belief that one is on a 
royal path to a nirvana. No belief can stand in the face of this curiosity if 
one is to 'succeed'; all beliefs will eventually be blown away. As Maharishi 
said, words of ignorance to remove ignorance. All the verbal knowledge in the 
movement are words of ignorance.
 

 Rightly applied they may work for you up to a point, but at some

Re: Re: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] Places You Can't Afford to Live

2013-10-16 Thread Share Long
PS, Doc, this sounds like dark night of the soul. I wonder how many on FFL have 
experienced that. Is it possible to have more than one? I think so!





On Wednesday, October 16, 2013 8:53 AM, "doctordumb...@rocketmail.com" 
 wrote:
 
  
 Xeno, you say that people stop short of enlightenment because it seems that 
no progress is happening. And in the paragraph above that, you say that 
at some point the words have to go. And yet it is the words, or the 
knowledge and understanding that can help a person continue when all is 
flat and seemingly non progressive. Even Maharishi's analogy of going 
around an iceberg, seeming to go backwards has helped me continue. Am I a fool? 
Or am I persistent? Both? And does it even matter?

The thing Xeno is talking about, is when all ideas, concepts, recited phrases, 
etc. go dry. No more juice or encouragement from them. The seeker feels shitty 
- end of story. This phase illustrates for the seeker, the futility of living 
in the future, where we want to get enlightened, or in the past, remembering a 
flashy spiritual experience. Even though the isolation one feels is the 
strongest, yet, it prepares us for a final surrender, a shift of identity, away 
from this isolated form. Whether, or not, a seeker decides to go through with 
the whole enchilada, is an exact reflection, of the degree to which a seeker 
takes spiritual liberation seriously.



---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:


Xeno, you say that people stop short of enlightenment because it seems that no 
progress is happening. And in the paragraph above that, you say that at some 
point the words have to go. And yet it is the words, or the knowledge and 
understanding that can help a person continue when all is flat and seemingly 
non progressive. Even Maharishi's analogy of going around an iceberg, seeming 
to go backwards has helped me continue. Am I a fool? Or am I persistent? Both? 
And does it even matter?






On Tuesday, October 15, 2013 10:06 PM, "anartaxius@..."  wrote:
 
  
 ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:


 Dear MJ;  Yes, working people back
in that day of  $3.35 an hour wages got a great deal then. However
it is true the conservative meditator I here speak for feels deeply
that people are not paying anywhere close to enough to learn TM at
$1,500.  And, the slacker kids living at home with their parents
neither too.  The TM movement could squeeze at least another thousand
out of the new people coming to our Peace Palaces.  It is extremely
important to have commitment from new people as they start or you end
up like some of the quitters we see here.
-Buck  

I think you may be missing something Buck. I am meditating in my fifth decade. 
Even after adjusting for inflation by current U.S. Government measures, the 
price I paid for TM was less than US$500 in current value. To continue with 
meditation, you have to have some kind of deep desire beyond simply thinking 
that some mental technique is going to solve all your problems, because it does 
not work out that way.

Something has to motivate beyond feeling better because some situations may 
arise where you simply do not feel well at all, and one can go through periods 
where it really does not seem to be doing anything at all. When somebody is 
taught a technique I would say there is a 10 to 20 percent chance they will 
continue. This happened in my family, and in the family of friends, and in the 
few research papers that mentioned such data. It is not that people are 
slackers. For one thing our culture does not support meditation that well in 
spite of its being more in common awareness than previously.

Another factor is the illusions the mind has. It affects groups and groups that 
teach meditation inevitably become weird in some way, particularly if 
religiosity is a part of the philosophy of the group. TM has always tried to 
hide its religiosity, but it oozes through the cracks so much you can almost 
drown in it. People have very strong religious delusions and when faced with a 
religiosity that is contrary to what they are emotionally programmed with, they 
may quit just for that reason alone.

