It's a good theory because that's how it was on my "sidhi" course. We'd get 
the sutra and try it for a bit and get endless encouragement to "feel the 
different flavours". 
 

 We were all disappointed when we found out it was in English, I was hoping for 
some super-mantra things. The general opinion was that if any "flavours" were 
felt at all it was mostly the power of suggestion that was doing it.
 

 Until we got to the "flying" sutra, the reaction of most people's minds to 
that was "Wow!" when they got it to work for the first time. Mine was of 
complete astonishment.
 

 The rest of the sutras did become more pronounced after extended practise but 
obviously no supernormal powers, the "flying" sutra was never that good again. 
Go figure.
 

 Apart from a secret wish to be able to levitate, I learned the "sidhis" 
because I wanted the extra depth to the standard TM and believed the hype that 
it was the quickest possible way to enlightenment. I did it for ten years 
including a great many courses. I can honestly say that I don't know what it 
was supposed to do, but it definitely increased the problems I had originally 
learned TM for. Unstressing? Not suitable? I don't care, they assessed me for 
the course, took my money and that was that. 
 

 I realised when I quit and went back to TM 20X20 that the "sidhis" weren't 
making me happy at all, in fact I was pleased to be rid of it, both for the 
time it takes and all the worsening of the stressed out/spaced out feelings I 
got.
 

 No enlightenment there. Not for me anyway, other people may react differently 
to it. But there's a disturbing habit in the TMO of making light of the bad 
bits of the practise, so most people will tell you they are having a great time 
even if they aren't. I got interviewed  for the brochures when on courses and 
told them what they wanted to hear even if the opposite was true. Rather I 
cherry picked from among the bad for the nice bits we'd all get from time to 
time.
 

 But the good bits of doing TM and the "sidhis" are in my top-ten best 
experiences in life, so it wasn't a complete waste of time. Rough with the 
smooth and all that. Trouble is, I wasn't after up and down, I remember reading 
somewhere that enlightenment is beyond all that. How can you get there by going 
the wrong way?
 
---In [email protected], <turquoiseb@...> wrote :

 From: Michael Jackson <mjackson74@...>
 To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>; 
[email protected] 
 Sent: Thursday, April 10, 2014 1:07 PM
 Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] Are the TM-Sidhis nothing but Placebo Effect?
 
 
   Spot on Barry.
 

 It's just a theory, but I think one can make a stronger case for it than TM 
True Believers can make for how they believe the TM-Sidhis "work." I guess 
we'll see...

 
 --------------------------------------------
 On Thu, 4/10/14, TurquoiseBee <turquoiseb@...> wrote:
 
 Subject: [FairfieldLife] Are the TM-Sidhis nothing but Placebo Effect?
 To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
 Date: Thursday, April 10, 2014, 8:14 AM
 
 I think one can make a case that they are. Here,
 I'll start...
 
 First, let's look at the basic TM technique, which uses
 Sanskrit mantras described by the TMO as "meaningless
 sounds" (which are really the names or "calling
 cards" of Hindu gods and goddesses, as anyone who can
 read books from India would know) as a mechanism for
 meditation. You *could* make a case that there is something
 "special" about these mantras, some sonic quality
 that actually facilitates meditation, because of course they
 have no meaning to most of the people who think them. 
 
 But that's not true for the TM-Sidhis. As anyone who has
 ever learned them knows (but gets really, really uptight
 when someone like myself points out), what you paid
 thousands of dollars for (a good argument for the Placebo
 Effect in itself) were a number of *English language
 phrases* straight from a translation of the Yoga Sutras, all
 of which very *definitely* have meaning. After a period of
 TM meditation, the "TM Sidha" is instructed to
 think them -- *in English* (or whatever modern language they
 were taught the TM-Sidhis in) in a particular way, and then
 wait for the effects. 
 
 I believe that a strong case can be made for Placebo
 Effect-like *expectation* in all of this, for three reasons.
 First, the TM-Sidhis were initially marketed *as a way of
 achieving and mastering all of the "siddhis" these
 phrases describe*. The original (first few years)
 "intro lectures" about the TM-Sidhi program were
 full of promises that you would learn to levitate and be
 able to perform other siddhis. Tales were told by people
 marketing and selling the new (and rather expensive) courses
 of people having been seen levitating, or
 walking through walls, or demonstrating invisibility. All
 of these tales were nothing more than urban legends, of
 course, because none of this had ever happened. But still,
 an *expectation* WAS formed among the people paying their
 money for the TM-Sidhi course that they'd have
 experiences like this themselves. 
 
 Second are the nature of the phrases they're thinking
 themselves. They *very much* have meaning, and you'd
 have to be a complete idiot not to realize that when
 you're sitting there thinking them that you're
 "supposed" to experience what they describe. For
 example, is there any question that when you're sitting
 there thinking "Friendliness" that you're
 supposed to feel more friendly? Or that when you're
 sitting there thinking "Strength of an elephant"
 you're supposed to feel stronger? Or that when
 you're thinking "Relationship of body and akasha -
 lightness of cotton fiber" you're supposed to lift
 up into the air as if you were actually
 lighter yourself? OF COURSE this is a form of suggestion,
 and I think that combined with the fact that the people
 thinking this last "sutra" had paid thousands of
 dollars for the privilege, one can make a strong case that
 any "bouncing" that follows (caused by unconscious
 or only partly conscious physical effort) can be attributed
 to nothing but the Placebo Effect.
 
 Third is the aspect of "reinforcement" that one
 receives in the form of praise for claiming to have *had*
 the experience of these phrases you're thinking. As
 reported here on FFL, in recent courses at MUM the
 participants are actually questioned after each session as
 to the "depth" or "profundity" of their
 "experiences." For each of the sutras (meaningful
 phrases), they are expected to raise their hands if they had
 a "Number 1" experience of them, a "Number
 2" experience of them, or a "Number 3"
 experience of them. Naturally, those who claim to have had
 Number 1 experiences are
 perceived as "better," and praised, further
 reinforcing the Placebo Effect. 
 
 So I think it's *very* possible to describe the reported
 effects of the TM-Sidhis as "nothing but Placebo
 Effect." The onus to prove or suggest otherwise falls
 on those who claim otherwise, and we'll wait patiently
 for you to do so. Please explain to us the "magic"
 or "Woo Woo" that enables thinking *English
 language phrases* to create the claimed effects of the
 TM-Sidhis. Please explain to us how you somehow divorce
 yourself from *expectation* when thinking these very
 meaningful phrases, and thus are not deceiving yourself into
 believing that they are producing an actual effect. Please
 explain how you are *not* affected by being regarded as
 somehow "special" merely for claiming that
 you've had "profound experiences" THAT YOU
 WERE TOLD TO EXPECT, and how that cannot be attributed to
 the Placebo Effect. 
 
 We'll
 wait...
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 


 









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