yeah they used to say that shit even during residence courses when you would 
fall asleep during Marshy preening about how he knew everything or those 
goddamn Larry Domash tapes. Domash may be the nicest guy in the world, but he 
sure is one boring speaker.
--------------------------------------------
On Thu, 4/10/14, salyavin808 <[email protected]> wrote:

 Subject: Re: [FairfieldLife] Are the TM-Sidhis nothing but Placebo Effect?
 To: [email protected]
 Date: Thursday, April 10, 2014, 12:29 PM
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
   
 
 
     
       
       
       I'm not sure what "field
 independence" is but I'm worried that you think
 there's anything you can do that might affect how
 placebo's work. I think TM makes people more suggestible
 not less. It's why they always have the
 "knowledge" tape after the meditation session,
 it's when you mind is most relaxed and open and
 therefore susceptible. 
 It also reinforces the belief in
 things like the mind "settling into finer levels of
 existence". How often was I told that the words
 weren't important because I was absorbing it
 unconsciously, and I was happy about that. LOL! Glad I
 started thinking about it all pretty quick....
 
 
 ---In [email protected], <sharelong60@...>
 wrote :
 
 turq, research and my own experience
 indicates that field independence develops in TMers. That
 alone would decrease and or prevent any alleged placebo
 effect and strengthen a person's ability to
 "divorce" from it. I think this is one of the
 greatest benefits of TM. It liberates. Even from itself.
 
 Plus I doubt than a placebo effect, even if it occurred in
 the beginning, can last for decades! Especially if a person
 has very little contact with the TMO.
 
 Lastly, again going by my own experience, I'd say that
 the language of the sutra doesn't matter as a
 person's awareness settles into finer levels of
 existence.
 
   On Thursday, April 10, 2014 3:17 AM,
 TurquoiseBee <turquoiseb@...> wrote:
  
  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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