--- In [email protected], "sandiego108" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], TurquoiseB <no_reply@> wrote:
> <snip> My first two questions as your student are:
> > 
> > 1. How do you know you're enlightened? 
> 
> These are excellent questions. In order to answer this 
> first one, I have to ask you first, what do you mean 
> by "enlightened"? I have written about this state 
> experientially many times, but there is a great deal 
> of confusion around this term, so I'd like to establish 
> meanings first.

Jim, you were the person who, only a few posts
ago, advised me to go back and read my TM Intro
Lecture notes. I don't have any; I threw away
all of my TM-related books and materials decades
ago. 

What I'm doing here is trying to get you to give
your *own* Intro Lecture. 

YOU are the one who claimed to be enlightened. I
would say that the onus falls on you to define
the term, not me.

As you have said many times, I am not in a position
to define enlightenment at all, whereas you are. 

So, if you need a definition before you continue
your Intro Lecture, I suggest you present one. 
That's what we all had to do when we were giving 
Intro Lectures. 

> > 2. Is it possible that you are mistaken?

Still unanswered.



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