--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, TurquoiseB <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "Irmeli Mattsson"
> <Irmeli.Mattsson@> 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.  :-)
>

JUdy left out the last phrase in MMY's statement "...and its a lot of 
fun!"

MMY may indeed perceive the world as being perfect, but he has fun 
doing his thing to change it.







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