Point #4:

* Nitpick them into arguing with you. Any nitpick will do, but the best 
is some kind of semantic nitpick about one or two words in something 
they posted that doesn't really have anything to do with the criticism 
you're trying to D-E-F-L-E-C-T. If you can get them -- or other posters 
-- all involved in a meaningless nitpick side argument that has nothing 
to do with the original criticism, they aren't involved in the 
criticism. You've won. 



________________________________
 From: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 25, 2014 6:29 PM
Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: No Mantra will cure willfully arrogant 
stupidity
 


  
What Maharishi told you, Geeze, was the association between the bija mantra and 
Saraswati. The bija itself is still a semantically meaningless sound (unlike 
the Sanskrit words that comprise the advanced techniques, which do have 
semantic meanings).

FWIW, I've been on residence courses in which the teachers were asked directly 
whether the mantras were the "names" of Hindu gods. In both cases the teacher 
willingly explained that in Hinduism, the bija mantras were associated with 
Hindu deities, whereas in TM we drew no such association but simply entertained 
the bija as a meaningless sound.



Checked in to see what was going on at FFL today and low and behold, it's the 
mantra meaning debate!


I've posted this before some years back but for me it was settled once and for 
all back in 1976 when I received my 4th "advanced technique". I was waiting in 
line to see MMY when the guy in front of me, a friend of mine, said "ask him 
the meaning, he'll tell you."

MMY gave me the new variation of my mantra (it was now Sri Aing Namah Namah) 
and I quietly said "what is the meaning?" MMY said "Glorious Saraswati I bow 
down to you again and again. {pause} Do not dwell."

At the time I was totally thrilled since I LOVED the idea of worshipping the 
goddess Saraswati. It was only much later that I began to think about the fact 
that I had been telling all of my students that they were meaningless sounds.
Many years later, when the mantra tables were revealed, it was easy to decipher 
the meaning of all of them.

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