Re: Re: Re: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: RE: RE: Growing up transgendered or, confused?

2013-11-04 Thread Share Long
Yes, Judy I was replying to BillyG but Neo was no longer showing his post and I 
didn't want to take the time to go to the website to reply from there. 





On Saturday, November 2, 2013 8:57 PM, authfri...@yahoo.com 
authfri...@yahoo.com wrote:
 
  
Did you mean to respond to BilllyG's post, Share, rather than this one? 


Share wrote:


 William, I wasn't referring to Judy in terms of posters scolding about people 
 not 
 snipping. She wasn't the one who was doing that.


On Saturday, November 2, 2013 4:58 PM, authfriend@... authfriend@... wrote:

  
Oh, did you think you were making a snappy, relevant comment here, Share?

Share flubbed:



 OTOH, some posters have scolded some other posters for NOT snipping! Go 
 figure!


You really just don't seem to be getting it about not posting any old thing 
that comes to your mind without giving it a bit of a think first.



 

On Saturday, November 2, 2013 3:06 PM, wgm4u no_re...@yahoogroups.com wrote:
 
  
Thanks for the tip 


---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:


The post a person is responding to (and sometimes a whole string of posts in an 
exchange) always appears when you click on the three dots in the bottom left of 
the Reply box--unless the person who wrote the post has deleted everything, 
which is what BillyG does. Apparently he doesn't like to feel that he's part of 
a discussion, so he gets rid of it all before posting.


---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:


It all depends on what software you're using. I've been monitoring FFL messages 
in IE and Firefox and I've noticed that some posts don't include what the 
person is responding to. However, when you hit reply sometimes the messages 
appear when you scroll down.

And, I've also noticed that hardly anyone follows the netiquette
  protocols for formatting messages anymore. It sure would be
  helpful if people would do some formatting using the old style
  right angle bracket, but now I realize that's really asking to
  much of people, since mainly they are just shooting from the hip
  with one-liner snickers. There seem to be only about two serious
  respondents left here anyway.

So, I'm using Thunderbird to send and reply to text only posts,
  but when I want to include an image I use Chrome, which has a nice
  feature to key in the location of the image URL. I haven't figured
  out what happened to the 'source view' in Neo to include an image
  URL. I've also noticed that several people have not figured out
  how to make an active URL link in any program. Go figure.

P.S. At this point, I'm not even posting with the expectation that
  anyone but lurkers would read this stuff, so it's mostly for them
  to be amused with.


On 11/2/2013 10:40 AM, authfriend@... wrote:

  
BillyG, you know, it's courteous to quote a bit of what you're responding to, 
or at least to identify the writer you're responding to. You don't do that, 
and it makes it look as though you don't want to actually have a discussion 
but rather only to make proclamations.









Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: RE: NPD

2013-11-04 Thread Michael Jackson
How about  Janet Digiovanna? What an abusive whack job she was - somebody ought 
to write a chapter on her sometime.

On Mon, 11/4/13, dhamiltony...@yahoo.com dhamiltony...@yahoo.com wrote:

 Subject: [FairfieldLife] RE: RE: NPD
 To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
 Date: Monday, November 4, 2013, 4:11 AM
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
   
 
 
 
   
   
   Whatutalking
 about?Robin Carlsen is a very
 interesting chapter in TM.  He and TM are going to be
 studied by historical and social-science scholars for a long
 time to come.I guess that makes you and some
 others who went off with him part of TM that way too.  That
 is okay. 
 If nothing else the court transcripts will always be part of
 the
 study of TM.  No need to get defensive.  I am glad you
 turned up here on FFL to share your experience with it too.
  It is very interesting,  -Buck
    
 
 ---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,
 fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:
 
  
 
 
 ---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com,
 dhamiltony2k5@... wrote:
 
 NPD
 Heads-up.  Seems there is a guy and
 a follower who showed up in town in the last few days with
 these
 kinds of traits.  Tells a good story, really smart but
 incredibly
 manipulative and evidently abusive with the younger
 follower.  Lot
 like that other guy that used to post here.  I sent this new
 guy on
 to find the afternoon Fairfield illumined experience
 banana-gram
 group.  I think they have the resources to deal with him
 safely and
 will appreciate him a lot. 
 
 I would think FF would be
 used to all sorts of crazy pseudo gurus making their way
 around the town square. Probably a good portion of residents
 there figured themselves some sort of teacher or capable of
 some special ability like speaking to animals, channeling
 angels or otherwise having their enlightened fingers on the
 pulse of what's-happenin'-now. Just one more of
 these dudes hitching his cow pony to the tie-up rail in
 front of Revelations surely is not cause for concern. Of
 course, a rousing game of Bananagrams always did separate
 the men from the boys (or the avatars from the
 plebs).
 Now on the
 subject of NPD and Robin I think this subject has been
 bandied about long enough. Neither you nor Barry has the
 beginnings of an inkling of what makes that man tick and
 most of us here would appreciate it if you would leave the
 negative and inappropriate labels where they belong - in the
 textbooks or in the hands of those who might have a
 clue.
 -Buck    
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


Re: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: Michelle Pfeiffer escaped from a cult

2013-11-04 Thread Share Long
Thanks, Xeno and exercise still best bet to prevent Alzheimers according to 
Mayo Clinic.
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/alzheimers/MY2






On Sunday, November 3, 2013 9:26 PM, anartax...@yahoo.com 
anartax...@yahoo.com wrote:
 
  
J Diabetes Sci Technol. 2008 November; 2(6): 1101–1113.
Published online 2008 November.

Alzheimer's Disease Is Type 3 Diabetes–Evidence Reviewed

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2769828/



[FairfieldLife] Bravo [Meditating] Fairfield, Iowa

2013-11-04 Thread dhamiltony2k5
Fairfield has melded small town Iowa values with the exotic culture inspired 
by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. 
 

 
http://www.desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/201311030405/OPINION01/311030029nclick_check=1
 
http://www.desmoinesregister.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/201311030405/OPINION01/311030029nclick_check=1



Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: MANICHAEAN VIEWS OF BUDDHISM

2013-11-04 Thread Share Long
Seraphita, would it be an error because Taoists believe that the Tao is always 
keeping good and evil in balance? And what is meant by a vulgar error?

Seraphita wrote:
The
 Yin and Yang concepts point to a Tao that includes the opposites. 
Imagining that one side of a pair of opposites could gain the upper hand
 over the other would be a vulgar error.




On Sunday, November 3, 2013 4:10 PM, s3raph...@yahoo.com 
s3raph...@yahoo.com wrote:
 
  
Re The Gnostic prophet Mani taught radical dualist cosmology; a struggle 
between the opposing forces of good and evil, spiritual light versus the 
material world darkness. Humans are composed of two opposing elements in a 
battle for power. There is a soul, but it is influenced by elements of both 
good and evil. Manichaeism is similar to the dualistic Bogomils, Paulicians, 
and Cathars. It's not complicated. Adepts in China and the Far East would 
probably relate to this with their own notions of Yin and Yang.:

The Yin and Yang concepts point to a Tao that includes the opposites. 
Imagining that one side of a pair of opposites could gain the upper hand over 
the other would be a vulgar error.
As the little we know about Manichaeism and similar dualist 
religions/philosophies comes to us from hostile sources isn't it possible that 
these beliefs weren't as dualist as they've been painted but perhaps also had 
the idea of a Transcendence that reconciled the positive and negative aspects 
of life?


