Huh?  Oh, I meant the women in India.  From recent news reports there seems to 
be a lot of hyper frisky fellers there.



________________________________
 From: curtisdeltablues <[email protected]>
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Thursday, May 2, 2013 11:03 AM
Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: VI annual YFC!
 


  
--- In [email protected], Share Long <sharelong60@...> wrote:

Plus they are practical, meaning one could still flee or er apply one's knee to 
a feller's nether regions if he got too frisky.
>

Jesus Share, what do you have on your Match.com profile that would make you 
need this deterrent in Fairfield? 

> FWIW, I have never worn a sari in my life.  Friends, in misguided attempts 
> to convert me, have GIVEN me saris!  And I did try one on because it was a 
> beautiful shade of royal blue with gold trim, the blue making my eyes pop, as 
> the beauticians say.  But really, it reminds one too much of one's previous 
> life as a mummy ha ha.  And how the heck does one sit on foam in a sari?! 
> 
> 
> Anyway, punjabis, now that's another whole matter, though I don't have one of 
> those either.  Yet!  They are flowingly feminine and some are such 
> beautiful colors and have beads, etc.  And they can be sexy depending on 
> height of neckline.  Plus they are practical, meaning one could still flee 
> or er apply one's knee to a feller's nether regions if he got too frisky.  
> So punjabis I'm guessing are great for setting boundaries if one is about to 
> experience PhysR rather than PsyR or EmoR.  I'm just sayin.  
> 
> 
> As for YF competition, I don't.  Why?  Because, at least back in the old 
> days, one had to fly in lotus in order to compete.  I have never been able 
> to fly in lotus.  Faulty hip sockets according to Dr. K in Kahoka.  Born 
> with them.  Don't even sit in lotus, he said.  So I don't.
> 
> 
> As for mammaries and YF, of course bounciness depends on size of the girls, 
> as they're called in thermography circles, and strength of muscle holding up 
> all that fat.  Though will say that that muscle does seem to have gotten 
> stronger over the decades.
> 
> 
> As for impact friendly foam, I'd say the comfyness of foam depends on one's 
> karma.  BTW, that's a little levity for the levitators as my Mom would say. 
>  Yes, karma and skill at finding foam that doesn't feel like a stack of 
> bricks upon impact!
> 
> 
> ________________________________
>  From: Ann <awoelflebater@...>
> To: [email protected] 
> Sent: Wednesday, May 1, 2013 9:33 PM
> Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: VI annual YFC!
> 
> 
> 
>   
> 
> 
> --- In [email protected], Michael Jackson <mjackson74@> wrote:
> >
> > I'm sure Buck and others might have a word or two to contribute, but from 
> > what I remember of them, the youthful always win, and it is ironic in that 
> > you are correct, it is an athletic event, but treated quite seriously by 
> > the TM peoples as a genuine competition of who is most adept at enlivening 
> > the Absolute in their consciousness.
> > 
> > As to the gender of the competition, there have never been any public 
> > demonstrations or competitions of women flyers cuz it would be too 
> > salacious for the gals to go hopping round the Domes with their boobs 
> > flopping about,
> 
> Well, women do a whole lot of things that can cause the boobs to cavort 
> about, including riding a horse. However, even meditating women have heard of 
> the 'brassiere' and if things get a little wild in the mammary department 
> they could always don a sports bra. So, I am not sure I buy the explanation 
> of the impetuous breasts having a mind of their own while their owner bounces 
> along on a piece of impact-friendly foam that would be the reason to exclude 
> women from this otherwise equal-opportunity sport.
> 
> >I mean after all Marshy had to publicly maintain the facade that he was a no 
> >sex kind of guy (they started the competitions long ago when he was still 
> >alive and I think there were a few he presided over) and it just wouldn't be 
> >in the TM style for ladies to do such things in public.
> 
> Oh geez, sounds like the 1800's.
> > 
> > 
> > So no no no! It wouldn't do to have the gals doing something that might 
> > incite the men folks to lust - haven't you ever seen the ridiculous 
> > so-called saris the Mother Divine women wear? They show a heap more flesh 
> > in India with the authentic ones.
> 
> No, I have not yet had the privilege to witness white women walking around in 
> saris in Iowa. If ever an anachronism existed this could be a favourite.
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > ________________________________
> >  From: Ann <awoelflebater@>
> > To: [email protected] 
> > Sent: Wednesday, May 1, 2013 9:28 PM
> > Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: VI annual YFC!
> > 
> > 
> > 
> >   
> > 
> > 
> > --- In [email protected], Michael Jackson <mjackson74@> wrote:
