--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, hermandan0 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> trying to follow new.mornings posting inspirations, i've started a 
new
> thread instead of intjecting this into the old one :)
> 
> --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "authfriend" <jstein@> wrote:
> 
> > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "vajradhatu108" 
> 
> <snip> 
> > > Any meditation technique that relies on a object
> > > of meditation, a mantra, the breath, etc. will by
> > > it's very nature have some subtle effort (as Mahesh
> > > acknowledged at Estes Park in regard to TM).* 
> > 
> > Of course, it's never been established that what he
> > said at Estes Park ever "acknowledged" any such
> > thing.
> 
> I'm not sure exactly what the Estes Park quote is,

Quoting an earlier post from Vaj:

"At Estes Park Maharishi pointed out that there really
was some effort in TM. He quoted the Vedas as saying,
'Be easy to us with gentle effort.'"

Obviously we'd need a great deal more context to
know whether Maharishi was using this quote to
describe TM as involving some effort.  Who is being
addressed in the quote?  It appears to be a request
of some kind, but who is making the request, and
of whom?  And how would one entity making a request
of another entity to "be easy to us" relate to TM?

There may be some connection, but it certainly isn't
obvious without the context.

 but
> Maharishi was quite clear that there is some "doing" in
> the thinking/picking up of the mantra and that, yes, this
> is a contradictory to the mantra just appearing on its
> own. That's why the the instruction to think or pick up
> the mantra is qualified by saying "effortlessy" or "as
> effortessly as a thought comes". Of course one is thinking
> and of course thinking is doing. It may be an effortless
> doing, but it's a doing.

I think there may be a semantic issue here with
regard to "doing."  If, as you say, "doing" can be
effortless, it seems like a distinction without a
difference.

> While it may not be fair to dismiss TM as being a technique
> of "effort" on account of that, vaj is, IMO, not incorrect
> in calling it "subtle effort" becaue of that doing.

Well, but is it effortless, as you say, or is it
"subtle effort"?  *That* is a distinction that makes
a *huge* difference.

MMY has also been very clear that even "subtle effort"
interferes with transcending, so again there would
appear to be a semantic issue.

> To misunderstand this puts one
> in the position of a meditator I once encountered who asked "What
> happens if you sit there for the entire 20 minutes and the mantra
> doesn't come?" Duh.

In my understanding, intentionally picking up the
mantra is done only when the mantra does not come
on its own.

In my experience, the recognition that I am not
thinking the mantra arises spontaneously, without
any intention or "mindfulness"; and the mantra
is there, also spontaneously, immediately following
that recognition.  At that point it would require
effort *not* to think the mantra.

This may not be what occurs for beginning TMers,
but I'd suggest that it becomes the case, for
most people, at least, after some experience of
TM practice.







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