--- In [email protected], "Llundrub" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Yeah, funny. That's not Vaj. 
> As for the quote, I don't see it.
the quoted self-descriptions are taken from his website. He wrote the
text in the first-person and posted it as "swami truthananda" in
alt.meditation.transcendental
> 
> 
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: shukra69 
> To: [email protected] 
> Sent: Sunday, July 10, 2005 11:59 AM
> Subject: [FairfieldLife] Vaj tries to blame TM for his mental ilnesses'
> 
> 
> describes himself as "evangelical" "orthodox" "Catholic"
"traditionalist"
> Christian":
> http://www.shunyata.net/new/home.htm
> 
> 
> I'm an 18 year veteran of the Transcendental Meditation movement. I
> was recruited into this destructive cult in 1974. I'd taken a year off
> of college between my junior and senior years. I was dissatisfied with
> my major, feeling confused and without clear goals. I decided to work
> for a 
> year, hoping to get my future into sharper focus. One day during my 
> "sabbatical" from college, I saw a poster with Maharishi's picture on 
> it, advertising a free introductory lecture on the stress releasing 
> benefits of Transcendental Meditation. I attended the lecture, 
> interested to find out if TM could supply a natural way tap into the 
> mental potential I was convinced I wasn't taking full advantage of. I 
> was also hoping it would help me relax. 
> 
> The teacher was persuasive, using charts and graphs to "prove" 
> scientifically that TM increased intelligence, reduced stress, and 
> expanded human potential. This was exactly what I wanted, and I signed 
> up to learn the technique as soon as possible.  
> 
> I experienced immediate benefits from practicing the TM technique. It 
> relaxed me, sharpened my sensory awareness, improved my memory, and
gave 
> me a deep, contented feeling I'd never experienced in my entire life. I 
> was hooked! But I remember being disturbed when the series of follow-up 
> lectures, required for learning the technique, involved being taught a 
> philosophy that was foreign to me. It was presented as the absolute 
> truth. Critical questions were answered with pat replies. I had 
> resistance to this information about cosmic consciousness, states of 
> enlightenment, etc. but my critical thinking mechanisms had been 
> weakened because of the profound effect the Transcendental Meditation 
> technique was having on me. I remember a clear point when my defenses 
> against it suddenly crashed, and I no longer resisted absorbing the 
> "knowledge." I'd snapped. 
> 
> After practicing the TM technique on my own for 3 years, the TM
movement 
> came out with an advanced technique called the TM Sidhi program, or the 
> levitation technique. It was the hottest new thing in the movement. 
> Everyone wanted to learn how to "fly." I was so eager to learn, I quit 
> my job, packed up all my things, and moved to Fairfield, Iowa, the home 
> of Maharishi International University (MIU). MIU is an accredited 
> university, with the TM philosophy forming the basis for every 
> discipline taught there. They had just started a volunteer staff 
> program, whereby you would work for a year in exchange for getting the 
> TM Sidhi program, which cost $3000 at the time. I jumped at the chance! 
> I realized many years later that I'd been subjected to mind control 
> techniques from the very beginning of my involvement in TM, but after I 
> moved to MIU, the thought reform greatly intensified. 
> 
> I became so indoctrinated by the TM philosophy that my touch with 
> reality was sharply severed. I ended up becoming extremely dependent on 
> the TM community, living there for the next 15 years. What drew me to 
> the group was a sense of belonging that I'd never experienced any other 
> time in my life. I had a lifestyle and framework from which to live
that 
> was simple, upbeat, and gave my life a much needed direction. I made 
> many good friends in Fairfield, was given opportunities to do jobs that 
> in the real world would have required vocational training which I
didn't 
> have. But in 1984, the positive aspects of my experience in the TM 
> community began to be overshadowed by the start of a nightmare. It
began 
> with my first mental breakdown -- a psychotic break. I had delusions of 
> grandeur, I stopped sleeping, and acted inappropriately. I was
picked up 
> by MIU security, and committed to a state mental hospital. What I
didn't 
> realize at the time is that this would be the first of 20 psychiatric 
> hospitalizations that I would experience while in the TM movement. 
> 
> I was diagnosed with manic depressive illness. The psychotic break was 
> labeled as a manic episode. Then soon after, I began suffering from 
> clinical depression. I was put on medication, began seeing a counselor, 
> but continued to experience long bouts of depression and anxiety. I'd 
> gone into the TM movement full of promise and potential. I'd always 
> excelled at jobs, and was quickly promoted to management positions. But 
> for the first time in my life, I was being taken aside and told that I 
> wasn't being productive enough on the job, and was threatened with 
> termination if I didn't improve. 
> 
> The mood swings continued, and eventually I was being hospitalized
every 
> 3 or 4 months. My self-confidence deteriorated. And it got so bad that 
> for two years I had suicidal thoughts every single day. I wanted to
die, 
> but I was afraid to kill myself. Eventually I was laid off from my job, 
> became homeless, finally moving into a seedy hotel room which I rented 
> by the week. My life had become a shambles -- a distant cry from the 
> success the TM movement had promised if I meditated twice day, as I had 
> continued to do. 