---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, punditster@... wrote:


So, let's review what we know about the prophet Mani. 

The Gnostic prophet Mani taught radical dualist cosmology; a
  struggle between the opposing forces of good and evil, spiritual
  light versus the material world darkness. Humans are composed of
  two opposing elements in a battle for power. There is a soul, but
  it is influenced by elements of both good and evil. Manichaeism is
  similar to the dualistic Bogomils, Paulicians, and Cathars. It's
  not complicated.

Adepts in China and the Far East would probably relate to this
  with their own notions of Yin and Yang, which is probably derived
  from the Indian Sankhya, a radical dualism, and later tantra- a
  theory of polarity which posits male and female energies. 

The name 'Mani' is Sanskrit. Mani traveled and lived in India for
  several years, visiting  Buddhist lands such as Bamiyan in
  Afghanistan, so it is not surprising that Buddhist influences
  would be apparent. Mani apparently adopted his theory of the
  reincarnation (transmigration of souls) from the Buddhists. Mani's
  sect structure was apparently based on the Buddhist Sangha, that
  is, Arhants and the lay follower community. 



On 11/2/2013 11:31 AM, emptybill@... wrote:

  
 No wonder the Near-Eastern realm got so mixed up.   
 
It seems that as Manichean ideology spread to the East it incorporated 
Buddhist concepts along the way in a effort to show the superiority of the 
Religion of Light. Mani lived during the third century of the current era. 
Mani used the epitaph Buddha of Light and identified himself as Maitreya. He 
and his followers specifically borrowed from early Pure Land Sutras and 
Nagarjuna's Madhyamaka philosophy. As it entered the region of Gandhara and 
spread to China it used the Buddhist Hinayana tradition to support its views 
of matter, the body and the world.
MANICHAEAN VIEWS OF BUDDHISM


David A. Scott 
Christ Church College of Higher Education 





Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: Astrology in the New Testament

2013-11-04 Thread Share Long
John, I still a bit perplexed about why jyotish calls the Moon the significator 
of the mind, rather than Mercury.





On Sunday, November 3, 2013 1:10 PM, jr_...@yahoo.com jr_...@yahoo.com 
wrote:
 
  
Share,

Pisces is a dual sign and is watery by astrological definition.  If the Moon is 
placed here, the Moon becomes more sensitive since the Moon is already wavering 
and watery by nature.


---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, jr_esq@... wrote:


Why was it written that Jesus was born in a manger?  Because he was born on 
December 25 which astrologically lies between the signs of Sagittarius, a 
horse, and Capricorn, the goat.  Interesting?  Bill Donohue explains more of 
his observations as follows:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4M6j6DwBWBgamp;list=PL4HZ228v9duPReHJuT6prrAUc9BzFEo_t



[FairfieldLife] Discussion with Igor Kufayev, Jac O’Keeffe, and Francis Bennett: New Interview on Buddha at the Gas Pump - 11/04/2013

2013-11-04 Thread Rick Archer
 


blog updates from


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If you are not doing so already, please consider donating a minimum of $1 or $2 
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 . 


published 11/04/2013


Discussion with Igor Kufayev, Jac O’Keeffe, and Francis Bennett 
http://batgap.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=62b7e50ba8598f35e2edf91d5id=eb1bd8b08de=aa1e3e9546
 

Nov 03, 2013 06:42 pm | Rick

At the 2013 Science and Non-Duality Conference in San Jose, I moderated a panel 
with Igor Kufayev, Jac O’Keeffe, and Francis Bennett as participants. We 
decided to videotape a discussion the night before in which we could develop 
and refine … Continue reading  
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[FairfieldLife] Re: NPD

2013-11-04 Thread TurquoiseB
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com,  wrote:

 NPD = narcissistic personality disorder ?


  [http://media.salon.com/2013/10/brosh_embed3.jpg]
http://media.salon.com/2013/10/brosh_embed3.jpg
http://media.salon.com/2013/10/brosh_embed3.jpg




[FairfieldLife] RE: Discussion with Igor Kufayev, Ja c O’Keeffe, and Francis Bennett: New Interview on Buddha at the Gas Pump - 11/04/2013

2013-11-04 Thread dhamiltony2k5
More than just the question of To Be or not to Be? is the BATGAP question:
 

 Is Awakening, as it’s commonly understood, merely the realization of the 
Absolute, non-dual reality, or is it a stage or stepping stone to a much more 
mature development – a larger wholeness, inclusive of both the absolute and 
relative? 
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, rick@... wrote:

 New Interview on Buddha at the Gas Pump - 11/04/2013  
 blog updates from
 Buddha at the Gas Pump 
If you are not doing so already, please consider donating a minimum of $1 or $2 
per month to help offset basic monthly expenses associated with hosting, 
MailChimp, etc. Of course, larger donations for other expenses are very much 
appreciated and needed. Donate button on http://batgap.com 
http://batgap.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=62b7e50ba8598f35e2edf91d5id=8e8cd9346de=aa1e3e9546.
 
 published 11/04/2013
 Discussion with Igor Kufayev, Jac O’Keeffe, and Francis Bennett 
http://batgap.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=62b7e50ba8598f35e2edf91d5id=eb1bd8b08de=aa1e3e9546

 Nov 03, 2013 06:42 pm | Rick

 At the 2013 Science and Non-Duality Conference in San Jose, I moderated a 
panel with Igor Kufayev, Jac O’Keeffe, and Francis Bennett as participants. We 
decided to videotape a discussion the night before in which we could develop 
and refine … Continue reading → 
http://batgap.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=62b7e50ba8598f35e2edf91d5id=e59880cb5ee=aa1e3e9546
 The post Discussion with Igor Kufayev, Jac O’Keeffe, and Francis Bennett 
http://batgap.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=62b7e50ba8598f35e2edf91d5id=7a01628a54e=aa1e3e9546
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RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Not a Vastu House

2013-11-04 Thread dhamiltony2k5
MJ you ask, Why? how do you account for the divorces, bankruptcies and 
illnesses that have occurred in vastu veda homes and businesses right there in 
Fairfield? 
 Mostly a lack of spiritual discipline, or discernment.
 

 Is it sham or a shame?
 
 
 “Seventh.—Are Meditators careful to live within the bounds of their 
circumstances, and to avoid involving themselves in business beyond their 
ability to manage; or in hazardous or speculative trade?”
 
 
 In truth, Real meditators as effective spiritual people rectify their own 
perfect vastu of their own temple bodies when they meditate. Some people fail 
to ever capture the fort for lack of discernment. For lack of discipline it is 
easy to get side-tracked in theology and thought forms of orthodoxies. 
Maharsihi called that, “Mistake of the Intellect”. Sort of like an Ikie 
Hartmann building monuments taking the resources of the teaching TM movement to 
rebuild all the dwellings of the world with East facing doors. As if the holy 
grail is not inside. Engineers solve problems with engineering. Spiritual 
people are spiritual by virtue of spirituality. That is a different vector. 
That is a problem, the second element that is getting lost in the TM movement 
under these TM administrator raja and prime minister people now. 
 Instead Simplify. Just be more simple in meditation and you will get there.  
Look out for your Self becomes the more obvious lesson in all this.
 -Buck 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 how do you account for the divorces, bankruptcies and illnesses that have 
occurred in vastu veda homes and businesses right there in Fairfield?
 