Basically you have to be kind of crazy to continue with meditation, there has 
to be something that pushes you forward, something you sense behind the bizarre 
character of the whatever system of 'enlightenment' you have fallen into that 
seems somehow 'true'. It is not something that can be quantified. There is a 
curiosity that one needs about this, not an entrenched belief that one is on a 
royal path to a nirvana. No belief can stand in the face of this curiosity if 
one is to 'succeed'; all beliefs will eventually be blown away. As Maharishi 
said, words of ignorance to remove ignorance. All the verbal knowledge in the 
movement are words of ignorance.

Rightly applied they may work for you up to a point, but at some point they 
have to go, and it is up to the individual how they handle or fail to handle 
the transition.

Re: Re: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] Places You Can't Afford to Live

2013-10-16 Thread Share Long
Wonderful, Doc, I agree. Except I don't think we have to take it seriously or 
unseriously or any certain way at all. Life is flowing along however we take it.





On Wednesday, October 16, 2013 8:53 AM, "doctordumb...@rocketmail.com" 
 wrote:
 
  
 Xeno, you say that people stop short of enlightenment because it seems that 
no progress is happening. And in the paragraph above that, you say that 
at some point the words have to go. And yet it is the words, or the 
knowledge and understanding that can help a person continue when all is 
flat and seemingly non progressive. Even Maharishi's analogy of going 
around an iceberg, seeming to go backwards has helped me continue. Am I a fool? 
Or am I persistent? Both? And does it even matter?

The thing Xeno is talking about, is when all ideas, concepts, recited phrases, 
etc. go dry. No more juice or encouragement from them. The seeker feels shitty 
- end of story. This phase illustrates for the seeker, the futility of living 
in the future, where we want to get enlightened, or in the past, remembering a 
flashy spiritual experience. Even though the isolation one feels is the 
strongest, yet, it prepares us for a final surrender, a shift of identity, away 
from this isolated form. Whether, or not, a seeker decides to go through with 
the whole enchilada, is an exact reflection, of the degree to which a seeker 
takes spiritual liberation seriously.



---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:


Xeno, you say that people stop short of enlightenment because it seems that no 
progress is happening. And in the paragraph above that, you say that at some 
point the words have to go. And yet it is the words, or the knowledge and 
understanding that can help a person continue when all is flat and seemingly 
non progressive. Even Maharishi's analogy of going around an iceberg, seeming 
to go backwards has helped me continue. Am I a fool? Or am I persistent? Both? 
And does it even matter?






On Tuesday, October 15, 2013 10:06 PM, "anartaxius@..."  wrote:
 
  
 ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:


 Dear MJ;  Yes, working people back
in that day of  $3.35 an hour wages got a great deal then. However
it is true the conservative meditator I here speak for feels deeply
that people are not paying anywhere close to enough to learn TM at
$1,500.  And, the slacker kids living at home with their parents
neither too.  The TM movement could squeeze at least another thousand
out of the new people coming to our Peace Palaces.  It is extremely
important to have commitment from new people as they start or you end
up like some of the quitters we see here.
-Buck  

I think you may be missing something Buck. I am meditating in my fifth decade. 
Even after adjusting for inflation by current U.S. Government measures, the 
price I paid for TM was less than US$500 in current value. To continue with 
meditation, you have to have some kind of deep desire beyond simply thinking 
that some mental technique is going to solve all your problems, because it does 
not work out that way.

Something has to motivate beyond feeling better because some situations may 
arise where you simply do not feel well at all, and one can go through periods 
where it really does not seem to be doing anything at all. When somebody is 
taught a technique I would say there is a 10 to 20 percent chance they will 
continue. This happened in my family, and in the family of friends, and in the 
few research papers that mentioned such data. It is not that people are 
slackers. For one thing our culture does not support meditation that well in 
spite of its being more in common awareness than previously.

Another factor is the illusions the mind has. It affects groups and groups that 
teach meditation inevitably become weird in some way, particularly if 
religiosity is a part of the philosophy of the group. TM has always tried to 
hide its religiosity, but it oozes through the cracks so much you can almost 
drown in it. People have very strong religious delusions and when faced with a 
religiosity that is contrary to what they are emotionally programmed with, they 
may quit just for that reason alone.

