--- In [email protected], "Susan" <wayback71@...> wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], turquoiseb <no_reply@> wrote:
> >
> > --- In [email protected], "Susan" <wayback71@> wrote:
> > >
> > > I would not be so hard on the folks that bought in to this 
> > > stuff in the TMO. Many had doubts but were afraid to voice 
> > > them.  We all have our "stuff" and we were young and devoted 
> > > and I think this was a time when you were with Rama, who 
> > > also had his own peculiar version of bat shit crazy crap.
> > 
> > Absolutely. I'm just having fun seeing how a few
> > people react to having their behavior described
> > the way someone not part of the TM movement might
> > see and describe it. My guess is that for many of
> > them it may be a novel experience.
> 
> Yep - we all became professional grade " modifiers" of what 
> was really going on in the TMO.  We got to be to be very 
> very very good at knowing how to explain it all so as not 
> to have people think you were all into something truly weird.  

Yup. And I'm certainly not suggesting that the Rama
trip or other spiritual orgs I've encountered were
free of this, merely that for them it never quite 
got to the point of absurdity like claiming that
"when we bounce on our butts we're creating world 
peace." 

What I've found interesting since starting this thread
is that no one -- not even the near-professional apol-
ogists on this forum -- have attempted *to* create a 
rational explanation for how bouncing on their butts
creates world peace. Most have just gone the "kill the
messenger" route and attempted to lash out at the 
person who pointed out (correctly) how absurd it is.

In the Rama trip, about the worst I saw was an attempt
to say that his frequent attempt to make predictions 
were always correct, the result of correct "seeing" or
psychic abilities. Me, I didn't buy it, so I started
writing them down, and then comparing what was predicted 
to how things turned out later. Turns out he was correct 
*at best* 50% of the time, same as if he'd flipped a 
coin. But I'd bet that if you asked most of his former
students, they'd claim he was "always correct."

Another funny thing around him had to do with his freq-
uent "misspeaks." For example, he'd mispronounce someone's
name (turning Jean Michel Jarre into Jarré), or misre-
membering the name of a movie (turning "Full Metal Jacket" 
into "Heavy Metal Jacket"). The hilarious thing was that
not only would no one ever correct him, they'd start pro-
nouncing the name that way and calling the movie by that
name themselves, as if his version was "better."  :-)

People are funny. Having invested heavily in something
or someone (especially when that emotional and intellec-
tual investment is accompanied by a heavy financial
investment), they'll tend to do almost *anything* to
avoid dealing with the possibility that they might have
made a mistake, or just been gullible. The only unusual
aspect of that phenomenon in the TMO is *how long* many
people have persisted in doing it, and how upset they
get when someone points it out.


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