 On Wed, 10/30/13, dhamiltony2k5@... mailto:dhamiltony2k5@... 
dhamiltony2k5@... mailto:dhamiltony2k5@... wrote:
 
 Subject: [FairfieldLife] RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Not a Vastu House
 To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
 Date: Wednesday, October 30, 2013, 12:01 PM
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Nearly 30 percent of kids in
 Jefferson County, Iowa are raised and live in poverty
 because their lodgings do not
 face East to catch the sunrise.  -Buck
  
 
 
 Rectifying
 Vastu, rebuilding the
 World;
 
 
 
 
 At a global celebration
 on 5 November, Dr Eike Hartmann, Minister of Architecture
 and City
 Planning for the Global Country of World Peace, highlighted
 plans to
 support health, happiness, and invincible peace and progress
 through
 these very special Maharishi Vedic Architecture
 initiatives. 
 
 
 
 He presented a beautiful visual display
 of all the planned projects,* which was prepared for the
 celebration
 by leaders of the Global Mother Divine Organization** in
 MERU,
 Holland. 
 
 
 
 Maharishi Vedic Architecture
 initiatives planned for India. Beautiful Maharishi Vedic
 Architecture
 initiatives planned for India include ideal Vastu villages,
 schools,
 and administrative centres. 
 
 The Ministry of Architecture
 plans to: 
 
 - Complete the Maharishi Samadhi Smarak, a
 memorial of Total Knowledge, with 12 exhibition Mandaps
 (halls) and
 beautiful gardens. 
 
 - Establish the administrative
 Capital of Raam Raj in Ayodhya,*** with a global parliament
 hall for
 192 countries. 
 
 - Construct a golden marble structure
 with Mandaps (halls) for Vedic performances (Yagyas) at the
 birthplace of Guru Dev, connected through a pilgrimage
 road to
 Ayodhya, with schools and other special buildings every few
 miles;
 and reconstruct two of Guru Dev's original
 Ashrams. 
 
 -
 Continue to build Maharishi Vidya Mandir schools, girls
 schools, and
 other educational facilities in India. 
 
 - Accomplish the
 reconstruction and enlivenment of all ancient pilgrimage
 places of
 India. 
 
 - Build 108 ideal Vastu villages along the Ganges
 River. 
 
 - Reconstruct every state in India according to
 Vastu through the master plan of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, with
 an
 auspicious state capital in every state's Brahmasthan
 (geographical
 centre). 
 
 - Build a national capital of India in the
 centre of the country for administration through Natural
 Law, with
 192 embassies, ministries, a parliament hall, residences for
 1,200
 parliamentarians, and a cultural centre at the auspicious
 Brahmasthan
 of the city. 
 
 * Please see Global Good News articles:
 Worldwide construction initiatives to offer profound
 benefits of
 Maharishi Vedic Architecture Around the world, Maharishi
 Vedic
 Architecture projects planned for peace-creating groups of
 Vedic
 Pandits 
 
 ** The Global Mother Divine Organization,
 founded in December 2007, is the ladies' wing of the
 Global Country
 of World Peace. 
 
 *** The ancient city of Ayodhya in India
 is significant in the Vedic Literature as the seat of the
 'reign of
 Raam', in which suffering belonged to no one. Through
 the programmes
 of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi and initiatives such as
 construction of a
 Raam Durbar—a 

[FairfieldLife] Dance in [Meditating] Fairfield, Iowa

2013-11-04 Thread dhamiltony2k5
Notice Lord Ganesh Presides on stage over the Dance
 https://barenecessities2013.shutterfly.com/pictures/105#69 
https://barenecessities2013.shutterfly.com/pictures/105#69


[FairfieldLife] RE: Not a Vastu House

2013-11-04 Thread awoelflebater
This little post, although slightly interesting as your POV, does not otherwise 
address the Vastu issue or MJ's question other than to imply Vastu is basically 
impotent in overriding an otherwise spiritually bereft person's likelihood of a 
having a divorce-free or sickness-free life. According to Buck, Vastu is not 
important and it is without merit - especially when pitted against the 
tendencies of human beings to be undisciplined and the Movement to be dogmatic.
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, dhamiltony2k5@... wrote:

 MJ you ask, Why? how do you account for the divorces, bankruptcies and 
illnesses that have occurred in vastu veda homes and businesses right there in 
Fairfield? 
 Mostly a lack of spiritual discipline, or discernment.
 

 Is it sham or a shame?
 
 
 “Seventh.—Are Meditators careful to live within the bounds of their 
circumstances, and to avoid involving themselves in business beyond their 
ability to manage; or in hazardous or speculative trade?”
 
 
 In truth, Real meditators as effective spiritual people rectify their own 
perfect vastu of their own temple bodies when they meditate. Some people fail 
to ever capture the fort for lack of discernment. For lack of discipline it is 
easy to get side-tracked in theology and thought forms of orthodoxies. 
Maharsihi called that, “Mistake of the Intellect”. Sort of like an Ikie 
Hartmann building monuments taking the resources of the teaching TM movement to 
rebuild all the dwellings of the world with East facing doors. As if the holy 
grail is not inside. Engineers solve problems with engineering. Spiritual 
people are spiritual by virtue of spirituality. That is a different vector. 
That is a problem, the second element that is getting lost in the TM movement 
under these TM administrator raja and prime minister people now. 
 Instead Simplify. Just be more simple in meditation and you will get there.  
Look out for your Self becomes the more obvious lesson in all this.
 -Buck 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 how do you account for the divorces, bankruptcies and illnesses that have 
occurred in vastu veda homes and businesses right there in Fairfield?
 
 On Wed, 10/30/13, dhamiltony2k5@... mailto:dhamiltony2k5@... 
dhamiltony2k5@... mailto:dhamiltony2k5@... wrote:
 
 Subject: [FairfieldLife] RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Not a Vastu House
 To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
 Date: Wednesday, October 30, 2013, 12:01 PM
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Nearly 30 percent of kids in
 Jefferson County, Iowa are raised and live in poverty
 because their lodgings do not
 face East to catch the sunrise.  -Buck
  
 
 
 Rectifying
 Vastu, rebuilding the
 World;
 
 
 
 
 At a global celebration
 on 5 November, Dr Eike Hartmann, Minister of Architecture
 and City
 Planning for the Global Country of World Peace, highlighted
 plans to
 support health, happiness, and invincible peace and progress
 through
 these very special Maharishi Vedic Architecture
 initiatives. 
 
 
 
 He presented a beautiful visual display
 of all the planned projects,* which was prepared for the
 celebration
 by leaders of the Global Mother Divine Organization** in
 MERU,
 Holland. 
 
 
 
 Maharishi Vedic Architecture
 initiatives planned for India. Beautiful Maharishi Vedic
 Architecture
 initiatives planned for India include ideal Vastu villages,
 schools,
 and administrative centres. 
 
