This is the best thing I have read in a long time - absolutely and perfectly 
describes all the hucksters and liars out there amongst the spiritual teachers.



________________________________
 From: "emptyb...@yahoo.com [FairfieldLife]" <FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com>
To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Sunday, June 15, 2014 6:00 PM
Subject: [FairfieldLife] LightMint Gone Bad
 


  


A Fallen Yogi - by James Swartz

 
Recently I received an email
with a link to a web blog by a reasonably famous 
teacher, Andrew Cohen. He
said he was stepping down so that he could work on himself and become a ‘better
person.’ It was a surprising event because arrogant people invariably live in an
ironclad state of denial, the better to project their emotional problems on 
others.
In any case he is definitely a slow 
learner…evidently the chorus
of angry voices that has followed him for twenty-
seven years swelled to such a
din that it became too loud to ignore. His 
statement will undoubtedly be
seen as a courageous act of contrition, the 
uplifting resolve of a
reprobate taking the first halting steps on the road to 
redemption. We wish him well
and hope that he becomes the person he needs to be. 
 
The real lesson here is not
his personal story but what it says about his view of enlightenment, since it 
was
behind this view that he perpetrated so much misery. 
 
Had he been taught by a
proper teacher…he was one of the first Papaji Neos…he might have actually known
what enlightenment is and hundreds of people would have been spared so much
heartache. Papaji, a shaktipat guru, propounded the experiential view of
enlightenment. 
 
Mr. Cohen was obviously not
enlightened by even the most liberal definition. 
What he called enlightenment
was merely a ‘deep awakening,’ an epiphany that had a profound effect on his
ego. It convinced him that there was something ‘more’ than his way of
seeing. It convinced him wrongly, that ‘he’ was ‘enlightened.’ 
 
In fact. enlightenment, as it
is popularly conceived, is not enlightenment because enlightenment is not a
special experience, an ‘awakening.’ It is the hard and fast knowledge, “I am 
awareness,
the ‘light.’ It is not something that happens because you, awareness, were
never unenlightened. You are unborn and never die. Experiences are born and
die. They do not change you, make you into something else. If you take
yourself to be an ego, an experiencing entity, you will be apparently modified 
by
what happens to you, spiritual or otherwise. We do not like the word
‘enlightenment’ because of its experiential connotations but if you insist on 
using it,
enlightenment is simply shedding ignorance of one’s nature as awareness. It is 
not the
gain of a special state or status. 
 
Any experience is only as
good as the interpretation of it. If I am awareness there is no way to conclude 
that I
am special or unique and that I have something that you don’t, because everyone
and everything is awareness. The understanding I am awareness neutralizes the
ego, because the ego is just a notion of specialness and uniqueness. It does not
mean that the ego disappears or is transcended. It means that it is known for
what it is, an idea of separateness appearing in me, awareness. 
 
We do not doubt the
profundity of Mr. Cohen’s experience. We question his 
interpretation. Because
anyone is free to define enlightenment in any way he or she chooses, he is free 
to
call his epiphany enlightenment. However, it should be noted that most of the
mischief in the spiritual world in the last thirty years from Muktananda to 
Osho and Adi Da
right up the present…the examples of fallen gurus are too numerous to
mention…can be laid squarely at the feet of the experiential view of
enlightenment. 
 
What actually happened? Under
the spell of apparent ignorance, theself …limitless
awareness… mistook itself for an experiencing entity, an ego, had a particular 
type of experience
known as an ‘awakening’, declared itself enlightened and imagined that it had
transcended itself. It came to believe that it now inhabited a special
experiential niche reserved only for the few and that said experience empowered 
it to
enlighten others not so blessed. Evidently, in Mr. Cohen’s case his exalted
status came with the companion belief that the end justifies the means, opening
the door to abusive ‘teaching’. 
 
This is the story: an
ordinary ego had an extraordinary experience, one that 
changed its idea of itself
but little else. The impurities that were there before the epiphany survived…as 
they
do…and immediately out pictured when the 
experience ended…with
predictable results. I recall hearing many stories of abuse at Mr. Cohen’s 
hands over the
last twenty plus years. 
 
