OMFG get a clue, next time please keep your intellectual vomit to
yourselves no one other than my deluded Aunt Share even pays attention
to your bullshit.


--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Ravi Chivukula  wrote:
>
> Do you realize Grandpa Xeno how psychopathically deranged your
experiences
> sound? You are too alienated emotionally, psychologically - god I felt
so
> sick reading your vomit.
>
>
>
>
> On Sun, Aug 25, 2013 at 12:42 PM, Xenophaneros Anartaxius <
> anartaxius@... wrote:
>
> > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "authfriend" authfriend@
wrote:
> > > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "Xenophaneros Anartaxius"
> >  wrote:
> > >> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "authfriend"  wrote:
> > >>
> > >>> Over the years I've been on this forum, I have gradually ceased
to
> > believe that there is a universally applicable scheme for the
development
> > of enlightenment, such that if someone doesn't have *this*
experience or
> > does have *that* experience, it means they are (or are not)
enlightened.
> > >>
> > >>> Some experiences (or lack of same) may be more common than
others, but
> > you can't make absolute, across-the-board "rules" that apply to all
> > individuals without exception, any more than you can do it with the
> > experience of falling in love. The uniqueness of first-person
ontology
> > remains just that.
> > >>
> > >>> My opinion, anyway.
> > >>
> > >>> [to Dr Dumbass] Not what I meant by "scheme." I meant something
like
> > Maharishi's "Seven States of Consciousness"--an outline, format, a
> > schedule, a list of "symptoms."
> > >>
> > >> First-person ontology is the thing that enlightenment gets rid
of,
> > >
> > > I question this and every other statement you've made
> > > in this post that you apply across the board, as opposed
> > > to describing your own experience.
> >
> > I am describing my own experience. That is all I have. There is just
> > experience. Not experiences, with an 's', but experience, singular.
> > Experience*s* are like sub directories or folders on a computer. It
is not
> > uncommon these days, others on this forum certainly seem to be
experiencing
> > something similar.
> >
> > There are a number of people in Fairfield having this kind of
experience.
> > And, I am confident, many others in all walks of life having these
> > experiences. It is in the air. It is not just a matter of TM, there
are
> > lots of groups and people bent on awakening and succeeding.
> >
> > I say these things across the board because that is the way I
experience
> > these things and there is some support in the environment for this
way of
> > describing human experience in long term meditators. None of this is
> > special with me.
> >
> > You have every prerogative to question (although you have not
actually
> > questioned anything above, you have only stated that you question
it).
> > Mapping out benchmarks for spiritual development is a minefield
because as
> > you said, 'I think there are likely many exceptions and anomalies',
so
> > there are people who are not going to fit the mold. My outline using
the
> > terms M used is just one way one could try to map general categories
of
> > experience.
> >
> > For example, Charles Manson shows a number of characteristics of
unity if
> > we examine his statements, but he is also insane, a psychopath, and
lacks
> > certain characteristics that a presumably normal person would have,
so he
> > would be a significant outlier in any scheme that purports to
categorise
> > enlightenment benchmarks.
> >
> > I have a collection of Classical music recordings. I always have
trouble
> > trying to shelf them in some coherent way. My system here is
generally by
> > time period and the composer's name, using the date of death as a
marker
> > within a time period and beyond that I can remember where most
composers
> > lie on the time line.
> >
> > I think M's scheme for enlightenment is workable for many people, it
is
> > more detailed than some schemes, but in the end any scheme turns out
to be
> > nonsense, but it has applicability for giving one a bearing while on
the
> > path. If a person's experience is anomalous, a scheme will appear to
be
> > wrong to that person.
> >
> > In retrospect a scheme might even seem more on point than when one
was on
> > the path, because when you are on the path, you do not really know
what you
> > are headed for, or even where you are, and a benchmark isn't a
specific
> > experience, it is an general category of experience so making a
mistake in
> > interpreting what is going on is certainly a reasonable assumption.