 The Ministry of Architecture
 plans to: 
 
 - Complete the Maharishi Samadhi Smarak, a
 memorial of Total Knowledge, with 12 exhibition Mandaps
 (halls) and
 beautiful gardens. 
 
 - Establish the administrative
 Capital of Raam Raj in Ayodhya,*** with a global parliament
 hall for
 192 countries. 
 
 - Construct a golden marble structure
 with Mandaps (halls) for Vedic performances (Yagyas) at the
 birthplace of Guru Dev, connected through a pilgrimage
 road to
 Ayodhya, with schools and other special buildings every few
 miles;
 and reconstruct two of Guru Dev's original
 Ashrams. 
 
 -
 Continue to build Maharishi Vidya Mandir schools, girls
 schools, and
 other educational facilities in India. 
 
 - Accomplish the
 reconstruction and enlivenment of all ancient pilgrimage
 places of
 India. 
 
 - Build 108 ideal Vastu villages along the Ganges
 River. 
 
 - Reconstruct every state in India according to
 Vastu through the master plan of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, with
 an
 auspicious state capital in every state's Brahmasthan
 (geographical
 centre). 
 
 - Build a national capital of India in the
 centre of the country for administration through Natural
 Law, with
 192 embassies, ministries, a parliament hall, residences for
 1,200
 parliamentarians, and a cultural centre at the auspicious
 Brahmasthan
 of the city. 
 
 * Please see Global Good News articles:
 Worldwide construction initiatives to offer profound
 benefits of
 

[FairfieldLife] RE: NPD

2013-11-04 Thread awoelflebater
NDP is far more complex than Barry's little cartoon implies. If it told even 
half the story Barry would qualify as Narcissist of the group. It also implies 
Barry has been damaged by those with NPD and is the reason he harps on it so 
much, indeed, seems terrified by the possibility someone might be trying their 
narcissistic ploys on him and by gum, he ain't gonna stand for it. No sirree, 
you asshole narcissists out there, don't mess with Baby Bawwy.
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, turquoiseb@... wrote:

 --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, wrote:
 
 NPD = narcissistic personality disorder ? 


 
http://media.salon.com/2013/10/brosh_embed3.jpg 
http://media.salon.com/2013/10/brosh_embed3.jpg 


 


[FairfieldLife] RE: RE: RE: NPD

2013-11-04 Thread authfriend
 
 Buck wrote:
 Whatutalking about? Robin Carlsen is a very interesting chapter in TM. He and 
 TM are going to be studied 
  by historical and social-science scholars for a long time to come.
 

 Maybe, maybe not. This was 30 years or so ago now, and there has been hardly 
any evidence of any such studying of Robin in connection with TM so far.
 

   I guess that makes you and some others 
   who went off with him part of TM that way too. That is okay. If nothing 
   else the court transcripts will 
   always be part of the study of TM. No need to get defensive.  I am glad 
   you turned up here on FFL to 
   share your experience with it too.  It is very interesting,  -Buck
 

 What's most interesting, it seems to me, is the difference between what we 
know of Robin in his cult days, from Ann and a couple of others who were around 
him then, and what we know of Robin firsthand from his presence on FFL in the 
past couple of years. No study of Robin's psychopathology, such as it may have 
been decades ago, would be complete if it didn't take that very striking 
difference into account.
 

 Yet Barry, who did not know Robin 30-some years ago, labeled him as having NPD 
based on Robin's participation on FFL.
 

 Take another look at the NPD characteristics that were mysteriously posted 
here. Many of them do fit the picture of Robin we have from those who knew him 
back then, but almost none of them fit his behavior on FFL. Yet according to 
Barry, NPD is incurable even with professional therapy (which Robin never had; 
any change in his behavior was due to his own efforts). That would appear to 
call in question whether Robin had NPD even in his WTS days.
 

 Ann is quite right to rebuke those who would apply a mental health diagnosis 
to Robin, either then or now, when they have no qualifications to do so. 
Especially when they have a marked tendency to try to affix the NPD label to 
anybody on FFL they don't like (and in Barry's case on Maharishi as well, as I 
pointed out--but at least Barry actually knew Maharishi many years ago).
 

 Buck wrote:
 NPD Heads-up. Seems there is a guy and a follower who showed up in 
 town in the last few days with these kinds of traits. Tells a good 
 story, really smart but incredibly manipulative and evidently abusive 
 with the younger follower. Lot like that other guy that used to post 
 here. I sent this new guy on to find the afternoon Fairfield illumined 
 experience banana-gram group. I think they have the resources to deal 
 with him safely and will appreciate him a lot. 
 

 Ann wrote:
I would think FF would be used to all sorts of crazy pseudo gurus making 
their way around the town square. Probably a good portion of residents 
there figured themselves some sort of teacher or capable of some special 
ability like speaking to animals, channeling angels or otherwise having 
their enlightened fingers on the pulse of what's-happenin'-now. Just one 
more of these dudes hitching his cow pony to the tie-up rail in front of 
Revelations surely is not cause for concern. Of course, a rousing game 
of Bananagrams always did separate the men from the boys (or the avatars 
from the plebs).
 

Now on the subject of NPD and Robin I think this subject has been 
bandied about long enough. Neither you nor Barry has the beginnings of 
an inkling of what makes that man tick and most of us here would 
appreciate it if you would leave the negative and inappropriate labels 
where they belong - in the textbooks or in the hands of those who might 
have a clue.
   

 






RE: Re: Re: Re: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: RE: RE: Growing up transgendered or, confused?

2013-11-04 Thread authfriend
Again, you make no sense, Share. What's on the Web site, of course, is Neo, so 
that excuse holds no water, sorry.
 

 Share bleated:
 
 Yes, Judy I was replying to BillyG but Neo was no longer showing his post and 
 I didn't 
  want to take the time to go to the website to reply from there. 
 

 
 On Saturday, November 2, 2013 8:57 PM, authfriend@... authfriend@... wrote:
 
   Did you mean to respond to BilllyG's post, Share, rather than this one? 
 

Share wrote:

  William, I wasn't referring to Judy in terms of posters scolding about 
  people not 
  snipping. She wasn't the one who was doing that.
 

 On Saturday, November 2, 2013 4:58 PM, authfriend@... authfriend@... wrote:
 
   Oh, did you think you were making a snappy, relevant comment here, Share?
 

 Share flubbed:

 
  OTOH, some posters have scolded some other posters for NOT snipping! Go 
  figure!
 

 You really just don't seem to be getting it about not posting any old thing 
that comes to your mind without giving it a bit of a think first.
 

 

 
 
 On Saturday, November 2, 2013 3:06 PM, wgm4u no_re...@yahoogroups.com wrote:
 
   Thanks for the tip 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 The post a person is responding to (and sometimes a whole string of posts in 
an exchange) always appears when you click on the three dots in the bottom left 
of the Reply box--unless the person who wrote the post has deleted everything, 
which is what BillyG does. Apparently he doesn't like to feel that he's part of 
a discussion, so he gets rid of it all before posting.
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 It all depends on what software you're using. I've been monitoring FFL 
messages in IE and Firefox and I've noticed that some posts don't include what 
the person is responding to. However, when you hit reply sometimes the messages 
appear when you scroll down.
 