> 
> I began sleeping during the day, and staying up all night reading. I 
> read a book on Jim Jones and the Jonestown massacre. This peaked my 
> interest in cults. I found the book Combatting Cult Mind Control by 
> Steve Hassan at the local library. As I read through the 8 criteria
of a 
> cult, I broke out in a sweat, fear running through my entire body. I 
> suddenly realized that TM was a cult, and it struck me between the eyes 
> that I needed to get out as soon as possible. 
> 
> I contacted several of the therapists and exit counselors listed in the 
> back of the book. They answered my many questions, and reaffirmed my 
> instinct to leave as soon as possible. I didn't want to lose my window 
> of clarity, falling back into the cult mindset and losing my nerve to 
> get out. So I packed up my car with all my belongings and my two dogs, 
> and drove out of Fairfield for good. I left behind 15 years of 
> friendships, the only lifestyle I'd known in my adult life, and a
belief 
> system I'd been completely indoctrinated to embrace. Cults condition
you 
> to be phobic about leaving the group. In my case, I was having
images of 
> being in a terrible car accident. I thought I'd be punished by
spiritual 
> forces for betraying Maharishi. 
> 
> I moved to another town in Iowa in order to start my new life
outside of 
> the cult. I wasn't prepared for how difficult it would be. I was
excited 
> with my new found freedom. I was learning all over again what it meant 
> to live in a democracy instead of the totalitarian system I was used to 
> in the TM community. But I was having extreme problems with
dissociation 
> -- an adverse side effect of all those years of meditation. I had great 
> difficulty fitting in socially. I made many mistakes, misreading
people. 
> Plus I was naive, and didn't know how to protect myself from people who 
> would take advantage of me. After 4 months out, I was feeling very 
> isolated, scared, and confused. Then I had the worst psychotic episode 
> of my life. 
> 
> I got myself to a hospital, terrified because voices inside my head
were 
> telling me to kill myself. I felt compelled to do myself harm, and 
> instinctively knew I had to get to a place where I would be protected 
> from myself. The internal struggle was intense, and I believe a direct 
> result of the confusion and despair I was experiencing as a result
of my 
> readjustment to mainstream society. 
> 
> After being released from the hospital, I began doing more reading on 
> cult recovery. I started seeing a counselor at the mental health
center, 
> hoping for help. She was a wonderful person, but completely 
> inexperienced with cult recovery. I saw her weekly for over 2 years, 
> becoming more and more confused and discouraged, feeling there must be 
> something inherently flawed in me, because the therapy wasn't working. 
> 
> Then I came across Dr. Margaret Singer's new book, Cults in Our
Midst. I 
> devoured the chapters on recovery, recognizing myself on every page.
She 
> described my exact symptoms, making me realize I wasn't flawed, and
that 
> I was having a normal reaction to an abnormal cult situation. I knew 
> then that I had to see a cult recovery specialist. There wasn't a
single 
> one in the state of Iowa, so I decided to do everything in my power to 
> get to Wellspring, the only residential cult recovery treatment center 
> in the country. 
> 
> I spent three weeks at Wellspring. I'd put on a brave front up until 
> that point, and didn't realize just how hopeless I'd been until I 
> finally got the proper help. When I was finally at the retreat, and 
> surrounded by people who understood the trauma I'd been experiencing, I 
> realized just how close I'd come to killing myself. Wellspring was a 
> clear turning point for me. I shudder to think where I'd be in my life 
> now without it. I received a good balance of individual counseling, 
> education, techniques to combat the dissociation, and a much needed 
> rest. I have a very thorough understanding of mind control now, which 
> has helped me stop blaming myself for what happened to me. I was 
> tentatively rediagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. I'd 
> suspected for many years that I didn't have true manic depressive 
> illness. It doesn't occur in my family and I didn't have all the
classic 
> symptoms. 
> 
> I learned at Wellspring that psychosis can result from being
traumatized 
> in a cult. Depression is also common among cult victims. Because so 
> little is known among mental health professionals about cult trauma, 
> victims are often misdiagnosed with manic depression, schizophrenia, or 
> some other mental illness. I spent 10 years of my life without getting 
> the proper help for the abuse I suffered in the TM movement. Getting to 
> Wellspring was an incredible relief for me because FINALLY I got the 
> help I needed. 
> 
> I'm on a good road now. I have an excellent therapist locally, who is 
> helping me continue to challenge the cult conditioning. I wish I could 
> say my life turned around immediately after Wellspring, but it's
still a 
> hard road. I was in the TM movement nearly all of my adult life. It
will 
> take time for me to recover. But I'm less depressed now. I have less 
> anxiety. I haven't had a single symptom of mania. I've been on 
> disability benefits for 3 years, having become so debilitated by my
cult 
> experience I could no longer work. I'm now looking for a part-time job, 
> and feeling more capable of working than I have in years. I still have 
> difficulty making friends. I developed social phobia after leaving TM 
> because of the enormous betrayal I felt from my cult experience. I'm 
> slowly able to spend more time with friends, which is a good sign. 
> 
> I feel hopeful about my future, and know that I will recover
completely. 
> I have a great deal of potential, that was thwarted and sidelined by my 
> time in the cult, but I'm confident now that I will find peace and 
> happiness in the years to come.
> 
> 
> 
> 
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