The enlightenment scenario he
envisioned, which he obviously did not critically 
examine, is classic duality.
It amounts to splitting the ego into a transcendental 
self and a self to be
transcended. To make this idea work, the ego needs to be in a state of complete 
denial.
It must imagine that the non-transcendent part of itself doesn’t exist. It
didn’t exist for him but sadly it existed for everyone else. To keep the myth of
transcendence alive, he was forced to lay the problem at the feet of those who 
hadn’t yet
‘transcended’, so his problem could easily be transferred elsewhere. 
 
He finally admitted his
folly. Without a trace of irony he said, “My ego is alive and well.” What an 
epiphany! It
should be brought to his attention that ego death orego transcendence, contrary
to popular belief, is perhaps the number one enlightenment myth. Nobody is
transcendent because reality is non-dual. It is not a duality. There is only
one self. You are awareness and awareness is ‘other than’ what it perceives,
although what it perceives is only itself. During 
‘awakening’ moments you are
actually experiencing yourself as you are but 
ignorance survives these
moments and it projects the experience on the ego. 
Vedanta calls this phenomenon
superimposition (adyaropa). You think that what belongs to you, awareness,
belongs to the ego. When the experience wears off you go back to experiencing
yourself as the ego but now you believe you are something other than your
ego. You declare yourself ‘enlightened’ and imagine that you are qualified to
teach others. 
 
The name of the organization
that Mr. Cohen founded tells the story, 
‘Evolutionary Enlightenment.”
It is an idea fit for doers who want to improve 
themselves. But enlightenment
is not about becoming a better person. It is 
about discovering who you
really are. Before you are a person, you are non-dual, actionless, ever-present,
ordinary perfectly full awareness. The assumption underlying the evolutionary
approach to suffering is incorrect…that reality is a duality, that you are in 
need
of fixing, that you can do something to get what you already have, that you can
‘transcend.’ Even in the unlikely event that he happens to become a ‘better’
person, he is in store for further disappointment assuming he actually wants to
be free. He will have to start his seeking over again from ground zero because 
his
idea of enlightenment is incorrect. 
 
Both people who imagine they
are transcendent and those who accept the 
experiential view of
enlightenment often fail to understand that life’s number one value is 
non-injury.
Non-injury is the most valuable value because reality is non-dual. Non-duality 
means that
you and I are non-separate. I will only injure 
something other than myself.
Furthermore this fact implies that I love everyone 
as I love myself…because they
are myself. When Mr. Cohen finally wakes up, this is a lesson that he will do
well to contemplate. 
 
Here is his statement: 
 
I’m fifty-seven years old and
currently find myself facing the biggest challenge of my life. I’ve been a 
teacher
of spiritual enlightenment for twenty-seven 
years. Enlightenment has
always been and always will be about transcending 
the ego. Over the last
several years, some of my closest students have tried to make it apparent to me 
that
in spite of the depth of my awakening, my ego is still alive and well. 
 
I’ve understood this simple
truth—that we all have egos no matter how 
enlightened we may be—and
even taught it to thousands of people all over the 
world throughout my career.
But when I was being asked to face my own ego by those who were nearest and
dearest to me, I resisted. And I often made their lives difficult as a result. 
 
I’m aware that many of my
students over the years have also been affected by my lack of awareness of this
part of myself. And for those of you who are reading this, I apologize. As time
passes I intend to reach out and engage in a process of dialogue with those of 
you
who would like to. 
 
In light of all this, for the
sake of my own integrity as a spiritual teacher and as a human being, I’ve 
decided
that I need to take some time off so I can make the effort to develop in many of
the ways that I’ve asked other people to. Starting this fall, once I’ve 
fulfilled
some prior commitments, I’m going to embark upon a sabbatical for an extended
period of time. During this hiatus, I will be stepping down from the leadership 
of
my organization, I won’t be publishing anything here on my blog, and will not be
doing any public teaching. My intention is to become a better teacher, and more
importantly, a better man. 
 
One of the most beautiful
fruits of my work over the years has been the 
international network of
people who have studied, collaborated, and trained with me for so long. They 
are all
examples of Evolutionary Enlightenment in their own right, and I couldn’t 
imagine
a greater community of people to carry forward this movement. I’m looking 
forward
to working with them in a very different way in the future.

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