Even
> > the belief in a scheme might be useful just to keep you going.
> >
> > My experiences were in some ways anomalous and that led to much
doubt. I
> > went through a long period where I did not want to read anything
about
> > spiritual development, meditating all the while, but just not
interested in
> > hearing about or discussing it. Also run-of-the-mill TM discussions
can be
> > incredibly boring.
> >
> > At any point in a spiritual path all one really needs is information
that
> > applies directly to what one's experience or experiences are just at
that
> > time, and not any other drivel; it does not always work to apply
cookie
> > cutter templates.
> >
> > The TM movement does not really want you to look at other stuff, but
> > eventually that is what helped me most; I took complete control of
my
> > 'program' away from the movement over time because it failed to
provide the
> > information I needed when I needed it.
> >
> > I experimented and researched. But eventually it was kind of full
circle,
> > I ended up reading about things that initially propelled me on the
journey,
> > and found answers to questions I could not find easily within the TM
org
> > and TM teachers.
> >
> > What propelled the restoration of interest in all this was a sudden
> > unexpected shift in experience. Everything I had thought had failed,
proved
> > in retrospect to have been useful, but to have had more specific
> > information at specific times in my life would possibly have made
the
> > process more efficient.
> >
> > The only reason I write here is to clarify the nature of my
experience.
> > This was also a big help, including the attacks. Learning to
navigate
> > opposition when experiencing basically non-opposition is a very
peculiar
> > exercise. Someone can say something that can polish up clarity on a
point,
> > but that point is not quintessentially a function of intellect.
> >
> > Bear in mind that when dealing with enlightenment, one is ultimately
not
> > dealing with rational discourse, but dealing with a quality of life
that
> > underlies, so to speak, everything else in experience, one attempts
to
> > align with that, but one is not always able to apply the intellect
to a
> > situation because intellect is a subset of experience, kind of in
its own
> > little compartment; it handles attempting to organise verbal
> > representations a wider world of experience, but is not that
experience,
> > it's a filter for that experience, which means something is cut out
or
> > blocked when it is use.
> >
> > If you fail to align with the wider experience, you try again, and
again.
> > You are not polishing your intellect - it might improve, or even get
worse.
> > You are polishing something you cannot even see, kind of like a
seagull
> > riding the currents of the air, learning to gracefully move on a
bedrock of
> > mystery.
> >
> > Waking up, or waking down, whichever way it goes does not matter
because
> > waking is the common element, is not a green card to nirvana. It is
like
> > your life is a building that has just been totally demolished, and
you now
> > have to build it anew, with a new understanding which simply cannot
have
> > the gravity the previous one did because you know it is not really
true,
> > but has a practical value only. The things thought about, as
thought, is
> > kind of like a comic book version of the wider perspective, of which
one
> > can not really say anything.
> >
> > If lucky, I suppose, much of the demolition happens in the
background
> > during all the years of meditating and search, so waking up from the
dream
> > might be gentle. If not, you might think you have gone insane, and
you
> > really do need some guidance. I have heard people say they thought
> > something was seriously wrong when the awakening happened, because
the
> > nature of the experience, however well prepared, was so unlike what
they
> > expected. But if the experience is clear enough, you can't go back.
You are
> > stuck in the ocean without an oar; you are the ocean in a specific
sense
> > which really cannot be described, so an oar would do no good in any
case.
> > To all the people in my life that made this possible, a heartfelt
Thank You.
> >
> > PS Judy, as this is a response to you, I am listening to the Dies
Irae
> > from Verdi's Messa da Requiem, just in case I need preparation for
any
> > potentially forthcoming response. :-)
> >
> > >> one ends up with a unity-centric ontology, the basic progression
is
> > that the mind's focus on individuality shifts to universality, and
the ego
> > is left without a job. The ego is why a person fears death. It's a
fiction
> > that conveniently wraps around various processes going on in
experience,
> > but it dies with great difficulty for most.
