"Group meditation...
 

 Dictated by the collective, any time you get two or more people together you 
have a group dynamic situation where you are actually creating another energy 
system between you, this happens spontaneously all the time. 

 So when you have a group like this, of meditators transcending, you have all 
this input of coherence in the subtle system .." 
 -FF Spiritual Coffee Haus Satsanga


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

 The Meissner-like transmission.. 

 The Meissner-like effect (ME) of active ‘civil resistance’ = 3.5% , or 11 
million in the USA

 The Meissner-like effect (ME) of effective meditators to societal positive 
coherence = 1% 
    Or 3,270,000 meditators. 

 The ME In the USA of advanced meditators, at the (square root of 1%) =>2,000. 

 Evidently SuperRadiance (SR) of meditators not as the only solution, but as a 
requirement for a functional society toward permanent peace and progress can 
not happen without sufficient participation in SR of group meditation. 
(Maharishi would say many times we must have 2,000). 
 The science quite evidently bares this out now with quite high level of 
certainty while in the numbers meditating it seems there is a deficiency in 
science literacy.  Quite evidently, there needs to be better evidence-based 
public policy fostering the regular practice of meditation by more people. 


 So why is civil resistance so much more effective than armed struggle? The 
answer lies in people power itself.
 Researchers 
http://www.amazon.com/Rebels-Dilemma-Economics-Cognition-Society/dp/0472085743 
used to say that no government could survive if five percent 
http://willopines.wordpress.com/2012/07/19/the-5-rule-and-indiscriminate-killing-of-civilians/
 of its population mobilized against it. But our data reveal that the threshold 
is probably lower. In fact, no campaigns failed once they’d achieved the active 
and sustained participation of just 3.5% of the population 
https://cup.columbia.edu/book/why-civil-resistance-works/9780231156820—and lots 
of them succeeded with far less than that [5] 
https://rationalinsurgent.com/2013/11/04/my-talk-at-tedxboulder-civil-resistance-and-the-3-5-rule/#_edn5.
 Now, 3.5% is nothing to sneeze at. In the U.S. today, this means almost 11 
million people.

 
https://rationalinsurgent.com/2013/11/04/my-talk-at-tedxboulder-civil-resistance-and-the-3-5-rule/
 
https://rationalinsurgent.com/2013/11/04/my-talk-at-tedxboulder-civil-resistance-and-the-3-5-rule/
 



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

 Q: A role of working social justice service in grounding spiritual experience? 

 FF Satsanga Observations:

 

 A: The world of consciousness is branched way beyond alpha brainwaves.
 


 A: Spirituality is taught by ‘the mothers’ as: 
 1moral cultivation, developmental education in moral values, 
 2cultivation of spiritual practice, and 
 3active service to others to help others; 
 Those three things together. that is the cultivation of the whole.
 One without the others is not complete and will leave people ungrounded. 

 
 A..that Compassion is different than mood-making and this is different than 
just narrow cultivation of consciousness. This like the difference between the 
state of compassion and the emotion of love. One can have loving thoughts or 
loving feelings which are distinct. Not that these are not great things, these 
are expressions. Those are expressions of the heart for sure. But the heart 
state, the state of compassion, is a steady thing. It is not a conditional 
thing. It is a pretty steady thing. It is not a conditional thing like, ‘I feel 
this and I become Compassionate’. It is a state, of compassion. It is, ‘If I am 
compassion then I observe’. It is a state. It is not, ‘oh I see this and I 
become compassion’. It is a state and it is a state of heart because of the 
energetics of the heart chakra that can embrace with a capacity to digest, to 
take in without fear. That requires stability. 
 


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

 

 Great observation, the exercising the polyvagal and the hologram of the 
wholeness of the subtle human system. 
 

 Look at the aspect of the ™ movement that is doing well, the David Lynch 
Foundation (DLF) of teaching ™. .  
 

 DLF  is highly attractive to gen-x and gen-millennial youth because iDLF is 
not just some sect of meditating but doing service work to need.  For good 
reasons DLF is engaged in  teaching meditation to veterans, in violent schools, 
to single moms, at UN peacekeeping camps, teaching meditation in prisons, etc. 
DLF foci being of social service to peoples in need. 

 The visioning people at the top of DLF were old successful field teachers, 
differing by a long shot  from the stayed rigid old Vlodrop people,.  The  DLF 
cohort are anything but complacent in adaptation to need. 
 Internally there has been quite a lot of argument and conflict with 
conservative ideologues inside over adaptation. Directed by science data and 
more empathetic scientists DLF as a group DLF has been able to go around 
conservative fanatics who would hold things back.  

 Looking at the ‘go-fund-me’ fliers that were up all over town this last summer 
and fall here before the recent teacher training course started in Bali the 
requesting for help was so that the candidate could become a teacher of 
meditation to serve particular populations in need. The urgings were very 
idealistic in sympathy and empathetic for needs of the time.  Polyvagal in 
nature. Much more of the heart than just in the head.
 