Basically you have to be kind of crazy to continue with meditation, there has 
to be something that pushes you forward, something you sense behind the bizarre 
character of the whatever system of 'enlightenment' you have fallen into that 
seems somehow 'true'. It is not something that can be quantified. There is a 
curiosity that one needs about this, not an entrenched belief that one is on a 
royal path to a nirvana. No belief can stand in the face of this curiosity if 
one is to 'succeed'; all beliefs will eventually be blown away. As Maharishi 
said, words of ignorance to remove ignorance. All the verbal knowledge in the 
movement are words of ignorance.

Rightly applied they may work for you up to a point, but at some point they 
have to go, and it is up to the individual how they handle or fail to handle 
the 

RE: Re: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] Places You Can't Afford to Live

2013-10-16 Thread doctordumbass
 Xeno, you say that people stop short of enlightenment because it seems that no 
progress is happening. And in the paragraph above that, you say that at some 
point the words have to go. And yet it is the words, or the knowledge and 
understanding that can help a person continue when all is flat and seemingly 
non progressive. Even Maharishi's analogy of going around an iceberg, seeming 
to go backwards has helped me continue. Am I a fool? Or am I persistent? Both? 
And does it even matter?
 

 The thing Xeno is talking about, is when all ideas, concepts, recited phrases, 
etc. go dry. No more juice or encouragement from them. The seeker feels shitty 
- end of story. This phase illustrates for the seeker, the futility of living 
in the future, where we want to get enlightened, or in the past, remembering a 
flashy spiritual experience. Even though the isolation one feels is the 
strongest, yet, it prepares us for a final surrender, a shift of identity, away 
from this isolated form. Whether, or not, a seeker decides to go through with 
the whole enchilada, is an exact reflection, of the degree to which a seeker 
takes spiritual liberation seriously.

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:

 Xeno, you say that people stop short of enlightenment because it seems that no 
progress is happening. And in the paragraph above that, you say that at some 
point the words have to go. And yet it is the words, or the knowledge and 
understanding that can help a person continue when all is flat and seemingly 
non progressive. Even Maharishi's analogy of going around an iceberg, seeming 
to go backwards has helped me continue. Am I a fool? Or am I persistent? Both? 
And does it even matter?

 

 
 
 On Tuesday, October 15, 2013 10:06 PM, "anartaxius@..."  wrote:
 
---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:
 
  Dear MJ; Yes, working people back in that day of $3.35 an hour wages got a 
great deal then. However it is true the conservative meditator I here speak for 
feels deeply that people are not paying anywhere close to enough to learn TM at 
$1,500. And, the slacker kids living at home with their parents neither too. 
The TM movement could squeeze at least another thousand out of the new people 
coming to our Peace Palaces. It is extremely important to have commitment from 
new people as they start or you end up like some of the quitters we see here.
 -Buck  
 

 I think you may be missing something Buck. I am meditating in my fifth decade. 
Even after adjusting for inflation by current U.S. Government measures, the 
price I paid for TM was less than US$500 in current value. To continue with 
meditation, you have to have some kind of deep desire beyond simply thinking 
that some mental technique is going to solve all your problems, because it does 
not work out that way.
 

 Something has to motivate beyond feeling better because some situations may 
arise where you simply do not feel well at all, and one can go through periods 
where it really does not seem to be doing anything at all. When somebody is 
taught a technique I would say there is a 10 to 20 percent chance they will 
continue. This happened in my family, and in the family of friends, and in the 
few research papers that mentioned such data. It is not that people are 
slackers. For one thing our culture does not support meditation that well in 
spite of its being more in common awareness than previously.
 

 Another factor is the illusions the mind has. It affects groups and groups 
that teach meditation inevitably become weird in some way, particularly if 
religiosity is a part of the philosophy of the group. TM has always tried to 
hide its religiosity, but it oozes through the cracks so much you can almost 
drown in it. People have very strong religious delusions and when faced with a 
religiosity that is contrary to what they are emotionally programmed with, they 
may quit just for that reason alone.
 

