If it is the same forum we have in India, the I really have done it !
if it's the three and half day thing.

I came away the second day half time. Eventually, as I see it here,
it's 'looking good' or the emperor's clothes.
I shamelessly accept I have been conned, told them as much.

On Jul 22, 10:42 pm, Mahakali <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi
>
> my experience of the Forum was that it was very powerful in creating a
> clearing space into which one could have reinvented himself. I was not
> attracted to their policy whereby the enrolled has to sell their own
> programs. Coaching was okay and the main teaching points were clearly
> taken from EST.
>
> I assisted on the Advanced course (did not have the money to pay for
> it). I liked it but I saw partecipants taking it far too seriously and
> ending up in tears, nervous breakdown etc etc.
>
> I can say that it helped in deconstructing the person/individual, but,
> the numbers of breakdowns may outnumber the number of breakthroughs.
>
> I can only recommend it if one is  a perfectly mentally stable
> individual; otherwise, one may risk to fall into another "cult" and
> may become dependent on it.
>
> Kali
>
> On 22 Lug, 15:33, Mark Ty-Wharton <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > On 22 July 2010 12:24, Mahakali <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > With all due respect, it all sounds very self development (i.e. an
> > > improvement of your own self) rather than an opening up to the real
> > > Self i.e. to the reality of what is.
>
> > > Kali
>
> > Okay, thank you.
>
> > My experience of Landmark Education is that it carries a message that has
> > two distinct qualities, a little like The Simpsons, where humour is divided
> > between children's humour (the obvious) and adult humour (the background
> > message - usually political or the parody of a famous film).
>
> > Landmark Education seems to have a hidden message that parodies spiritual
> > teachings, either that or I am filtering that meaning into it?
>
> > What you don't know that you don't know for example can be interpreted in
> > two ways, a superficial one, where a person wants to develop that area and a
> > more profound one where there is a realisation, a knowing (of that which was
> > not previously known).
>
> > Landmark Education tend not to call their courses "self development" for
> > that very reason.
>
> > The Invented Life seminar is by design a discovery of Self and if you are
> > into advaita, well worth doing.
>
> > Cheers
>
> > Mark

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