By asking for donations to finance free Initiations David Lynch takes from the 
rich and gives to the poor, a modern day Robin Hood. No wonders the devotees of 
stale, rigid and outdated religions representing the old ways of doing things 
hate him. Unfortunately the representatives of their outgoing energies are 
plenty here on FFL.
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <LEnglish5@...> wrote :

 The David Lynch Foundation offers TM instruction for free to people in "at 
risk" groups, but the $2500 price tag was originally set by Maharishi to entice 
wealthy people and only wealthy people to learn TM. Weren't you complaining 
about how insanely high that price tag was? 

 Seems to me that no matter how TM is marketed and for what price and for 
whichever group of people -the homeless, war refugees, students in El Barrio 
watching their cousins kill their cousins, or world famous actors and 
actresses, CEOs worth as much as small countries, etc.- you'll find a reason to 
kvetch.
 

 It's just an idea. YMMV.
 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <turquoiseb@...> wrote :

 One of the things I've noticed over the years is how many long-term TMers say 
things like, "I'd be dead if it weren't for TM," or "TM saved my life," or "TM 
cured me of my depression/anxiety/suicidal thoughts/mental illness/whatever." 

I've always found these claims difficult to relate to, because I didn't have 
anything to "cure" or "get over" when I first started TM. I had already left 
drugs behind me, having discovered them back when LSD was still legal and came 
in a bottle with Sandoz on the label. I did my time with them, enjoyed them 
*not* because they were an "escape from my problems" but because they enhanced 
an already-enjoyable life. But then I got tired of them, and even more tired of 
the scene surrounding them, and left them behind. I'm probably one of the only 
people here who didn't have to wait 15 days before starting TM. :-)  I was also 
neither depressed nor suicidal. In fact, I was a pretty happy frood, and merely 
one who was looking for ways to become even happier.

And for a time, TM presented what I was looking for, something to enhance a 
good life and help me to appreciate it even more. But then it became as boring 
and as stagnant as drugs had been, and with an even more stifling social scene, 
so I moved on again to other forms of meditation that worked better.

But there seem to be any number of long-term TMers who don't look back on their 
TM experience this way. They seem to focus on what it enabled them to "get 
over" or "cure" or "get beyond," almost as if (almost) before TM they had been 
"broken" and TM had "fixed" them. 

This gets me to thinking about tent revival meetings in the South (which, of 
course, you can't help but attend a few of if you grow up in the South), in 
which the most fervent "believers" and most fundamentalist Bible-thumpers were 
ALL those who formerly were drunks or whores or thieves or something BAD. It's 
as if they don't feel they can adequately shout "I've been SAVED!" unless they 
feel they had a lot to be saved FROM.

And *this* gets me to thinking about whether Maharishi always pitched TM to 
losers and people with problems and low self esteem because they become the 
best disciples. And *disciples* is what he was looking for.

Think about it. Does the TMO really spend any energy trying to market TM to 
"regular people," who have few problems in life and are just looking to enjoy 
it more? They do not. They focus on People With Problems.

Kids doing badly in school. Criminals locked away in prisons. Veterans with 
PTSD. 

Can't this be seen as a continuation of a long-standing trend to look for 
prospective new students among populations who are more likely to be easy to 
convert into True Believers and thus become disciples? 

It's just an idea. YMMV. 

 

 







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