below
--- In [email protected], "sparaig" <lengli...@...> wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], Duveyoung no_reply@ wrote:
> >
> > "sparaig" wrote:
> >
> > > I've solved complex math problems while sorta/almost thinking the
mantra. Its
> > > only when you note the mantra isn't part of your mental landscape
that the choice
> > > arises, and adding 524,288 to itself to get 1,048,576 is no harder
to do while
> > > thinking the mantra than not. In fact, I often find it easier to
do WHILE thinking the mantra, but this  also is a trap.
> >
> > Spare Egg,
> >
> > I believe you've just told us that you are not practicing TM. 
Hoping the mantra "sorta" continues while one is "halfway" putting the
attention on other mental processes is not following the instructions. 
One must "innocently favor the mantra."
> >
>
> Did I say something about "hoping?"

Fuck, I knew when I typed that word that you'd come back at me like that
cheap shot.  My bad, your worse.  You plainly stated that you have been
comfortable with meditations in which "you divided the mind" by trying
to be God with the ability to attend to two processes at once.  That's
not TM, and, in fact, you're encouraging a delusion since it is
impossible to attend to two things at once and that one is actually
flitting back and forth between the two processes.  It may be an adroit
finessing of the use of attention, but it ain't TM, bub.
>
> > But, yes, while the mantra is attended, other processes by the
millions are happening too, and any of them could become an object of
attention, and many of them will convincingly be "better fruit that
beguiles the monkey-mind to jump off of the mantra branch." Thus the
instruction to favor the mantra.  This is effort -- this is a
philosophical/intellectual PROCESS (work being done) of coming to a
conclusion.  The conclusion is: I'll decide to favor the mantra -- not
all these other tempting processes.
> >
> > Edg
> >
>
> And no effort involved in favoring something over something else,
unless
>  you insist that mere discrimination by definition, is effort.
>
> In which case the monkey mind never is without effort and you've just
> changed MMY's entire analysis of TM and how it works.

Bingo!  Spare Egg gets it!  The whole field of Being is an effortful
processing.  Amness is a buzzingness.  Descrimination is effort.  Very
little effort, I grant you, but effort is effort is effort.  I think
Maharishi understood this nuance -- if the quotes we've read from him
recently here are true quotes, he knew some effort is required to
maintain the illusion of effortlessness.

Edg
>
>
> L.
>

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