 And, I've also noticed that hardly anyone follows the netiquette protocols for 
formatting messages anymore. It sure would be helpful if people would do some 
formatting using the old style right angle bracket, but now I realize that's 
really asking to much of people, since mainly they are just shooting from the 
hip with one-liner snickers. There seem to be only about two serious 
respondents left here anyway.
 
 So, I'm using Thunderbird to send and reply to text only posts, but when I 
want to include an image I use Chrome, which has a nice feature to key in the 
location of the image URL. I haven't figured out what happened to the 'source 
view' in Neo to include an image URL. I've also noticed that several people 
have not figured out how to make an active URL link in any program. Go figure.
 
 P.S. At this point, I'm not even posting with the expectation that anyone but 
lurkers would read this stuff, so it's mostly for them to be amused with.
 
 On 11/2/2013 10:40 AM, authfriend@... mailto:authfriend@... wrote:
 
   BillyG, you know, it's courteous to quote a bit of what you're responding 
to, or at least to identify the writer you're responding to. You don't do that, 
and it makes it look as though you don't want to actually have a discussion but 
rather only to make proclamations.
 
 
 
 
 




 
 

 
 




 
 
 
 




 
 

 




 
 
 
 



 
 

 
 



 
 
 
 





RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: Michelle Pfeiffer escaped from a cult

2013-11-04 Thread authfriend
Share will, of course, take this single article as conclusive proof of type 3 
diabetes and decide that I was wrong. Yet what I said was that there is as yet 
no scientific consensus as to its existence.
 

 She and Xeno might want to have a look at this study (published two years 
after the one Xeno cited), just for one example:
 

 Curr Neuropharmacol. 2011 December; 9(4): 693–705.
 Consequences of Aberrant Insulin Regulation in the Brain: Can Treating 
Diabetes be Effective for Alzheimer’s Disease

 




 This study does mention type 3 diabetes in passing:
 

 It has even been suggested that AD could be considered as 'type 3 diabetes' 
since insulin can be produced in brain.

 

 Obviously has even been suggested indicates these authors do not consider 
this as much more than speculation at this point.
 

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 J Diabetes Sci Technol. 2008 November; 2(6): 1101–1113.
 Published online 2008 November.
 

 Alzheimer's Disease Is Type 3 Diabetes–Evidence Reviewed
 

 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2769828/

 



RE: Re: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: Michelle Pfeiffer escaped from a cult

2013-11-04 Thread doctordumbass
I'd be careful about listening to those guys. Exercise won't help, but facing 
the past will. My experience with minds falling apart, is that life grants the 
desire, to those it occurs to - allows them to forget the past, or certainly 
the elements in it, that they have avoided for decades. The religion of Science 
continues to ignore consciousness, as a huge factor, regarding physical and 
mental health, and makes itself look pretty stupid in the process.

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 Thanks, Xeno and exercise still best bet to prevent Alzheimers according to 
Mayo Clinic.
 http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/alzheimers/MY2 
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/alzheimers/MY2

 

 
 
 On Sunday, November 3, 2013 9:26 PM, anartaxius@... anartaxius@... wrote:
 
   J Diabetes Sci Technol. 2008 November; 2(6): 1101–1113.
 Published online 2008 November.
 

 Alzheimer's Disease Is Type 3 Diabetes–Evidence Reviewed
 

 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2769828/

 
 

 
 



 
 
 
 





RE: RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: Michelle Pfeiffer escaped from a cult

2013-11-04 Thread authfriend
Buck wrote: 
 
 That is interesting,  Why the seemingly modern increase in AD incidence?  Too 
 much wheat and sugar
  processed food western diet as trigger to type 3 diabetes?
 

 Again, we don't know whether there is such an entity as type 3 diabetes. In 
any case, according to the current speculation, it would be Alzheimer's that 
was triggered, the idea being that Alzheimer's itself is a third type of 
diabetes.
 

 

 

 

   Macaroni?  All that Mountain Dew piled high in Walmart grocery shopping 
carts?  What are we doing?  More meditation could proly be helpful.  
 -Buck 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 J Diabetes Sci Technol. 2008 November; 2(6): 1101–1113.
 Published online 2008 November.
 

 Alzheimer's Disease Is Type 3 Diabetes–Evidence Reviewed
 

 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2769828/

 





Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: MANICHAEAN VIEWS OF BUDDHISM

2013-11-04 Thread Richard J. Williams
We know mostly about Mani from The Dead Sea Scrolls, the Enochan 
literature and the writings of Augustine of Hippo, who claimed to have 
been a dualistic Manichaen for ten years. The radical dualism of 
Manichaeism is evident in many Gnostic sects but mainly in the 
Paulicans, Bogomils and the Cathars.


So, the dualism of Gnoticisim has been pretty much established. 
Manichaeism is based on the doctrine that the entire world of material 
bodies are all constructions of Satan. Numerous themes in the religious 
beliefs of Mani were derived from Buddhist influences when Mani lived in 
Buddhist Ghandara. Yin and Yang are complimentary forces rather than 
opposing forces which, when taken together in various proportions, turn 
into a whole. It's not complicated.


According to Foltz, Taoism is also based on Yin Yang and many Buddhist 
elements have been incorporated into Taoism, such as supporting 
monesterys, monks, vegetarianism, and adopting the Buddhist doctrine of 
emptiness. Taoism in turn influenced the Buddhist Chan school and 
Japanese Zen school.


Work cited:

'Religions of the Silk Road'
Richard Foltz
Palgrave Macmillan, 2010
p. 71

Read more:

Subject: The Silk Road
Newsgroups: alt.meditation.transcendental
Author: Willytex
Date: March 10, 2004
http://tinyurl.com/yjs4uv4

Subject: Foreign Devils on the Silk Road!
Author: Willytex
Newsgroups: alt.meditation.transcendental, alt.religion.gnostic
Date: February 6, 2005
http://tinyurl.com/yb2275p

On 11/3/2013 4:10 PM, s3raph...@yahoo.com wrote:


Re The Gnostic prophet Mani taught radical dualist cosmology; a 
struggle between the opposing forces of good and evil, spiritual light 
versus the material world darkness. Humans are composed of two 
opposing elements in a battle for power. There is a soul, but it is 
influenced by elements of both good and evil. Manichaeism is similar 
to the dualistic Bogomils, Paulicians, and Cathars. It's not 
complicated. Adepts in China and the Far East would probably relate to 
this with their own notions of Yin and Yang.:



The Yin and Yang concepts point to a Tao that includes the 
opposites. Imagining that one side of a pair of opposites could gain 
the upper hand over the other would be a vulgar error.


As the little we know about Manichaeism and similar dualist 
religions/philosophies comes to us from hostile sources isn't it 
possible that these beliefs weren't as dualist as they've been painted 
but perhaps also had the idea of a Transcendence that reconciled the 
positive and negative aspects of life?




---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, punditster@... wrote:

So, let's review what we know about the prophet Mani.

