Gotta agree with Salyavin here -- no buzz whatsoever. I instructed hundreds of 
people, and thus did hundreds of pujas, and never felt a damned thing. 


I'm convinced that the "buzz" thing is mood-making and the placebo effect.



________________________________
 From: salyavin808 <[email protected]>
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 25, 2014 6:17 PM
Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: No Mantra will cure willfully arrogant 
stupidity
 


I didn't get a buzz from the puja, I enjoyed the chanting and the exotic 
unexpectedness of it though and getting the mantra at the end was clever, it 
worked straight away too. I was hooked from day one - regardless of the 
etymology of the terms ;-)

I think you'll have a job getting the "aspects of natural law" excuse past the 
fundies though, a blue elephant worshipped by Hindu's is still a blue elephant 
no matter what you call it....


---In [email protected], <noozguru@...> wrote :


So did you get a "buzz" from the puja? 
You should and that's probably why you liked it.  The "buzz" would
be the increase of "shakti" which is something not well understood
by western science.

Another thing we need to remember is that just the word "Hindu"
was a form of ignorance created by invaders of the Indus Valley
who could not pronounce a word starting with "I" so they put an
"H" in front.  Sort of of a joke.

And "Hinduism" just like MMY said, is indeed a philosophy just
like Buddhism and not a religion.  The "invaders" also thought the
practices constituted a "religion."  And truly there are some
Indians who practice it "religiously." :-D 


On 03/25/2014 08:07 AM, salyavin808 wrote:
>
 
>
>
>
>
No Mantra will cure willfully arrogant stupidity? Hmmm, seems like that's the
sort of thing meditation was designed for. Is it too late for a
refund? 
>
>
>I don't know why
you people get so upset at a few inconvenient facts. I'm
an athiest and I loved the puja, all that bowing and
singing and incense, just like some sort of religious
thing but not a religious thing because it was all in
foreign and quite enjoyable anyway, so why would it
matter? Unless you are some sort of religious person who
has what they are allowed to do proscribed by someone
else, but who would admit to that? As the TM teacher
said: if you like ceremonies it's a nice one. If you
don't, it's a short one. And besides, I wanted to get my
hands on the enlightenment and the supernatural powers
the book promised, so I would have sat through a hymn
service at the local church. Almost.
>
>
>Anyhoo's, I don't
remember any god doing anything for me lately so I
conclude that the origin of mantras is irrelevant, and
also about as irrelevant as other TMO teachings I had
plowed into me like the "fact" that most of classical
Indian literature happens to be present in my body in
some, unspecified, way. Which seems to me about as
religious a statement as you could possibly make.
>
>
>Coincidentally, you
can cure people of any health problem at all by chanting
the relevant section of something called the ved at the
unwell part of the body in another undoubtably secular
(and not cheap) ceremony in order to redress the
balance. According to the latest "discoveries" of
Maharaja Raja Raam (Tony to his friends) the reason we
get ill in the first place is because the battles of the
Ramayana are being fought out in our bodies. Astounding.
Order me an obviously secular yagya immediately!
>
>
>But mantras I don't
care about. I mean, obviously they come from
some hindu or pre-hindu teaching, all this stuff does
and all this stuff is ancient. The question is, why
would that be a surprise to anybody?
>
>
>---In [email protected], <emptybill@...> wrote :
>
>
>Recently I
have read here on FFL an argument professed by
former TM’ers who stopped
practicing because they claimed they were deceived
about the
"meaning" of mantras. 
>
>
>I don't
believe anyone has stopped for that reason. Usually
they quit because they don't think like it or don't
think it has enough reward for the time invested. 
>
>
>Some
people seem to take to it like ducks to water and
become full of flashy experiences and evangelical
zeal, I know I did. Go figure.....
>
>
> 

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