--- In [email protected], "sparaig" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], "Rick" <risrosen@> wrote:
> >
> > --- In [email protected], hermandan0 <no_reply@> wrote:
> > >
> > > trying to follow new.mornings posting inspirations, i've started
a new
> > > thread instead of intjecting this into the old one :)
> > > 
> > > --- In [email protected], "authfriend" <jstein@> wrote:
> > > 
> > > > --- In [email protected], "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, 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.
> > > 
> > > 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. 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.
> > >
> > 
> > 
> > I would swear that I saw a tape in which somebody asked MMY that very
> > thing and he said something to the effect of, well, then that's just
> > the way it is, there's nothing to be done.  (Though every teacher or
> > checker I later told that to said he couldn't have said that.)  I
> > think the person's mantra wasn't coming without an amount of effort
> > that seemed to be too much.  I've used to have that "problem" myself a
> > lot, and I would end up sometimes sitting there for most of 20 minutes
> > without, it seemed, even a glimmer of a mantra.
> > 
> 
> In the early 70's, a TM teacher had to check a recently returned
Vietnam vet. She said it 
> took her the entire checking session to get him to keep his eyes
closed more than a 
> second or so. She never got past that stage with him. 
> 
> Obviously, in some situations, for some people, the usual procedures
and predictios just 
> don't apply.
> 
> > 
> > Also, it seems to me that the contradictory nature of the meditation
> > is an essential element of it.
> >
> 
> I think that its not a contraiction so much as a non-rational thing.
You can't discuss it and 
> it is silly to even try (which is what we're doing in this thread:
being silly).
>

Well. it seems to me that the silly nature of this group is an
essential element of it.  





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