Good to see Dr. Nader out on facebook live talks now strategically ditching the 
crown and regalia to working at redeveloping the core values of 
Transcendentalism as a TM teacher.
 

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

 Eroding Core Values and Loss of Communal Critical Mass
  
 One session of papers at the Communal Studies conference was on ‘the end of 
community’ with three in depth papers given on three different communal groups. 
One of the groups was a 19th Century group something like our own in Fairfield 
and the others were of more secular communal groups of the earlier 20th Century 
and late 19th. 

 The commonality in their three narratives was what came as diffusion of their 
core values in time as there came along arrivals of newer outsiders in 
membership and fewer of generations born to the older founding generation would 
stay on in community. These trends were supplanting to founding generations 
then in time. Hence, the loss in perspective of foundational core communal 
values over time as those values came to not be so well spoken to (championed) 
or lived in the groups. 

 Evidently once core foundational values diminished in time within each group 
example there came in a mundane to the workload of sustaining ‘community’ as 
resources of energy and altruistic goodwill ebbed and dried. The cohesion of a 
communal ‘shakti’ generally went down, people leave, people stop coming.  Each 
group then arriving to point whence their assets of what had been built up to 
facilitate their core values are then auctioned off. The sale. 
 
 Within the examples in these papers was the group of Zoar separatists, 
something like our own in transcendentalism, seems something of a template for 
how it goes with spiritual practice groups as our own:  Diminution of the 
cheering of core values, administrative rigidity setting in, loss of people, 
loss of altruism towards the community, loss of donors, loss of critical mass, 
financial crisis, and finally an auction of assets attendant to the dispersal 
of community.  

 A long declining arc of the Dome meditation attendance numbers in what is the 
Fairfield, Ia. meditating community seems far along on this path. 

 In TM community it is said: “The Past is a lesser state of evolution.”  But, 
planners warn cautioning us otherwise,  “Past performance is not a guarantee of 
future returns” .  Towards becoming something else like a historic site to 
visit, according to these histories evidently things may not look the same as 
what we may see now as community.


 Already we are hearing grumblings in TM from what is an elder International 
Council of Rajas that the Domes in Fairfield, Iowa are too expensive to 
maintain.  While at the same time the University being without endowment 
requires active and substantial donor cohorts every year to make budget for 
what all they should like to do to keep on.  With prospect in communal core 
values the hopeful in re-developing community are constrained in reality by 
budget and human resource right now. The complexion of the core group remaining 
quite evidently is not what it once was in youth. May providential blessings 
from the superradiance in the Nature of the Unified Field support a magnanimous 
prosperity to our continued journey here in community.  
 Jai Guru Dev,   
 


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

 The Communal Studies Association.  
 http://www.communalstudies.org/ http://www.communalstudies.org/

 

 

 This year’s conference is being hosted nearby Fairfield. Over at Bishop Hill, 
a historic village in Illinois, Oct 5 & 6. 

 

 An annual scholarly conference w/ academics who study groups like ours. 
Intentional communities past and present. Historic or contemporary. 
 

 Typically the conference is two days of papers being delivered by social 
scientists, historians, historic preservationists. 

 

 People can come and attend for one day as they may wish. There is a whole 
program but the sessions with the papers can be attended without doing the 
whole conference.  
 

 There are categories for different level attendees. One day attendance is $65. 
Student and grad student rates too.. 
 Link:  http://www.communalstudies. org/registration-2018 
http://www.communalstudies.org/registration-2018
 

 Conference page:  http://www.communalstudies. org/annualconference 
http://www.communalstudies.org/annualconference
 

 This is my tenth year attending. I find most any of the papers presented to be 
interesting. I put the CSA conference on my calendar every year now. Because 
this year’s conference is so near at hand I would urge any scholarly types to 
come over and sit in, even for a day. 
 

 Kind Regards, 
 





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