I just found a post from Robin that makes what he had in mind explicit (if not, 
er, perfectly clear). Excerpt: 

 "What I did believe...was that my enlightenment had opened up a truth that was 
intrinsically relevant to to Western Civilization, and this was all about the 
drama of *individuation*. I certainly had perfect confidence that Maharishi, 
eventually, would confer upon me an official status which would enable all 
those who were devoted to him to be initiated into the reality of what seemed 
empirically undeniable; namely, that one's life, the providence of one's 
personal history, was the universe's attempt to create a perfect kind of 
individuality through the drama that, metaphysically, was contained in the 
context of one's life—--especially in relationship with other human beings.
 
"As vivid and real as this seemed to me while I was in Unity 
Consciousness--—and everyone who participated in this adventure with me became 
convinced of this truth of the intrinsic meaningfulness of one's life in a very 
personal sense—--and acted out and applied this truth in their own life quite 
independent of myself—--as vivid and real as this was, it now, after coming 
down from enlightenment, seems unreal to me.


 "But that is what I was seeking from Maharishi: the official imprimatur which 
would enable all his initiators/governors to recognize the complementary 
reality to transcendence: perfect individuation through becoming sensitive to 
the inherent drama of one's personal life. That life was arranged to make 
manifest this drama....

 

 "I only wanted the TM initiators to know the secret that seemed to have been 
uncovered through my enlightenment. The secret of Western Civilization as seen 
through the Veda in the form of an enlightenment which appeared to confer equal 
significance to the Self and the self."

 

 
https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/FairfieldLife/conversations/messages/313720 
https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/FairfieldLife/conversations/messages/313720

 

 I still don't think "co-opt" is quite the right term, but clearly he felt 
Maharishi's teaching needed this additional component (at least in the West) 
that only he, Robin, could supply.
 

 

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

 
 

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

 Well, perhaps you didn't see his behavior as co-opting Maharishi's teachings, 
but giving people advice on how to make TM-Sidhis practice better, certainly is 
the kind of thing that I would call "co-opting Maharishi's teaching." 

 Notice I didnt' mean that he co-opted Maharishi's teachigns as his own, but 
that he decided he was competent enough to give advice and that it was 
appropriate for him to do so.
 

 Perhaps "co-opt Maharishi's position AS teacher" is a better way of putting it.
 

 I think to some degree you are correct in that he felt he could impart some of 
the techniques and add his own "spin" to them. He didn't get the siddhis until 
some of his TM teacher group "followers" taught them to him. At that point we 
all got his version of them even though must of us had the original siddhis 
taught to us via the normal channels. I believe his actions in this case were 
fueled by the sense that he could do no wrong created by his then current state 
(of enlightenment) coupled with a healthy dose of ego generated by the illusion 
created by his hallucinatory state. It is by his own admission that he felt his 
enlightenment to be a delusion, hallucinatory. 
 

 

 L.
 

 


 

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

 
 

I wrote:

 Also, Robin had no intention of co-opting Maharishi's teaching, as I've 
already pointed out here recently (so has Ann, who was with him at MIU), and he 
did indeed ask for a formal nod from Maharishi as to his enlightenment and the 
changes he wanted to make to the movement. Maharishi, not surprisingly, refused 
to give permission, and Robin gave up.
 

 Add: "...refused to give permission or endorse his enlightenment...."
 









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