---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <authfriend@...> wrote:
Maharishi said that everyone passes through transcendence as they go from one state of consciousness to another (waking to dreaming to sleeping and back again). He probably would not have recommended trying to hold one's awareness in that in-between stage, at least not for ordinary meditators. Sounds to me as though Ramana Maharshi was turning a description of his spontaneous experience into a prescription for practice instead of just letting it develop naturally in his students. Ann, one might well not notice an instant of transcendence between waking and sleeping--it's easy enough to miss when one is meditating (since there's quite literally nothing to it, nothing to be aware of). Yes, and I make this point in a recent post to Seraphita. You know, this transcendence business is a funny one because it seems like you only realize you were transcending after the fact and that is kind of like having had amnesia and someone tells you that for the last five minutes you were bellydancing except you don't remember a thing. ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <s3raphita@...> wrote: Re Ann's "The transition between waking and sleeping is not transcendence in my book. It is full of thoughts and awareness that do not feel transcendental at all.": So you are *not* doing what Maharshi says. You have to hold your awareness at the point you wake up *before* thoughts arise. Presumably it worked for Ramana because he was in a state of Unity already; his suggestion is that it could work for others also. I mention him as his ideas rather nicely dovetail with Lynch's description of transcending during meditation. And I mention Lynch and the commentator on the article as their take on TM as an intermediate state between sleep and waking is more helpful than the Official TM approach using bubble diagrams. Re Richard's "Meditation means "to think things over". So, TM meditation is based on thinking. Anyone who can think is probably already practising a basic meditation.": If "meditation" means thinking then "Transcendental Meditation" suggests "going beyond thinking". But "meditation" only means thinking in western contexts. Easterners use whatever word they use in their language for "meditation" in a sense closer to western ideas of "contemplation".