> > >
> > > 
> > > 
> > > That was brilliant Curtis! And funny too. But who knows, maybe Buck will 
> > > use his farm muscles to out maneuver all of them on the foam.
> > 
> > I don't really understand what the 'competition' is all about. Do the men 
> > compete against the men and do the women have a competition too? And do the 
> > men always outdistance the women? And do the younger always outdistance the 
> > older? If so, then it seems doubtful any of this is flying. It sounds like 
> > a competition of strength - pure and simple. I don't think the mechanics of 
> > pushing off a piece of foam with brute force and intention would be the 
> > same as having some other physical law that governs the ability of a human 
> > being to fly, even though they have no jet engine or feathers or leathery 
> > wings or wings like an insect, and therefore lift off is not governed by 
> > strength at all but by that mysterious force of nature that would allow 
> > (although not, seemingly, so far yet in the history of TM) a humanoid to 
> > lift spontaneously off the floor. In other words, I don't buy it; having 
> > this competition is sort of like a strange parody of what the siddhi is
>  all
> >  about. I think it sort of demeans the whole thing although on another 
> > level I kind of like the fact that this event occurs because it is almost 
> > like a sort of self-imposed joke by the people who organize this. It is, in 
> > the end, an athletic event, IMVHO.
> > > 
> > > 
> > > ________________________________
> > >  From: curtisdeltablues <curtisdeltablues@>
> > > To: [email protected] 
> > > Sent: Wednesday, May 1, 2013 7:40 PM
> > > Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: VI annual YFC!
> > > 
> > > 
> > > 
> > >   
> > > This was always schtick, but now it is pathetic schtick with the younger 
> > > more flexible flyers kicking the asses of the older flyers with decades 
> > > more experience with the technique, exposing the emperor. 
> > > 
> > > And the crowd will watch younger more athletic "flyers" win every event 
> > > AGAIN, and no one will notice the ass cheeks of the whole theory on full 
> > > display. 
> > > 
> > > --- In [email protected], "card" <cardemaister@> wrote:
> > > >
> > > > 
> > > > Sixth Annual Yogic Flying Competition Coming May 5
> > > > A Yogic Flying® competition will be held at the Maharishi 
> > > > Patanjali Golden Domes May 5 at 2:00 p.m., featuring four events and a 
> > > > live demonstration of EEG during Yogic Flying practice.
> > > > "Yogic Flying is a technique that demonstrates the ability of 
> > > > individuals to enliven the total potential of natural law in the 
> > > > simplest form of their own awareness," said Dimitrios Karasis, 
> > > > president of the Ultimate Flying Club.
> > > > Sponsored by the Global Student Council and the Ultimate Flying Club, 
> > > > the competition will demonstrate the mind-body coordination of the 
> > > > participating Sidhas, students, staff, faculty, and Invincible America 
> > > > Assembly participants.
> > > > The event will feature four events: 25-meter dash, 25-meter hurdles, 
> > > > high jump, and long jump. First-, second-, and third-place medals will 
> > > > be awarded, and cash prizes will be given to the top contestants by the 
> > > > Super Radiance for Heaven on Earth Foundation.
> > > > There will also be a live demonstration of the EEG of Yogic Flying 
> > > > conducted by Fred Travis, director of the University's Center for 
> > > > Brain, Consciousness, and Cognition. Dr. Travis will explain how Yogic 
> > > > Flying practice brings about increased orderliness and coherence of 
> > > > brain functioning, demonstrating scientifically the value of this 
> > > > technology for human life. Group practice of the Transcendental 
> > > > Meditation and TM-Sidhi® programs, including Yogic Flying, has 
> > > > been found to reduce social stress and improve societal quality of life 
> > > > in a number of ways, including reduced crime and accident rates.
> > > > In the last 25 years, many Yogic Flying participants have come together 
> > > > to demonstrate the peace-creating effect of groups of Yogic Flyers, 
> > > > sometimes traveling to global hot spots and war-torn areas.
> > > > "A tiny percentage of any population can transform life for the entire 
> > > > population, simply by diving within," said Craig Pearson, MUM executive 
> > > > vice-president and author of The Complete Book of Yogic Flying. "Entire 
> > > > nations can be made invincible, impervious to negativity, by just a 
> > > > small number of people. This is the Maharishi Effect."
> > > > Everyone is invited to attend this event. Cookies will be served.
> > > > 
> > > > ---------------
> > > > 
> > > > Have an aning (~uh-ning; hunch in Swedish) we might testify something
> > > > extraordinary!
> > > >
> > >
> >
>


 

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