 Basically you have to be kind of crazy to continue with meditation, there has 
to be something that pushes you forward, something you sense behind the bizarre 
character of the whatever system of 'enlightenment' you have fallen into that 
seems somehow 'true'. It is not something that can be quantified. There is a 
curiosity that one needs about this, not an entrenched belief that one is on a 
royal path to a nirvana. No belief can stand in the face of this curiosity if 
one is to 'succeed'; all beliefs will eventually be blown away. As Maharishi 
said, words of ignorance to remove ignorance. All the verbal knowledge in the 
movement are words of ignorance.
 

 Rightly applied they may work for you up to a point, but at some point they 
have to go, and it is up to the individual how they handle or fail to handle 
the transition. Most of the people that want to help you along on the path are 
going to help you fail because they failed to make that transition. I believe M 
said at least CC was possible for everyone with TM, but CC is not 
e

Re: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] Places You Can't Afford to Live

2013-10-16 Thread Share Long
Xeno, you say that people stop short of enlightenment because it seems that no 
progress is happening. And in the paragraph above that, you say that at some 
point the words have to go. And yet it is the words, or the knowledge and 
understanding that can help a person continue when all is flat and seemingly 
non progressive. Even Maharishi's analogy of going around an iceberg, seeming 
to go backwards has helped me continue. Am I a fool? Or am I persistent? Both? 
And does it even matter?






On Tuesday, October 15, 2013 10:06 PM, "anartax...@yahoo.com" 
 wrote:
 
  
 ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:


 Dear MJ;  Yes, working people back
in that day of  $3.35 an hour wages got a great deal then. However
it is true the conservative meditator I here speak for feels deeply
that people are not paying anywhere close to enough to learn TM at
$1,500.  And, the slacker kids living at home with their parents
neither too.  The TM movement could squeeze at least another thousand
out of the new people coming to our Peace Palaces.  It is extremely
important to have commitment from new people as they start or you end
up like some of the quitters we see here.
-Buck  

I think you may be missing something Buck. I am meditating in my fifth decade. 
Even after adjusting for inflation by current U.S. Government measures, the 
price I paid for TM was less than US$500 in current value. To continue with 
meditation, you have to have some kind of deep desire beyond simply thinking 
that some mental technique is going to solve all your problems, because it does 
not work out that way.

Something has to motivate beyond feeling better because some situations may 
arise where you simply do not feel well at all, and one can go through periods 
where it really does not seem to be doing anything at all. When somebody is 
taught a technique I would say there is a 10 to 20 percent chance they will 
continue. This happened in my family, and in the family of friends, and in the 
few research papers that mentioned such data. It is not that people are 
slackers. For one thing our culture does not support meditation that well in 
spite of its being more in common awareness than previously.

Another factor is the illusions the mind has. It affects groups and groups that 
teach meditation inevitably become weird in some way, particularly if 
religiosity is a part of the philosophy of the group. TM has always tried to 
hide its religiosity, but it oozes through the cracks so much you can almost 
drown in it. People have very strong religious delusions and when faced with a 
religiosity that is contrary to what they are emotionally programmed with, they 
may quit just for that reason alone.

Basically you have to be kind of crazy to continue with meditation, there has 
to be something that pushes you forward, something you sense behind the bizarre 
character of the whatever system of 'enlightenment' you have fallen into that 
seems somehow 'true'. It is not something that can be quantified. There is a 
curiosity that one needs about this, not an entrenched belief that one is on a 
royal path to a nirvana. No belief can stand in the face of this curiosity if 
one is to 'succeed'; all beliefs will eventually be blown away. As Maharishi 
said, words of ignorance to remove ignorance. All the verbal knowledge in the 
movement are words of ignorance.