> > >>
> > >> Conventionally we still use nomenclature when we converse with
other
> > bodies because it simplifies communication to say 'yours', 'mine',
'me',
> > 'I', etc., when transferring information between minds. As we start
out,
> > everyone has a personal ontology experience, so what is unique about
what
> > everyone has? It's like different coloured coffee cups, that are
otherwise
> > all the same.
> > >>
> > >> The basic scheme of enlightenment is 'me' progressing to
'everything
> > all together'. The details in between I think are pretty much as you
> > surmise - different people experience the letting go of initial
state of
> > spiritual progress differently, though there seem to be some basic
> > commonalities.
> > >>
> > >> In attempting to 'harmonise' various traditions, I would say the
common
> > states described would correspond to M's WC, CC, and UC/BC.
Traditions with
> > meditation might add TC, although some, perhaps those meditating
with
> > mindfulness kinds of meditation, may not experience TC at all
because that
> > meditation is really aimed at UC (which is probably why many find it
more
> > difficult than TM).
> > >>
> > >> Mindfulness meditators may become aware at some point they are in
a
> > state that is with TM called CC; in other words, TC is not
necessarily
> > described as the goal, since in this meditation, you just sit there
> > silently, which is how meditation functions in unity, there not
being an
> > inward and outward stroke. As far as I am aware, TM is not
necessarily
> > superior to these other methods as far as the final result; more
important
> > may be how much you want the final result. GC is more interesting as
some
> > traditions would consider the refined visions of GC as just sensory
> > illusions, which then dissipate when unity dawns.
> > >>
> > >> The greatest difficulty I have heard people mention when talking
of
> > their experience outside of the TM movement is the loss of the sense
of
> > small self, or ego. Some people simply chicken out when they see
that
> > enlightenment is not about personal ontology. If they manage to
chicken out
> > prior to a very clear awakening, they might be able to go back to
being the
> > fake person they were before without much difficulty. People with a
strong
> > ego-structured mind might have the most resistance to this process
of
> > 'enlightenment'. Some people become frightened, really frightened.
They
> > have so much invested in 'who they are'.
> > >>
> > >> Enlightenment is not about your specialness in any way other than
the
> > capacity to be enlightened, so when you reach that threshold where
you can
> > go either way, you can either be a coward, or accept the fact you
are going
> > to die before your physical death. If the awakening is clear enough
you do
> > not get to go back, and any remaining issues you have you just have
to hack
> > through them, which really means they hack through the fictional
'you'
> > until that 'you' is basically history. This is not necessarily
pleasant.
> > >>
> > >> I think you are correct in assuming that the progression of
experience
> > is highly variable depending on the starting point and the 'karma'
of the
> > person, the history associated with an individual body. Some never
make it;
> > some breeze through without a hitch or any seeming progression (a
very
> > small number), and everyone else is in between somewhere.
> > >>
> > >> I suppose if you had a map of what might happen, it might be like
a map
> > of the United States with New York on one side, and San Francisco on
the
> > other, and some vague change of colour in between annotated with
blurry
> > text that cannot be read clearly.
> > >>
> > >> You follow the map, thinking you are going to reach, say, San
Francisco
> > from New York. Some of that indistinct stuff in the middle of the
map might
> > happen or not. You might get upset that you cannot find your way. In
the
> > end, you find you were tricked. You never left New York, but now
'you' have
> > a completely different perspective on life, the consciousness no
longer
> > identifies with the personal 'me' shtick process running in the mind
and
> > the mind itself somehow acquiesces this state of affairs, so it does
not
> > matter. And this explanation is a big, big lie. But it might serve.
> > >>
> > >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > ------------------------------------
> >
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> >
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> > http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairfieldLife/
> > and click 'Join This Group!'Yahoo! Groups Links
> >
> >
> >
> >
>

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