I thought you had to do a couple of (expensive) advanced techniques
before they'd let you into the hopping room to learn sidhas. Am I wrong
about that? [And the SCI basic course also.]

--- In [email protected], doctordumbass@...  wrote:
>
> Hi, No, I was not a TM teacher. When I reached the point of going on
TTC I was disenchanted with the org, so it didn't happen. I worked for
the TMO three different times for about three years, total - did the
sids also, but no advanced techniques, or any of the stuff from the last
30 years.
>
> Yeah I get what you are saying, and agree that the most important
distinction is that the 'end state' if you will, keeps growing.
Paradoxically, that sustainability is one element that defines it,
unlike the perfect mood/thought/bank account or or other static symbol,
that the ego associates with enlightenment, prior to consciousness being
established in silence.
>
> --- In [email protected], Bhairitu noozguru@ wrote:
> >
> > Well my problem was that having been a TM teacher and I think you
were
> > too, I *never* heard the term "TM Style Enlightenment".  That's
> > something Lawson made up and we know Lawson was *not* a TM teacher. 
And
> > I think he made it up to support his argument.  Lawson, please don't
do
> > that.  You're smart guy and shouldn't need to do such things.
> >
> > I've always found that the different levels as MMY defined them just
> > seems to confuse TM'ers and it's sort of irrelevant anyway. Once a
> > meditator (regardless of the technique) notices they still are
> > experiencing the transcendent coming out of meditation and carrying
> > through activity then they are on the road to moksha which is how
many
> > other paths define it.  You can call "moksha" enlightenment if you
want
> > but the word "enlightenment" carries a lot of implications to
westerners
> > that the abstract Sanskit term "moksha" does not.  It's a growing
state
> > which was what MMY was saying and other teachers say.  In fact I
would
> > submit there are TM'ers who are in CC but so confused because they
are
> > looking for something flashier (I guess celestial visions) rather
than
> > just an underlying silence or that experience that you don't exist
> > unless called upon to localize awareness.
> >
> > The problem with carrying on research between different schools is
that
> > many of  the more traditional schools don't give a damn about
research.
> > They just make their techniques available and if it works for the
> > student fine and if it doesn't feel free to move on to something
else.
> > And no need to validate by research.  If there is any difference
between
> > TM and other techniques it would be because of the lack of omkara
which
> > would most likely produce a different brain activation pattern than
a
> > technique without.  But that's only a difference and different
mantras
> > too should produce different patterns.
> >
> > On 07/18/2013 05:47 AM, doctordumbass@ wrote:
> > > Ok, but it is incorrect to refer to those two different
expressions of the physiology, as two different types of enlightenment.
> > >
> > > Once liberation is achieved, it is exactly the same, no matter
what the means. The eternal freedom achieved through the practice of TM,
is identical to that achieved through any other means. If it isn't, it
isn't Moksha.
> > >
> > > TM is a very reliable means to clean up the body and mind.
However, there are no precursors to enlightenment. It results when we
are somehow permanently attuned to, and living, the Grace of life. How
we get there is a mystery that reveals itself, once we are established
in  total freedom.
> > >
> > >
> >
>

Reply via email to