The Gnostic prophet Mani taught radical dualist cosmology; a struggle 
between the opposing forces of good and evil, spiritual light versus 
the material world darkness. Humans are composed of two opposing 
elements in a battle for power. There is a soul, but it is influenced 
by elements of both good and evil. Manichaeism is similar to the 
dualistic Bogomils, Paulicians, and Cathars. It's not complicated.


Adepts in China and the Far East would probably relate to this with 
their own notions of Yin and Yang, which is probably derived from the 
Indian Sankhya, a radical dualism, and later tantra- a theory of 
polarity which posits male and female energies.


The name 'Mani' is Sanskrit. Mani traveled and lived in India for 
several years, visiting  Buddhist lands such as Bamiyan in 
Afghanistan, so it is not surprising that Buddhist influences would be 
apparent. Mani apparently adopted his theory of the reincarnation 
(transmigration of souls) from the Buddhists. Mani's sect structure 
was apparently based on the Buddhist Sangha, that is, Arhants and the 
lay follower community.



On 11/2/2013 11:31 AM, emptybill@... mailto:emptybill@... wrote:


No wonder the Near-Eastern realm got so mixed up. *//*

It seems that as Manichean ideology spread to the East it 
incorporated Buddhist concepts along the way in a effort to show the 
superiority of the Religion of Light. Mani lived during the third 
century of the current era. Mani used the epitaph Buddha of Light 
and identified himself as Maitreya. He and his followers specifically 
borrowed from early Pure Land Sutras and Nagarjuna's Madhyamaka 
philosophy. As it entered the region of Gandhara and spread to China 
it used the Buddhist Hinayana tradition to support its views of 
matter, the body and the world.


MANICHAEAN VIEWS OF BUDDHISM


*/David A. Scott /*
*//*

*/Christ Church College /**/of /**/Higher Education/*









[FairfieldLife] RE: MANICHAEAN VIEWS OF BUDDHISM

2013-11-04 Thread s3raphita
Seraphita, would it be an error because Taoists believe that the Tao is always 
keeping good and evil in balance? 
 Yes
 And what is meant by a vulgar error? 
 Simply that Lao-Tse would have regarded most people as too ignorant to 
understand his teaching. 
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, sharelong60@... wrote:

 Seraphita, would it be an error because Taoists believe that the Tao is always 
keeping good and evil in balance? And what is meant by a vulgar error?

Seraphita wrote:
The Yin and Yang concepts point to a Tao that includes the opposites. 
Imagining that one side of a pair of opposites could gain the upper hand over 
the other would be a vulgar error. 

 
 
 On Sunday, November 3, 2013 4:10 PM, s3raphita@... s3raphita@... wrote:
 
   Re The Gnostic prophet Mani taught radical dualist cosmology; a struggle 
between the opposing forces of good and evil, spiritual light versus the 
material world darkness. Humans are composed of two opposing elements in a 
battle for power. There is a soul, but it is influenced by elements of both 
good and evil. Manichaeism is similar to the dualistic Bogomils, Paulicians, 
and Cathars. It's not complicated. Adepts in China and the Far East would 
probably relate to this with their own notions of Yin and Yang.:
 

 The Yin and Yang concepts point to a Tao that includes the opposites. 
Imagining that one side of a pair of opposites could gain the upper hand over 
the other would be a vulgar error.
 As the little we know about Manichaeism and similar dualist 
religions/philosophies comes to us from hostile sources isn't it possible that 
these beliefs weren't as dualist as they've been painted but perhaps also had 
the idea of a Transcendence that reconciled the positive and negative aspects 
of life?
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, punditster@... wrote:

 So, let's review what we know about the prophet Mani. 
 
 The Gnostic prophet Mani taught radical dualist cosmology; a struggle between 
the opposing forces of good and evil, spiritual light versus the material world 
darkness. Humans are composed of two opposing elements in a battle for power. 
There is a soul, but it is influenced by elements of both good and evil. 
Manichaeism is similar to the dualistic Bogomils, Paulicians, and Cathars. It's 
not complicated.
 
 Adepts in China and the Far East would probably relate to this with their own 
notions of Yin and Yang, which is probably derived from the Indian Sankhya, a 
radical dualism, and later tantra- a theory of polarity which posits male and 
female energies. 
 
 The name 'Mani' is Sanskrit. Mani traveled and lived in India for several 
years, visiting  Buddhist lands such as Bamiyan in Afghanistan, so it is not 
surprising that Buddhist influences would be apparent. Mani apparently adopted 
his theory of the reincarnation (transmigration of souls) from the Buddhists. 
Mani's sect structure was apparently based on the Buddhist Sangha, that is, 
Arhants and the lay follower community. 
 
 
 On 11/2/2013 11:31 AM, emptybill@... mailto:emptybill@... wrote:
 
   
  
 No wonder the Near-Eastern realm got so mixed up.   
 It seems that as Manichean ideology spread to the East it incorporated 
Buddhist concepts along the way in a effort to show the superiority of the 
Religion of Light. Mani lived during the third century of the current era. 
Mani used the epitaph Buddha of Light and identified himself as Maitreya. He 
and his followers specifically borrowed from early Pure Land Sutras and 
Nagarjuna's Madhyamaka philosophy. As it entered the region of Gandhara and 
spread to China it used the Buddhist Hinayana tradition to support its views of 
matter, the body and the world.
 MANICHAEAN VIEWS OF BUDDHISM
 
 
 David A. Scott 
 
 Christ Church College of Higher Education 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 



 
 
 
 


 


[FairfieldLife] RE: RE: RE: RE: NPD

2013-11-04 Thread dhamiltony2k5
Yes, maybe, maybe not,
 

  The TM-Robin Carlsen court transcripts are proly someone's academic thesis in 
the future for modern example of someone by personality coming broadside to try 
to take over an existing group or movement. Historically sort of like Count 
Leon did with George Rapp and the experience of fragmentation in the Harmonists 
where you get the battle of character playing out in a spiritual group by 
personality. It is really interesting story that one can see in life and also 
learn to recognize as you go along. Seems very much part of any of our 
adaptation in doing groups and dealing with the aspect of charismatic 
leadership of whatever personality.
 Practically this is sort of like, how far do you let someone run on with their 
seeming mystical associations before you pull them up short? Like this guy who 
evidently is extremely clever showing up last week in Fairfield trying to 
figure things out and get a foothold. It's noteworthy in the field of study of 
mysticism and communal spiritual movements. What is reality and what is mental 
illness in the range of things? Engraved gold plates and angels?
 -Buck in the Dome 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

  
 Buck wrote:
  Whatutalking about? Robin Carlsen is a very interesting chapter in TM. He 
  and TM are going to be studied 
  by historical and social-science scholars for a long time to come.
 

 Maybe, maybe not. This was 30 years or so ago now, and there has been hardly 
any evidence of any such studying of Robin in connection with TM so far.
 
 
   I guess that makes you and some others 
   who went off with him part of TM that way too. That is okay. If nothing 
   else the court transcripts will 
   always be part of the study of TM. No need to get defensive.  I am glad 
   you turned up here on FFL to 
   share your experience with it too.  It is very interesting,  -Buck
 

 What's most interesting, it seems to me, is the difference between what we 
know of Robin in his cult days, from Ann and a couple of others who were around 
him then, and what we know of Robin firsthand from his presence on FFL in the 
past couple of years. No study of Robin's psychopathology, such as it may have 
been decades ago, would be complete if it didn't take that very striking 
difference into account.
 