Rightly applied they may work for you up to a point, but at some point they 
have to go, and it is up to the individual how they handle or fail to handle 
the transition. Most of the people that want to help you along on the path are 
going to help you fail because they failed to make that transition. I believe M 
said at least CC was possible for everyone with TM, but CC is not 
enlightenment. That means a lot of people are going to fail, and they will not 
help you along your way; they will become an active force against your progress 
unless you know how to brush them aside and stay on purpose. You are one of 
those sorts that needs to be brushed aside. Maybe in years to come that will 
not longer be true, but right now you are an anachronism.

People may stop short of 'enlightenment', short of awakening simply because it 
seems progress is no longer happening - they may be right on the cusp. As one 
Zen master said, you may not be aware of your own enlightenment. You may not 
sense how close you are because everything seems flat, or simply have become so 
saturated with the spiritual environment you can't stand it anymore and need a 
hiatus for a while so what has occurred can sink in and gestate for a while 
before you can again move on.

Remember Buck, the Meissner effect is electromagnetic; it is just a verbal 
analogy that ties it with the supposed Maharishi Effect, the latter which has 
no scientific standing outside of the TM movement's proclamations. Pushing 
pseudoscience as fact does no service to meditation except in the minds of 
idiots and the uniformed. It is not the money 

RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] Places You Can't Afford to Live

2013-10-15 Thread anartaxius
 ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:
 
  Dear MJ; Yes, working people back in that day of $3.35 an hour wages got a 
great deal then. However it is true the conservative meditator I here speak for 
feels deeply that people are not paying anywhere close to enough to learn TM at 
$1,500. And, the slacker kids living at home with their parents neither too. 
The TM movement could squeeze at least another thousand out of the new people 
coming to our Peace Palaces. It is extremely important to have commitment from 
new people as they start or you end up like some of the quitters we see here.
 -Buck  
 

 I think you may be missing something Buck. I am meditating in my fifth decade. 
Even after adjusting for inflation by current U.S. Government measures, the 
price I paid for TM was less than US$500 in current value. To continue with 
meditation, you have to have some kind of deep desire beyond simply thinking 
that some mental technique is going to solve all your problems, because it does 
not work out that way.
 

 Something has to motivate beyond feeling better because some situations may 
arise where you simply do not feel well at all, and one can go through periods 
where it really does not seem to be doing anything at all. When somebody is 
taught a technique I would say there is a 10 to 20 percent chance they will 
continue. This happened in my family, and in the family of friends, and in the 
few research papers that mentioned such data. It is not that people are 
slackers. For one thing our culture does not support meditation that well in 
spite of its being more in common awareness than previously.
 

 Another factor is the illusions the mind has. It affects groups and groups 
that teach meditation inevitably become weird in some way, particularly if 
religiosity is a part of the philosophy of the group. TM has always tried to 
hide its religiosity, but it oozes through the cracks so much you can almost 
drown in it. People have very strong religious delusions and when faced with a 
religiosity that is contrary to what they are emotionally programmed with, they 
may quit just for that reason alone.
 

 Basically you have to be kind of crazy to continue with meditation, there has 
to be something that pushes you forward, something you sense behind the bizarre 
character of the whatever system of 'enlightenment' you have fallen into that 
seems somehow 'true'. It is not something that can be quantified. There is a 
curiosity that one needs about this, not an entrenched belief that one is on a 
royal path to a nirvana. No belief can stand in the face of this curiosity if 
one is to 'succeed'; all beliefs will eventually be blown away. As Maharishi 
said, words of ignorance to remove ignorance. All the verbal knowledge in the 
movement are words of ignorance.
 

 Rightly applied they may work for you up to a point, but at some point they 
have to go, and it is up to the individual how they handle or fail to handle 
the transition. Most of the people that want to help you along on the path are 
going to help you fail because they failed to make that transition. I believe M 
said at least CC was possible for everyone with TM, but CC is not 
enlightenment. That means a lot of people are going to fail, and they will not 
help you along your way; they will become an active force against your progress 
unless you know how to brush them aside and stay on purpose. You are one of 
those sorts that needs to be brushed aside. Maybe in years to come that will 
not longer be true, but right now you are an anachronism.
 

