In life most people are not able to have more than one home at a time. Most those who are here in the meditating community now are not going to just up and move away. A lot have come to Fairfield and some lot of meditators haven't left Fairfield regardless what bad the behavior the movement has been up to at times. Most of the deeper erosion (attrition) happened back in the 1990's. Since then its been a smaller chronic or endemic attrition for various reasons, some usual reasons around money, sex, or differentials of inclusion or exclusivity, including the ongoing reigns of terror excluding people from the communal group meditation by administration.
And yet people move back to Fairfield to be in the meditating community. Housing is kind of tight right now with people, young and old, returning. But still the larger portion of meditators lives on in town [Fairfield] or the County [Jefferson] outside of contact with the organized or formal movement on campus or with the Global Country of World Peace hold up out in M. Vedic City to the edge of Fairfield proper. ---In [email protected], <[email protected]> wrote : ---In [email protected], <dhamiltony2k5@...> wrote : There are several elements to the 40 year old Fairfield meditating community that will allow it to endure here longer. Fairfield is still a nice place to meditate and live, regardless of how folks feel about the ongoing nature of the Raja movement. However it would be better for everyone, the Raja movement itself, if the TM movement would better behave itself within conscience of its own ethical behavior. As has been looked at here before, ethical behavior is evidently a “leading economic indicator”. Attending fast as they can now to that they should need to better look at themselves inside as others may see them. “Change begins within”, as they say. That change in the Raja movement may shortly very well be about their own survival. Yes, Fairfield will go on. Fairfield regardless is still a real nice place to meditate, and live. -JaiGuruYou It is a cute little town which I always enjoyed while I was a student there and after, when I moved back for a year to start a horseback riding program for the students and faculty off campus. I totally "get" the appeal because it is a small, walkable community with many people who have a few fundamental things in common. The weather is a bit of a drag in the winters, though, and the distance from a city bigger than Iowa City is a kind of a drag and it is in the Midwest which I can do without having lived in Chicago twice in my life. Being very active in my sport means I would be too far geopgraphically from serious competition and the fact that I love Victoria and Canada, for that matter, pretty much rules out returning to FF to ever live again. Oh, and other than the small detail that I don't meditate and am not into any other alternate therapies or systems of which there seems to be an awful lot of there, I might just fit in fine. ---In [email protected], <awoelflebater@...> wrote : ---In [email protected], <[email protected]> wrote : That's interesting. I have a friend on the East Coast who wants to move back here within the next couple of years. Former MUM student. She visited with her daughter a while back. The daughter has no interest in moving here because "it's all old people." I think she has a point. This community is not renewing itself, and time will soon wipe us out. I give Fairfield another 25 years or so as an eclectic spiritual center; after that almost all the people who make this place tick will be dead or demented, and Fairfield will bit by bit revert to its former status as an unremarkable small town in the Midwest. The University might stagger on for a bit longer, but neither MUM nor MSAE have any money, so I do not see a bright future for them. That all sounds about right but I'd give it 15 years, not 25. ---In [email protected], <dhamiltony2k5@...> wrote : I just returned from a scholar's conference on Communal Societies. Spent the past week traveling to the Lexington, Ky area for the annual meeting of the Communal Studies Association. http://www.communalstudies.org/ http://www.communalstudies.org/ The conference is three days of scholarly papers on groups like ours here in Fairfield, Iowa multiple sessions with papers being delivered on 20 minute intervals. 2015 Paper schedule: http://www.communalstudies.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/Pleasant-Hill-Program-12-Sept-15.pdf http://www.communalstudies.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/Pleasant-Hill-Program-12-Sept-15.pdf They host their annual meetings at historic sites of communal societies. This year their conference was at the historic Shaker village of Pleasant Hill. The historic site at Pleasant Hill is of a historic ashram-like spiritual group with many features similar to our own here in Fairfield, Iowa. http://shakervillageky.org/ http://shakervillageky.org/ About 130 association members came to this years conference. Lot of the scholars teach at the university level who use the Communal Studies Association to be able to present papers in conference or publish in the association's journal. Also there were papers given by people who live in communal groups of various types. I've been attending these conferences for a number of years now. Most all the papers are interesting and relevant to Fairfield in some way by comparison as criticism. I always go away from these conferences with relevant things that I will think about for the following year. I have gone enough times to their annual conference that folks in this association know me as the person from Fairfield, Iowa and folks at the conference will then often ask me in conversation how it is going for the meditating group here? Of course there are layers to answering this question. Well, on returning home to Fairfield, Iowa from the CSA annual conference I drove in just in time for the weekly shape note harmony sing in Fairfield. In the Sacred Harp tune book there is a song titled, The Church's Desolation. The last verse of the text is a pretty good paraphrased succinct description of 'how it is going' in Fairfield for the contemporary meditating community. The Church's Desolation is a real fine tune to sing by example of the genre with great harmony and poignant narrative in the text. Verse 3, like meditating Fairfield, Iowa: Some few, like good Elijah, stand While thousands have revolted, In earnest for the heav'nly land They never yet have halted. With such religion doth remain, For they are not perverted; O may they all through men regain The glory that's departed.
