In my tradition shaktipat is given by touch.  A lot of other traditions 
do it this way.  Did you know that Maharishi also gave shaktipat when he 
first taught meditation?

What non-TM people have you been impressed by?

On 10/16/2012 02:06 PM, Share Long wrote:
> Silently making eye contact and I do remember the word shakitpat being used a 
> few times.  In the beginning only teachers and mentors gazed with others.  
> Now everyone gazes with everyone.  Since I didn't like it, I'm probably not 
> the best to describe its benefits.
>
> How is shaktipat given in your tradition?
>
>
> guy at the gas station=Buddha At the Gas Pump?
>
> Impressed?  Most recently I have been impressed by Dr. Nader because he seems 
> brilliant AND compassionate AND down to earth.  He is leading a very human 
> life with a wife and children and a medical practice.
>
>
>
> ________________________________
>   From: Bhairitu <noozg...@sbcglobal.net>
> To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
> Sent: Tuesday, October 16, 2012 2:38 PM
> Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Saniel Bonder in Fairfield visits
>   
>
>    
> What is "the gazing"?  I've been taught to give shaktipat by my tantra
> guru but it doesn't involve any "gazing."  Sometimes I wonder if these
> people had any authentic teacher or just some charlatan from India.
> There are probably more than a few Indians in the US who have learned
> tantra and some are astrologers and others are quiet maybe helping
> someone if they ask.  And then there is the guy at the gas station who
> decided to call himself a Swami for some extra money.
>
> It's a good thing to spend a few months testing a teacher and boning up
> on the field through books such as Dr. Robert Svoboda's excellent
> trilogy (on what it is like to be a westerner learning from an authentic
> tantric).
>
> I would also be interested in what kind of things "impress" people?
>
> On 10/16/2012 10:55 AM, Share Long wrote:
>> laughing because different strokes, etc.  I rarely liked the gazing.  OTOH, 
>> I wasn't comfortable attending and NOT participating in gazing.  And they 
>> don't like people coming late to avoid the gazing...
>>
>>
>> WDM gave me a steady spiritual family when I first left campus.  I'll always 
>> be grateful for that.  Even so, I was never looking for another theory of 
>> consciounsess, etc. so I didn't mind their lack of that.  And I do think the 
>> whole mutuality angle is an important one that very few others discuss.
>>
>>
>> Didn't go last night but am busting with curiosity about it (-:
>>
>>
>>
>> ________________________________
>>    From: Alex Stanley <j_alexander_stan...@yahoo.com>
>> To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
>> Sent: Tuesday, October 16, 2012 12:49 PM
>> Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: Saniel Bonder in Fairfield visits
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "feste37" <feste37@...> wrote:
>>>
>>> And it cost $20 too. I see Bonder as a guy with a few ideas, which
>>> may or may not be helpful to some people.
>> Waking Down is a small, niche path that is certainly not for everyone.
>>
>>> I have heard him twice, and can't say I have been overwhelmingly
>>> impressed.
>> I wasn't at all impressed the first time I went to see him and Linda at the 
>> FF library, about 10 years ago. But, on his next trip to FF, he was here 
>> with Pascal Salesses, a WD teacher who had just moved to FF, and I felt a 
>> connection with her. I'm grateful that Saniel started WD, but I've always 
>> connected better with some of the other teachers. And, I can't even begin to 
>> get through his books. For me, the WD experience had nothing to do with 
>> ideas; it was all about the gazing.
>>
>>
>>
>
>   

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