 People may stop short of 'enlightenment', short of awakening simply because it 
seems progress is no longer happening - they may be right on the cusp. As one 
Zen master said, you may not be aware of your own enlightenment. You may not 
sense how close you are because everything seems flat, or simply have become so 
saturated with the spiritual environment you can't stand it anymore and need a 
hiatus for a while so what has occurred can sink in and gestate for a while 
before you can again move on.
 

 Remember Buck, the Meissner effect is electromagnetic; it is just a verbal 
analogy that ties it with the supposed Maharishi Effect, the latter which has 
no scientific standing outside of the TM movement's proclamations. Pushing 
pseudoscience as fact does no service to meditation except in the minds of 
idiots and the uniformed. It is not the money that keeps people meditating. For 
the wealthy $1500 is pocket change, and they can discard meditation as easily 
as a pair of shoes that do not fit. The movement has an elitist mentality, and 
if it cannot appeal to the masses as it did in the 1960s and 1970s, it will 
simply become yesterday's news, and some other system will for a time, perhaps, 
find itself in the spotlight.
 

 

 

 

 





RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] Places You Can't Afford to Live

2013-10-15 Thread dhamiltony2k5
 Dear MJ; Yes, working people back in that day of $3.35 an hour wages got a 
great deal then. However it is true the conservative meditator I here speak for 
feels deeply that people are not paying anywhere close to enough to learn TM at 
$1,500. And, the slacker kids living at home with their parents neither too. 
The TM movement could squeeze at least another thousand out of the new people 
coming to our Peace Palaces. It is extremely important to have commitment from 
new people as they start or you end up like some of the quitters we see here.
 -Buck  
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:

 so you are saying the folks who paid 35 to about 65 bucks in the 60's and 70's 
and still do TM don't appreciate what they got???
 
 On Tue, 10/15/13, dhamiltony2k5@... mailto:dhamiltony2k5@... 
mailto:dhamiltony2k5@...> wrote:
 
 Subject: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] Places You Can't Afford to 
Live
 To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
 Date: Tuesday, October 15, 2013, 4:10 PM
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  And,
 Om the middle-class, they spend money on the stupidest
 things like
 new smartphones or new F-150 pickup trucks when they
 don't need them.
 Harley Davidson motorcycles. Jeezus have you looked at the
 price of
 Harley Davidson motorcycles and noticed how many
 middle-class
 middle-agers are going down the road on them dressing and
 trying to
 look like the lower working classes they are not? What a
 wealthy bunch of
 spiritually ill-disciplined narcissistic people.-Buck 
 
 
 
 ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,
 mailto:fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
 
  You
 know, If people don't pay a lot of money to learn TM
 they most
 certainly will not appreciate it. 
 
 
 
 ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,
 mailto:fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
 
 Paying
 for learning TM? 
 
 ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,
 mailto:fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
 
 Housing
 31 percent. Utilities on average? Groceries? 
 Transportation. Payroll taxes about 30 percent, medical,
 clothing, raising kids.  
 
 ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,
 mailto:fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
 
  Trulia ran these numbers based on the
 assumption that a family shouldn't spend more than 31
 percent of its pre-tax income on housing (and that it must
 pay local property taxes and insurance). This data also
 assumes that a family makes a 20 percent down payment on a
 home – a daunting feat even on a six-figure income in
 somewhere like Los Angeles or New York. 
 
 ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,
 mailto:fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
 
 Richard, look how similar FF and San Antonio are:
 
http://www.bestplaces.net/compare-cities/san_antonio_tx/fairfield_ia/costofliving
 
http://www.bestplaces.net/compare-cities/san_antonio_tx/fairfield_ia/costofliving
 
 
 