 

 

 yifuxero writes

 Old ideas often fade away only when the old generation dozes off.  The Old 
Guard at MUM  may change but it doesn't look like it.
 For example, take the connections between Consciousness and biology relating 
to the Polyvagal nervous system. The key ingredient is Compassion (the feeling 
of Compassion resulting from more Empathy). 
 The old idea is that this would be a type of mood making and contrary to the 
notion that people are to meditate and "take it as it comes"  No. Compassion 
must be worked on diligently and over time: the Quakers are an example. It's a 
type of culture that grows and evolves, but first the idea must be introduced. 
This is unlikely in the MUM atmosphere since Compassion doesn't bring in $.
 

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

 “How can CEOs learn from Kodak’s failure?”.  Fabulous article for our 
meditating Fairfield communal purposes. From the last two paragraphs it could 
be said we are ‘in Kodak’ mode still. 

 “..Of course strategy sessions with the BIG CEO went nowhere. Of course all 
the people buried in the hierarchy who saw the oncoming problems and had ideas 
for solutions made no progress. Their bosses and peers ignored them.”

 Yes we just accomplished a strategic removal of an unable/disabling old 
leadership for the university community yet in what touches the Fairfield 
meditating community there are no tools  or skillsets to use yet inside there 
that would help facilitate a communal transition. Being available to listen and 
share is not where the Rajas have been with this. The work that got done to 
remove Bevan was done ad hoc by the community and forced on them.
  
 Yes things are being done now at the level of Hagelin but it is autocratic and 
not apparent because it still does not sit with, listen or engage with the 
meditating community outside the university and movement bubble. Same old 
problem.  

 A desire is there for transition but no method/practiced skillsets to 
facilitate innovation.  These are school teachers and ‘administrators’ by 
experience, not leaders in the sense of effective CEO’s. Effective leadership 
of this would require training old dogs in new methods of listening circles, 
non-violent communication listening skills, intergenerational work, and 
restorative justice work that might actually acknowledge the past in going 
forward.  

 Because of a leadership character of where a past leadership has for so long 
taken us we are starting a communal climb out from way down in a hole. The last 
paragraphs of the Kodak article are useful to read as to a way out.. 
  
 Kodak article:
 “How can CEOs learn from Kodak’s failure? Historically, Kodak was built on a 
culture of innovation and change. It’s the type of culture that’s full of 
passionate innovators, already naturally in tune to the urgency surrounding 
changes in the market and technology. It’s these people – those excited about 
new ideas within your own organization – who keep your company moving ahead 
instead of falling behind. One key to avoiding complacency is to ensure these 
innovators have a voice with enough volume to be heard (and listened to) at the 
top. It’s these voices that can continue to keep a sense of urgency in your 
organization. If they are given the power to lead, they will continue to 
innovate, help keep a culture of urgency and affect change.
 ... The organization overflowed with complacency 
http://www.kotterinternational.com/kotterprinciples/urgency/complacency. I saw 
it, maybe in the late 1980s. Kodak was failing to keep up even before the 
digital revolution when Fuji started doing a better job with the old 
technology, the roll-film business. With the complacency so rock-solid, and no 
one at the top even devoting their priorities toward turning that problem into 
a huge urgency around a huge opportunity, of course they went nowhere. Of 
course strategy sessions with the BIG CEO went nowhere. Of course all the 
people buried in the hierarchy who saw the oncoming problems and had ideas for 
solutions made no progress. Their bosses and peers ignored them.”

 Barriers to Change: The Real Reason Behind the Kodak Downfall 
http://www.forbes.com/sites/johnkotter/2012/05/02/barriers-to-change-the-real-reason-behind-the-kodak-downfall/#5011be473698
 
 
 
http://www.forbes.com/sites/johnkotter/2012/05/02/barriers-to-change-the-real-reason-behind-the-kodak-downfall/#5011be473698
 
 Barriers to Change: The Real Reason Behind the Kodak... 
http://www.forbes.com/sites/johnkotter/2012/05/02/barriers-to-change-the-real-reason-behind-the-kodak-downfall/#5011be473698
 Dr. John Kotter discusses the real reason behind the Kodak downfall: 
complacency. Read on to find out how Kodak let complacency take over, and how 
to avo...


 
 View on www.forbes.com 
http://www.forbes.com/sites/johnkotter/2012/05/02/barriers-to-change-the-real-reason-behind-the-kodak-downfall/#5011be473698
 Preview by Yahoo 
 

  




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

 "Restorative justice."  Nice term.  So is this happening in Fairfield?  
Awareness without action, or in other words, "complacency" is not a good 
strategy.  Reenvision!   

