Thanks.  I read a couple of stories and enjoyed them.  I got a flavor 
of what you are talking about.
--- In [email protected], TurquoiseB <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], "Jeff Fischer" <jeffcandace@>
> wrote:
> >
> > > > --- In [email protected], TurquoiseB <no_reply@> 
> > > > wrote:
> > 
> > > "Doing program" in a room with siddhas, at its finest, 
> > > was a 3 on a scale that, for me, goes to 11. There 
> > > really wasn't much to get freaked about. 
> >  
> > > I am *not* saying that the phenomena I experienced were
> > > in any sense "better" than those one can have with the
> > > TM siddhis. But more powerful? My scale of 1 to 11 is
> > > logarithmic, like the Richter scale.
> > 
> > I'd be interested to know what you use to measure it...
> 
> I'd like to thank you for asking this, Jeff. It's
> a really good question, one that I'll puzzle over
> for some time. 
> 
> I can generate a 5 pretty much anytime I want, 
> because I live adjacent to a serious power place
> and within a few hours' drive of several that are
> far more powerful. Every time I have hiked to the
> top of Quéribus it's been at least a 6, and spending 
> the night there during a full moon is definitely an 8.
> 
> The best way I can think of to convey to you some of
> the 6+ moments is to point you to the book I wrote.
> In it there are a series of "tsakli." (The first such
> story explains what tsakli are and why I chose that
> name for these particular recollections.) 
> 
> The power is not in the words -- they are at best a
> feeble attempt to express the inexpressible -- or in
> the events that the words describe. The power is in 
> the state of attention that I "wore" while the events
> were taking place, and which I can still tap back into
> when I read these stories. The moments were structured
> in eternity, and eternity is always present.
> 
> http://www.ramalila.net/RoadTripMind
> 
> Unc
>


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