>
> --- In [email protected], "Patrick Gillam"
> <jpgillam@> wrote:
> >
> > --- authfriend wrote:
> > >
> > > --- Gillam wrote:
> > > >
> > > > Consider this wrinkle: they didn't see the error in
> > > > their judgment *until they had done TM for a while.*
> > > > It's like, add perception of TM's shortcomings to the
> > > > list of benefits engendered by TM. The irony is too delicious.
> > >
> > > But it's something of an infinite regress; they're
> > > still making an error of judgment in not seeing
> > > that TM made it possible for them to see their
> > > *original* error of judgment.
> >
> > Ha! Yeah, it goes on and on - if one takes this analysis
> > seriously. I'm doing it for amusement, so I cannot honestly
> > say what makes people fall in love with TM, then feel jilted
> > when it appears to fail them.
>
> While I agree about the "jilted" thang, having
> lived with a control-freak harpy doesn't really
> have any cause-and-effect relationship to having
> later met a great woman, does it?
I don't think Patrick's theory necessarily includes
the second component of finding a new and better
technique/path, though.
One type of former-now-rabid-anti-TMer his theory
would *not* apply to, on the other hand, would be
those who "move on" to, say, fundamentalist
Christianity, or an allegiance to another equally
or even more flawed guru, or any other situation
in which they find themselves giving up their
autonomy. Some women get it together to leave
one abusive man only to "move on" to another one.
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