Yeah, that was once a core value teaching in TM, 'meditate and act'. Then it 
(also) went on to other stuff in the 1990’s with attempt at the resuscitation 
of the Vedic Sciences, Vedic culture, sanskrit, faith in astrology, yagyas, 
ayurveda, remedies and such. The bad fitting pink saris and conflicted ™. And, 
culture. The 'Rajas' and what would seem a relatively small Global Country of 
World Peace, https://www.globalcountry.org/wp/ 
https://www.globalcountry.org/wp/ Jai Guru Dev 
 

 jr_esq wrote :

 Eustace,
 

 B Gita Chapter II, verse 48 states:  "Yogastah kuru karmani."...  meaning 
established in yoga, perform actions.  This essentially is saying that TM is 
Karma Yoga.


 

Eustace wrote :

 I posted here believing someone would have the answer at this fingertips or at 
least on a shelf nearby. Clearly this wasn't the case, it seems the book is no 
longer popular in Fairfield.,So I did what I had tried to avoid, buy the Kindle 
edition of the Science of Being ahd Art of Living, Well here is what I 
remembered:
 

 ===========================================

 This explains the significance of action and justifies its status as a path to 
enlightenment. This innocent, natural, simple process of perception and 
experience—from the outward gross to the inward subtle and Transcendent, and, 
from there, again returning to the outward gross—comprises the path of 
action^15 for enlightenment.

^15 The Bhagavad-Gītā calls it the Path of Action, or Karma Yoga.

Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. Science of Being and Art of Living (Kindle Locations 
5255-5257). MUM Press. Kindle Edition
 ===========================================
 

 Maharishi plainly states that TM is Karma Yoga. IMHO, every TMer who practices 
regularly should sooner rather than later know this.
 

 In those early for me years, I remember I had added an extra 5 or 10' at the 
ebnd of my practice, reading TM books. After Science of Being and Art of Living 
and the Commentary, I read Canelakos' book on the early research on TM, 
Bloonfeld's book, the cartoon book, and then 2 or 3 more that I came across, 
until I realized that the book I was reading was repeating, almost verbatim, 
what I had read in the previous book, and I realized it was time to stop. Ah, 
yes. And I already had the habit of reading all the footnotes and endnotes, 
sometimes the author conveys crucial information in there.
 

 A few years later I came across the very interesting Glaser's book Positive 
Addiction, and the I read 2 9r 3 of Deepak Chopra's books when he was with the 
movement.
 

 I haven't read any other book on TM for several years, and certainly there 
have been some well worth reading.
 

 But, IMHO, new mediators should hot skip the 2 classics, including the 
footnots!
 

 JGD,
 

 Eustace
 
-- 

 . .
 

 A few,

 

 As much as ™ itself is said to be effortless meditation it does take some 
discipline to do. At the outset it is actually something you ‘do’.  

 I have these old cassette tapes from the India TM teacher training courses 
with Maharishi, outdoor lectures with crows cawing in the background and such. 
He says plainly that ™ does take some concentration (in particular) to do, to 
recognize what is going on and ‘do’ the practice, it requires a little action 
to do. 

 So yes, TM it could be said is ‘karma yoga’. From that standpoint and then all 
those old meditators out in coffee shops when they could be meditating, are 
just ill-disciplined loafers.. ‘taking it easy and taking it as it comes..’ as 
if that is a spiritual practice in itself. 
 

 sharelon...@yahoo.com wrote :

 
 
 According to the concordance, on pg 303 of SofB, there's something on karma 
yoga.
 Hope this helps.

 

 cardemaister offers:
 At least YF seems to be karma yoga par excellence: simultaneous intense action 
(karma) and

 "non-action", samaadhi (yoga)??
 





  Thursday, July 12, 2018, 1:09:47 AM CDT, eustace10679  wrote:
 

 

  No, that's not it. I remember reading plainly that TM *is* Karma Yoga, the 
important issue being that after diving in you *have* ti get out and transfer 
to the outer world of action the what you got from diving in. That's why in TM 
extended practice -- without outside action -- is not recommended under normal 
circumstances and unlike other meditation practices. I remember reading it in 
the Science of Being -- and I've also read the Commentary. 

 Maharishi's statement was straightforward and it did not involve 
interpretation. I think everybody should know about it. If anybody has the book 
handy and haven't read it, This statement remained in my memory as the most 
interesting in the book. And BTW it was written many years before the 
introduction of the sidhi program.

 

 Eustace:
 

 Several decades ago, I remember reading in the Science of Being and Art of 
Living (I think) that TM is Karma Yoga. Has anybody read the book recently and 
can provide an exact reference? It has to be added in the Wikipedia page, at 
least as a footnote, to counterbalance that "mantra meditation".
 
-- 
The Meditation Meter Website
http://emf.neocities.org/tm/meditationmeter.html 
http://emf.neocities.org/tm/meditationmeter.html

 













 




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