 
 On Tuesday, October 15, 2013 9:13 AM,
 Share Long  wrote:
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Richard, using Sperling's to compare San
 Antonio, TX to Brewster, NY
 
http://www.bestplaces.net/compare-cities/san_antonio_tx/brewster_ny/costofliving
 
http://www.bestplaces.net/compare-cities/san_antonio_tx/brewster_ny/costofliving
 
 
http://www.bestplaces.net/compare-cities/san_antonio_tx/brewster_ny/costofliving
 
http://www.bestplaces.net/compare-cities/san_antonio_tx/brewster_ny/costofliving
 
 
 On Tuesday, October 15, 2013 8:33 AM,
 Richard Williams  wrote:
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 An old couple I know down in San
 Antonio live in the family home that they inherited from his
 auntie. The guy says he pays about $100 per month in
 property taxes. Sounds like pretty cheap rent for a 1200 sq
 ft place on the south side of town. A lot of his property
 taxes go to local public schools. And, he doesn't even
 have any children! Go figure.
 
 "According to what
 I've read, a family shouldn't spend more than 31
 percent of its pre-tax income on housing." Using those
 calculations, these 10 metros are the least
 affordable:
 
 'Places Where The
 Middle Class Can’t Afford To Live
 Anymore'http://www.theatlanticcities.com/housing// 
http://www.theatlanticcities.com/housing// 



RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] Places You Can't Afford to Live

2013-10-15 Thread dhamiltony2k5
It is true, as a conservative meditator I simply do not feel that people are 
even paying enough to learn TM at $1,500. And, their slacker kids living at 
home with their parents too. I feel the TM movement could squeeze at least 
another thousand out of the new people coming to our Peace Palaces. It is 
important to have commitment or you end up like some of the quitters we see 
here. 
 -Buck 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:

  And, Om the middle-class, they spend money on the stupidest things like new 
smartphones or new F-150 pickup trucks when they don't need them. Harley 
Davidson motorcycles. Jeezus have you looked at the price of Harley Davidson 
motorcycles and noticed how many middle-class middle-agers are going down the 
road on them dressing and trying to look like the lower working classes they 
are not? What a wealthy bunch of spiritually ill-disciplined narcissistic 
people.
 -Buck
  
 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:

  You know, If people don't pay a lot of money to learn TM they most certainly 
will not appreciate it.
  
 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:

 Paying for learning TM?
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:

 Housing 31 percent. Utilities on average? Groceries? Transportation. Payroll 
taxes about 30 percent, medical, clothing, raising kids. 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:

  Trulia ran these numbers based on the assumption that a family shouldn't 
spend more than 31 percent of its pre-tax income on housing (and that it must 
pay local property taxes and insurance). This data also assumes that a family 
makes a 20 percent down payment on a home – a daunting feat even on a 
six-figure income in somewhere like Los Angeles or New York.
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:

 Richard, look how similar FF and San Antonio are:
http://www.bestplaces.net/compare-cities/san_antonio_tx/fairfield_ia/costofliving
 
http://www.bestplaces.net/compare-cities/san_antonio_tx/fairfield_ia/costofliving
 

 
 
 On Tuesday, October 15, 2013 9:13 AM, Share Long  wrote:
 
   Richard, using Sperling's to compare San Antonio, TX to Brewster, NY 
http://www.bestplaces.net/compare-cities/san_antonio_tx/brewster_ny/costofliving
 
http://www.bestplaces.net/compare-cities/san_antonio_tx/brewster_ny/costofliving
 
http://www.bestplaces.net/compare-cities/san_antonio_tx/brewster_ny/costofliving
 On Tuesday, October 15, 2013 8:33 AM, Richard Williams  wrote: 
   An old couple I know down in San Antonio live in the family home that they 
inherited from his auntie. The guy says he pays about $100 per month in 
property taxes. Sounds like pretty cheap rent for a 1200 sq ft place on the 
south side of town. A lot of his property taxes go to local public schools. 
And, he doesn't even have any children! Go figure.
 
 "According to what I've read, a family shouldn't spend more than 31 percent of 
its pre-tax income on housing." Using those calculations, these 10 metros are 
the least affordable:
 
 'Places Where The Middle Class Can’t Afford To Live Anymore'
 http://www.theatlanticcities.com/housing// 
http://www.theatlanticcities.com/housing/2013/10/where-even-middle-class-cant-afford-live-any-more/7194/