Trying to be 'disruptive' now, Is TM.org a Spiritual Regeneration Movement 
(SRM)?  Is the TM movement currently transformational as a regenerative, 
reform, or revolutionary movement?  

 Consideration,
 TM as Revolutionary Millenarian:
 https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/communal-studies-forum/1di3VYUG13U 
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/communal-studies-forum/1di3VYUG13U


 

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

 ChangeMakers: Disruptors Transforming the World for Good,
 

 the real changemakers—those who have found a radical way to improve the lives 
of their friends, family, countrymen, and global family.
 Changemakers, according to a recent New York Times article, are “people who 
can see the patterns around them, identify the problems in any situation, 
figure out ways to solve the problems, organize fluid teams, lead collective 
action, and then continually adapt as the situations change.”
 

 Changemakers disrupting for revolutionary transformation for good.. 

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

 This weekend's Changemaker conference, hosted by MUM and the David Lynch 
Foundation, as described in the Source’s article at the below link:
 

https://www.iowasource.com/2018/03/30/changemaker/ 
https://www.iowasource.com/2018/03/30/changemaker/ Are You a Changemaker? 
Leaders Converge in Fairfield to Transform the World 
https://www.iowasource.com/2018/03/30/changemaker/ 4 DAYS AGO  by MICHAEL 
STERNFELD https://www.iowasource.com/author/michael-sternfeld/
Humanitarian Father Gabriel Mejia and filmmaker David Lynch are two of the 
speakers at ChangeMakers: Disruptors Transforming the World for Good April 6-7.

 Young or old, we all benefit from having a clear purpose in life, a North Star 
to guide us on our journey. Discovering and constantly refining this mission is 
a lifelong quest that always unfolds new pathways and dimensions. Some 
far-sighted visionaries have mastered this process in a way that benefits and 
serves humanity. These are the real changemakers—those who have found a radical 
way to improve the lives of their friends, family, countrymen, and global 
family.


 On April 6–7, leading changemakers will converge at a conference to explore 
what it takes to make a difference on this planet. ChangeMakers: Disruptors 
Transforming the World for Good, at Maharishi University of Management (MUM) in 
Fairfield, is the first event in a new Changemaking Series, hosted by MUM and 
the David Lynch Foundation (DLF).

Changemakers, according to a recent New York Times article, are “people who can 
see the patterns around them, identify the problems in any situation, figure 
out ways to solve the problems, organize fluid teams, lead collective action, 
and then continually adapt as the situations change.”


 Each of the guest speakers in the ChangeMakers conference—including filmmaker 
David Lynch, MoveOn.org http://MoveOn.org’s Laura Dawn, and former Army Ranger 
Dusty Baxley—is an individual who perceived a clear need in their environment 
and disrupted the status quo to find solutions.
 
Delivering the keynote address will be Father Gabriel Mejia from Colombia. 
Father Gabriel found his own mission at age 37 when he saw the streets of 
Medellin filled with unwanted children, the so-called “disposable ones.” As a 
man filled with love and the unbounded energy to change lives, he responded by 
creating the city’s first shelter, a sanctuary for children to find a good meal 
and a safe place to sleep. Thirty years later, his Hogares Claret Foundation 
runs 52 such centers that have rescued and restored dignity to over 100,000 
children and young adults.
 

Father Gabriel has been responsible for rescuing over 100,000 children from the 
streets of Medellin and establishing dozens of orphanages in Colombia that use 
innovative therapies to turned damaged children into responsible young adults.


 “The basic therapy is love,” Father Gabriel says. “Love is powerful medicine 
for any illness or disorder. When a child feels he is welcome, when a child 
feels educators are concerned about him . . . they change. The child changes.”


 Iconic filmmaker David Lynch demonstrates that artists also serve as 
changemakers. In addition to his boundary-breaking career as a director, Lynch 
created the David Lynch Foundation 13 years ago to help ease the epidemic of 
trauma and stress among at-risk populations by teaching these groups 
Transcendental Meditation (TM). Lynch’s deepest desire was to “ensure that any 
child anywhere in the world who wanted to learn to meditate could do so.” 
Through benefit events featuring high-profile celebrities such as Paul 
McCartney, Ringo Starr, Hugh Jackman, Jerry Seinfeld, and Katy Perry, the 
foundation has raised funds to teach TM to over 500,000 students, veterans with 
PTSD, and survivors of abuse. David will lead a session via Skype exploring his 
changemaking process both as an artist and through the work of his foundation.
 

 Laura Dawn is a powerhouse changemaker who is a founding member of political 
action group MoveOn.org http://MoveOn.org. Dawn has spent the last decade 
leading groundbreaking cultural campaigns that garnered over 500 million online 
views. Her forte is creating viral content and organizing high-level 
collaborations between renowned artists and grassroots activists to spur action 
for social change. She is joined by her partner and cocreator Daron Murphy on 
her latest initiative, the cultural strategy firm ART NOT WAR.


 There will also be several speakers from Chicago’s inner city from DLF’s 
collaboration with the University of Chicago Crime Lab. Nakisha Hobbs is the 
principal and cofounder of Village Leadership Academy, where the primary focus 
is to transform urban youth into global leaders. Incorporating the DLF Quiet 
Time program as a foundation, the school trains inner-city youth to be the next 
generation of changemakers. Barry “Ra” Frye grew up on Chicago’s South Side and 
had to overcome his own experience with PTSD before returning to his 
neighborhood to begin rebuilding the community. His goal has been to transform 
gang leaders through the Passages program, which incorporates TM.


 Dusty Baxley is a veteran who served two tours of duty as an Army Ranger 
specializing in combat parachute assault. After returning to civilian life, he 
found that many of his fellow veterans were falling into depression and even 
committing suicide. In response, Baxley dedicated his life to bringing relief, 
healing, and hope to active-duty veterans and former military personnel 
experiencing PTSD.


 This ChangeMakers event and the larger series are both part of an initiative 
by MUM to help students harness their unique talents to launch positive action 
in the world. The theme is “Transform Yourself, Transform the World.”
All of us are potential changemakers, living in a world that constantly 
changes. If we can learn to ride these waves of change and exert our own unique 
influence on them, we will have found the changemaker within.
 The ChangeMakers event is free and open to the public at Maharishi University 
of Management. For more information, visit ChangeMakers 
http://www.mum.edu/changemakers-event-2018 [at 
http://www.mum.edu/changemakers-event-2018 
http://www.mum.edu/changemakers-event-2018].







  


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