--- In [email protected], "Irmeli Mattsson"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> When something falls from one's hand to the floor, we perceive the
> occurrence as mistake. If not we wouldn't even pick the thing up.
>
> From a bigger perspective everything may be perfect as it is, but
> perceiving something as a mistake or error may activate changes
> in our behavioural patterns.
>
> <snip>
> Perceiving everything as perfect in daily life I feel to be a
> kind of mood making.

It's a good point. If one truly believes that every
action they perform is perfect, where is the impetus
to *improve*, to *do better*?

I once knew a guy, a Japanese martial artist, who
was widely regarded as the best in the world at his
particular art.  But the *secret* of being the best
at his art was that he considered himself a beginner,
and every practice session his first practice session,
an opportunity to "get it right" this time.

One of the benefits of this approach was that he was
never bored, even after practicing the same movement
for the 10,000th time.  I don't think he would have
felt the same way -- or become as good as he was --
if he'd bought into the "everything is perfect just
as it is" mindset.

I think that sometimes people forget one of Maharishi's
most valuable teschings, "Knowledge is different in
different states of consciousness."  "Everything is
perfect as it is" is true in only one of them; from
the others it's just mood-making, and possibly not
very productive mood-making.

For example, if a scholar became enlightened, to the
point that he occasionally glimpsed the perfection of
it all, but then needed to learn a new subject to
keep his teaching job, how far do you think he'd get 
with his studies if he approached them believing that 
"everything is perfect just as it is?" 

"Everything is perfect just as it is" is a nice
realization to have from time to time and leave
behind, the same way you'd leave behind a nice
acid trip.  As a practical way of living, it sucks.  :-)








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