 Barriers to Change: The Real Reason Behind the Kodak Downfall 
http://www.forbes.com/sites/johnkotter/2012/05/02/barriers-to-change-the-real-reason-behind-the-kodak-downfall/#b02a9e136985
 
 
 
http://www.forbes.com/sites/johnkotter/2012/05/02/barriers-to-change-the-real-reason-behind-the-kodak-downfall/#b02a9e136985
 
 Barriers to Change: The Real Reason Behind the Kodak... 
http://www.forbes.com/sites/johnkotter/2012/05/02/barriers-to-change-the-real-reason-behind-the-kodak-downfall/#b02a9e136985
 Dr. John Kotter discusses the real reason behind the Kodak downfall: 
complacency. Read on to find out how Kodak let complacency take over, and how 
to avo...


 
 View on www.forbes.com 
http://www.forbes.com/sites/johnkotter/2012/05/02/barriers-to-change-the-real-reason-behind-the-kodak-downfall/#b02a9e136985
 Preview by Yahoo 
 

  
 


---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <dhamiltony2k5@...> wrote :

 For a small place, Fairfield, Iowa has a number of open performance venues and 
open space parks that are actively used. The music and performing arts 
communities are developed and busy here all the time.   In fact Fairfield is 
known with booking agents as a place with venues and a sophisticated audience 
that turns out for talent.  A lot of people traveling in the various arts put 
Fairfield on their tours. Fairfield is an easy drive between St. Louis, 
Minneapolis, Chicago, Kansas City and Omaha. I like the architectural link. An 
artistic family here in Fairfield rehabilitated a classic old brick railroad 
freight house into a new performance space that opened this last year. That is 
all fine.

 However, it is evident in history that where spiritual practice groups like 
ours diffuse into other things, absorbed in business, social or political cause 
and they get away from their formative spiritual practice it is not long before 
their communal assets get sold off. Bankruptcy got headed off last year for the 
university with a timely change of leadership.

 An evident challenge now for survival of the Domes is that the previous 
administration spent 36 years separating meditators from the collective 
practice. There is some deep hurt here to remediate. Turning the Domes in to 
open space for mundane performance or sports would really signal the end. No, 
there is work to do at reconciliation now. It likely is going to take some 
brave leadership to pull it off.  

 See:  Engaging Restorative Justice in Reclamation of Community
 
https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/FairfieldLife/conversations/messages/433528 
https://groups.yahoo.com/neo/groups/FairfieldLife/conversations/messages/433528



---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <emily.mae50@...> wrote :

 How about turning that iconic dome into a public space!  Re-envision, 
repurpose it for an open, inclusive and rockin' venue.....e.g.,  you could do a 
 "concerts in the dome" series.  How are the acoustics?  Sructure a 
public-private partnership with the Town of Fairfield.  

 Public Space architecture and design | ArchDaily 
http://www.archdaily.com/search/projects/categories/public-space 
 
 http://www.archdaily.com/search/projects/categories/public-space
 
 Public Space architecture and design | ArchDaily 
http://www.archdaily.com/search/projects/categories/public-space

 
 View on www.archdaily.com 
http://www.archdaily.com/search/projects/categories/public-space
 Preview by Yahoo 
 

  

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <dhamiltony2k5@...> wrote :

 
 

 Archer, from a distance view that is fine, your philosophical of ‘no-doing 
do-nothing’. 
 

Some of us live in Fairfield, Iowa, though, with this amazing facility for 
meditation that has just a couple hundred people meditating in it now. The 
question, (..what can be done?) is operational, what can be done in the 
community to better utilize the place by way of facilitating the meditating 
community that came here to meditate. 
 Some damages clearly were done to a feeling of cohesion of the meditating 
community, what might the remediation look like to have more people meditating 
collectively again in Fairfield, Iowa?

 Archer Angel writes:

 ..that nothing need be done.

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <dhamiltony2k5@...> wrote :

 
 Should we create a dispensation for the meditators who do not attend group 
meditation in Fairfield, Iowa? What can we do?  

One could correlate from what science that we do know about group meditation 
that a large part of the tense psycho-spiritual problems we collectively face 
is rooted in the absentee meditators living here, those who do not attend to 
the collective meditation of Fairfield, Iowa.  All those Art of Living people, 
the Oneness people, the Amma satsang and others. They seem to not care that 
they are given this opportunity, even at the weekday no-badge group meditation, 
and they make no effort. Those satsangs don’t even show up to meditate with 
others in collective group meditation as a practice where there is offered 
invitation.   It is like they have a spiritual aloofness, a type of arrogance 
that keeps them from doing the spiritual work. 
 What can be done to motivate them to open their hearts to communal practice?
 -JaiGuruYou

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <dhamiltony2k5@...> wrote :

 In Transcendentalism, 
 this becomes MMY’s great legacy along the line with George Fox or Jesus Christ 
"Where two or more are gathered..". This modern development, of natural 
sciences correlating with transcendentalism in modern time as the practical 
role of collective meditation, not only an individual experience is compelling 
in transcendental meditationism but now by virtue of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi's 
articulation there is the evident science of collective practice of meditation 
on the whole.  
  
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, <dhamiltony2k5@...> wrote :

 


















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