 Yet Barry, who did not know Robin 30-some years ago, labeled him as having NPD 
based on Robin's participation on FFL.
 

 Take another look at the NPD characteristics that were mysteriously posted 
here. Many of them do fit the picture of Robin we have from those who knew him 
back then, but almost none of them fit his behavior on FFL. Yet according to 
Barry, NPD is incurable even with professional therapy (which Robin never had; 
any change in his behavior was due to his own efforts). That would appear to 
call in question whether Robin had NPD even in his WTS days.
 

 Ann is quite right to rebuke those who would apply a mental health diagnosis 
to Robin, either then or now, when they have no qualifications to do so. 
Especially when they have a marked tendency to try to affix the NPD label to 
anybody on FFL they don't like (and in Barry's case on Maharishi as well, as I 
pointed out--but at least Barry actually knew Maharishi many years ago).
 

 Buck wrote:
 NPD Heads-up. Seems there is a guy and a follower who showed up in 
 town in the last few days with these kinds of traits. Tells a good 
 story, really smart but incredibly manipulative and evidently abusive 
 with the younger follower. Lot like that other guy that used to post 
 here. I sent this new guy on to find the afternoon Fairfield illumined 
 experience banana-gram group. I think they have the resources to deal 
 with him safely and will appreciate him a lot. 
 

 Ann wrote:
I would think FF would be used to all sorts of crazy pseudo gurus making 
their way around the town square. Probably a good portion of residents 
there figured themselves some sort of teacher or capable of some special 
ability like speaking to animals, channeling angels or otherwise having 
their enlightened fingers on the pulse of what's-happenin'-now. Just one 
more of these dudes hitching his cow pony to the tie-up rail in front of 
Revelations surely is not cause for concern. Of course, a rousing game 
of Bananagrams always did separate the men from the boys (or the avatars 
from the plebs).
 

Now on the subject of NPD and Robin I think this subject has been 
bandied about long enough. Neither you nor Barry has the beginnings of 
an inkling of what makes that man tick and most of us here would 
appreciate it if you would leave the negative and inappropriate labels 
where they belong - in the textbooks or in the hands of those who might 
have a clue.
   

 








RE: RE: Re: Re: Re: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: RE: RE: Growing up transgendered or, confused?

2013-11-04 Thread sharelong60
As I've mentioned before, Judy, I have 2 versions of email inboxes. One is 
Basic and one is Neo. Neo inbox only shows the most recent post of a thread. 
This morning I found a way to access and reply to previous posts.  

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 Again, you make no sense, Share. What's on the Web site, of course, is Neo, so 
that excuse holds no water, sorry.
 

 Share bleated:
 
  Yes, Judy I was replying to BillyG but Neo was no longer showing his post 
  and I didn't 
  want to take the time to go to the website to reply from there. 
 
 
 
 On Saturday, November 2, 2013 8:57 PM, authfriend@... authfriend@... wrote:
 
   Did you mean to respond to BilllyG's post, Share, rather than this one? 
 

Share wrote:

  William, I wasn't referring to Judy in terms of posters scolding about 
  people not 
  snipping. She wasn't the one who was doing that.
 

 On Saturday, November 2, 2013 4:58 PM, authfriend@... authfriend@... wrote:
 
   Oh, did you think you were making a snappy, relevant comment here, Share?
 

 Share flubbed:

 
  OTOH, some posters have scolded some other posters for NOT snipping! Go 
  figure!
 

 You really just don't seem to be getting it about not posting any old thing 
that comes to your mind without giving it a bit of a think first.
 

 

 
 
 On Saturday, November 2, 2013 3:06 PM, wgm4u no_re...@yahoogroups.com wrote:
 
   Thanks for the tip 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 The post a person is responding to (and sometimes a whole string of posts in 
an exchange) always appears when you click on the three dots in the bottom left 
of the Reply box--unless the person who wrote the post has deleted everything, 
which is what BillyG does. Apparently he doesn't like to feel that he's part of 
a discussion, so he gets rid of it all before posting.
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 It all depends on what software you're using. I've been monitoring FFL 
messages in IE and Firefox and I've noticed that some posts don't include what 
the person is responding to. However, when you hit reply sometimes the messages 
appear when you scroll down.
 
 And, I've also noticed that hardly anyone follows the netiquette protocols for 
formatting messages anymore. It sure would be helpful if people would do some 
formatting using the old style right angle bracket, but now I realize that's 
really asking to much of people, since mainly they are just shooting from the 
hip with one-liner snickers. There seem to be only about two serious 
respondents left here anyway.
 
 So, I'm using Thunderbird to send and reply to text only posts, but when I 
want to include an image I use Chrome, which has a nice feature to key in the 
location of the image URL. I haven't figured out what happened to the 'source 
view' in Neo to include an image URL. I've also noticed that several people 
have not figured out how to make an active URL link in any program. Go figure.
 
 P.S. At this point, I'm not even posting with the expectation that anyone but 
lurkers would read this stuff, so it's mostly for them to be amused with.
 
 On 11/2/2013 10:40 AM, authfriend@... mailto:authfriend@... wrote:
 
   BillyG, you know, it's courteous to quote a bit of what you're responding 
to, or at least to identify the writer you're responding to. You don't do that, 
and it makes it look as though you don't want to actually have a discussion but 
rather only to make proclamations.
 
 
 
 
 




 
 

 
 




 
 
 
 




 
 

 




 
 
 
 



 
 

 
 



 
 
 
 







RE: RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: Michelle Pfeiffer escaped from a cult

2013-11-04 Thread sharelong60
Judy of course assumes incorrectly that she knows what's going on in my mind. 
Plus she projects that I will decide that she is wrong, which is what she does! 
Actually I skimmed her post on this topic and took it as more input about the 
topic rather than as right or wrong. This points to a fundamental difference 
between us and why IMO she just about always is inaccurate in her opinions 
about me. 

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 Share will, of course, take this single article as conclusive proof of type 3 
diabetes and decide that I was wrong. Yet what I said was that there is as yet 
no scientific consensus as to its existence.
 

 She and Xeno might want to have a look at this study (published two years 
after the one Xeno cited), just for one example:
 

 Curr Neuropharmacol. 2011 December; 9(4): 693–705.
 Consequences of Aberrant Insulin Regulation in the Brain: Can Treating 
Diabetes be Effective for Alzheimer’s Disease

 




 This study does mention type 3 diabetes in passing:
 

 It has even been suggested that AD could be considered as 'type 3 diabetes' 
since insulin can be produced in brain.

 

 Obviously has even been suggested indicates these authors do not consider 
this as much more than speculation at this point.
 

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 J Diabetes Sci Technol. 2008 November; 2(6): 1101–1113.
 Published online 2008 November.
 

 Alzheimer's Disease Is Type 3 Diabetes–Evidence Reviewed
 

 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2769828/

 





Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: Not a Vastu House

2013-11-04 Thread Richard J. Williams
The Sanskrit word 'vastu' means a dwelling or house with a corresponding 
plot of land. The word pertains to construction. Vastu is based in five 
elements: earth, air, fire, water, and space, all interrelated.


