--- In [email protected], "raunchydog" <raunchy...@...> wrote:
<snip>
> Maharishi often invited questions. I never had a chance
> to ask him anything directly, but I do remember driving
> my SCI teacher, Tom Miller, crazy with questions to the
> point of detecting, occasionally, a slight sputter of
> frustration. I love how he put up with me but it never
> entered my mind that I should quit TM because I wasn't
> satisfied with his answers. 

I loved residence courses and advanced lectures
because of the chance to ask questions, and I asked a
zillion of 'em. Some of the answers were satisfying,
some weren't. If I wasn't able to pry an answer out of
the teacher that made sense to me, I'd ask the same
question on the next course or at the next lecture.

And often I'd get a better response. With all the
yammering about "rote answers" here, my experience
was that the better teachers all had their own "spin"
on how to answer a question, drawing on their own
experience and insight and figuring out different
ways to explain things.

I had the distinct sense that they loved having the
opportunity to answer a meaty question that made
them think.



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