Well said, salyavin.

As for me, this morning I was at home in my apartment in Paris,
waiting for the torrential rain to let up enough so that I can run to
the Metro and go to work, and while waiting began to surf the TV
channels and found a show actually being broadcast in English. I
had heard of it before, because it's mentioned so often on Huffpost
and on other social media outlets, but I had never seen it before.

Now that I have finally seen "Glee," I am convinced that it's pretty
much the perfect metaphor not only for Fairfield Life, but for the
fantasy projected lifestyle that many have come to believe is their
real lifestyle.

I mean, the basic metaphor is an American high school. That's
pretty much synonymous with superficiality, self-absorption, and
lack of contact with reality, right? It's rife with drama queens,
real queens, cliques, mean girl clubs, poseurs, and idiots who
believe they're geniuses.

If you live in the US and haven't seen it, I think you'd find it
*remarkably* reminiscent of Fairfield Life. And possibly life in
Fairfield itself.

Where else, after all, could you find a bunch of people ecstatic
that the rules have been lifted and now they can spend as much
time as they want ragging on the people they don't like, the ones
not "cool enough" to be in their "club?" Only on FFL, and GLEE.

:-)

--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "salyavin808"  wrote:
>
> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "sparaig" LEnglish5@ wrote:
> >
> > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, turquoiseb  wrote:
> > [...]
> > >
> > > That's the thing that TBs never seem to realize about
> > > their dreams of an "Age Of Enlightenment" -- how BORING
> > > it would be.
> >
> > Do you really believe that things would be boring if everyone
meditated?
>
> Things would be exactly the same if everyone meditated. Look
> at this place, look at the TMO. I think the point is that *if*
> you got your dreamed of AoE you wouldn't have any of the fun,
> rows and scandals that seem such a motiff around here and in
> the wider movement.
>
> > I mean, I'd expect fewer crimes and such, but look at the famous
people who have been meditating for 40 years: are they boring?
>
> The only one I can think of is Lynch and I would definitely
> say his career has been sinking to ever more anodyne lows
> as the years go by. The rest of the long termers, Bevan etc,
> don't strike me as embodying any values I would have associated
> with enlightenment before I actually knew what the score was.
>
> I suspect you have an idea of what the AoE would be like but keep
> getting it confused with mundane reality. That's the TMOs bad, it
> keeps up the myth of a perfect life for all but has yet to deliver
> even a glimpse for us to get excited over, seems like it's all
> dogma to me - get the east facing house, eat the right food, pay
> for the yagyas, get to the dome twice a day and voila! Or not...
>
> > Creating a situation where you operate at lower stress-levels
shouldn't make a lick of difference as to how interesting or
uninteresting people find you unless it is the self-destructive impulses
due to stress that people are finding interesting.
>
> This is often the way with music and art. And war has always
> been the biggest motivator of industry, do you think we would
> have got to the moon without the Rusky threat, no chance. Forget
> Mars, and Jeebus, in what way would people spending 4 hours a day
> in the dome make them more likely to build huge rockets. It gives
> you *less* time to do stuff, the "accomplish more" thing is a joke
> isn't it?
>
> > DO you think that the existence of crime and war in the world make
the world a more interesting place to live? What if we used those same
resources to go to Mars or devise a better educational system, or a
better Internet?
> >
> > Wouldn't the world be at least as interesting in that situation?
>
> It would be interesting to live in a fantasy world yes. But I don't
> see any great discoveries coming from meditators, unless I missed
> something, I think TM - fundamentally - don't do jack shit, you are
either a great thinker to start with, or you aren't.
>
> Would Einstein have discovered things quicker if he spent 20x20 in
> a trance? We'll never know but we can be sure that if he got
brainwashed by the reesh he would have made as many wild unprovable and
speculative claims about physics as certain other "scientists"
> I could mention. 50 years of meditation has failed *utterly* in this
regard. Hagelin has *not* finished Einstein's work.
>
> > L
> >
>


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