However, once a building has been constructed there is very little that 
can be done to make it vastu compliant. For that, you'd have to be 
consulting a Feng Shui expert. It's then all a matter of placement and 
positioning. So, I've decided to build a vastu home from the ground up. 
One decision I've already made is to build my structure on a pier and 
beam construction, and I've decided to use cedar posts for the supports, 
arranged in a logical series.


All humans make use of vastu to a degree, even if they don't believe in 
it. There's probably not a single person on this list that hasn't been 
inclined to decorate and arrange their own home. Almost the whole of 
agriculture is based on vastu principles - oriented to the sun and wind 
and arranged for the flow of water. All nature employs vastu in the form 
of nests and animal habitats.


Bad vastu is probably the result of a person having a sickness, not the 
cause. A marriage won't last long if there's not a balance, especially 
for those whose dwelling looks like a place inhabited by slobs.  If you 
don't like this answer, take two mirrors and call me in the morning.


On 11/4/2013 8:36 AM, awoelfleba...@yahoo.com wrote:


This little post, although slightly interesting as your POV, does not 
otherwise address the Vastu issue or MJ's question other than to imply 
Vastu is basically impotent in overriding an otherwise spiritually 
bereft person's likelihood of a having a divorce-free or sickness-free 
life. According to Buck, Vastu is not important and it is without 
merit - especially when pitted against the tendencies of human beings 
to be undisciplined and the Movement to be dogmatic.




---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, dhamiltony2k5@... wrote:

*MJ you ask, Why? *how do you account for the divorces, bankruptcies 
and illnesses that have occurred in vastu veda homes and businesses 
right there in Fairfield? **


*Mostly a lack of spiritual discipline, or discernment.*

*
*

*Is it sham or a shame?*


“Seventh.—Are Meditators careful to live within the bounds of their 
circumstances, and to avoid involving themselves in business beyond 
their ability to manage; or in hazardous or speculative trade?”



In truth, Real meditators as effective spiritual people rectify their 
own perfect vastu of their own temple bodies when they meditate. Some 
people fail to ever capture the fort for lack of discernment. For lack 
of discipline it is easy to get side-tracked in theology and thought 
forms of orthodoxies. Maharsihi called that, “Mistake of the 
Intellect”. Sort of like an Ikie Hartmann building monuments taking 
the resources of the teaching TM movement to rebuild all the dwellings 
of the world with East facing doors. As if the holy grail is not 
inside. Engineers solve problems with engineering. Spiritual people 
are spiritual by virtue of spirituality. That is a different vector. 
That is a problem, the second element that is getting lost in the TM 
movement under these TM administrator raja and prime minister people now.


Instead Simplify. Just be more simple in meditation and you will get 
there.  Look out for your Self becomes the more obvious lesson in all 
this.


-Buck



---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com 
wrote:


how do you account for the divorces, bankruptcies and illnesses that 
have occurred in vastu veda homes and businesses right there in Fairfield?



On Wed, 10/30/13, dhamiltony2k5@... mailto:dhamiltony2k5@...
dhamiltony2k5@... mailto:dhamiltony2k5@... wrote:

Subject: [FairfieldLife] RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Not a
Vastu House
To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
mailto:FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
Date: Wednesday, October 30, 2013, 12:01 PM


























 Nearly 30 percent of kids in
Jefferson County, Iowa are raised and live in poverty
because their lodgings do not
face East to catch the sunrise.  -Buck



Rectifying
Vastu, rebuilding the
World;




At a global celebration
on 5 November, Dr Eike Hartmann, Minister of Architecture
and City
Planning for the Global Country of World Peace, highlighted
plans to
support health, happiness, and invincible peace and progress
through
these very special Maharishi Vedic Architecture
initiatives.



He presented a beautiful visual display
of all the planned projects,* which was prepared for the
celebration
by leaders of the Global Mother Divine Organization** in
MERU,
Holland.



Maharishi Vedic Architecture
initiatives planned for India. 

[FairfieldLife] FREE week-long streaming of NEW 60mins Genetic Roulette~The Gamble of Our Lives

2013-11-04 Thread Rick Archer
FREE week-long streaming of new 60mins Genetic Roulette~The Gamble of Our Lives 

@ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HUQWG4-vq90



Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: Michelle Pfeiffer escaped from a cult

2013-11-04 Thread Bhairitu
When all is said and done I'll bet that the basic cause of  Alzheimer's 
is poor blood flow to the brain. And there can be multiple reasons for 
that and multiple solutions.


On 11/04/2013 04:42 AM, Share Long wrote:
Thanks, Xeno and exercise still best bet to prevent Alzheimers 
according to Mayo Clinic.
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/alzheimers/MY2 
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/alzheimers/MY2





On Sunday, November 3, 2013 9:26 PM, anartax...@yahoo.com 
anartax...@yahoo.com wrote:

J Diabetes Sci Technol. 2008 November; 2(6): 1101–1113.
Published online 2008 November.


  Alzheimer's Disease Is Type 3 Diabetes–Evidence Reviewed


http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2769828/







Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: Michelle Pfeiffer escaped from a cult

2013-11-04 Thread Share Long
That makes sense, Bhairitu. I was also reading recently that lack of sleep 
disallows the needed flushing out of toxins in the brain. Basically this 
vehicle, the body, requires a lot of maintenance!





On Monday, November 4, 2013 10:31 AM, Bhairitu noozg...@sbcglobal.net wrote:
 
  
When all is said and done I'll bet that the basic cause of  Alzheimer's is poor 
blood flow to the brain.  And there can be multiple reasons for that and 
multiple solutions.

On 11/04/2013 04:42 AM, Share Long wrote:

  
Thanks, Xeno and exercise still best bet to prevent Alzheimers according to 
Mayo Clinic.
http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/alzheimers/MY2







On Sunday, November 3, 2013 9:26 PM, anartax...@yahoo.com 
anartax...@yahoo.com wrote:
 
  
J Diabetes Sci Technol. 2008 November; 2(6): 1101–1113.
Published online 2008 November.


 
Alzheimer's Disease Is Type 3 Diabetes–Evidence Reviewed


http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2769828/






[FairfieldLife] the blue skies of China!

2013-11-04 Thread Share Long
http://i.imgur.com/tqUevXX.jpg

Re: [FairfieldLife] FREE week-long streaming of NEW 60mins Genetic Roulette~The Gamble of Our Lives

2013-11-04 Thread Bhairitu
Also my native state of Washington is voting tomorrow on GMO labeling.  
Let's hope it passes.  As usual the food gangsters have been spending a 
lot of money to see it defeated.  It is thought that the labeling law 
actually won in California as some recounts showed except that in the 
Central Valley where Big Farma rules they made it expensive and 
difficult to do a recount.


On 11/04/2013 08:21 AM, Rick Archer wrote:


FREE week-long streaming of new 60mins Genetic Roulette~The Gamble of 
Our Lives


@ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HUQWG4-vq90






[FairfieldLife] RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: NPD

2013-11-04 Thread authfriend
Not sure what, if anything, this has to do with the post of mine you're 
responding to, but you need to get your facts straight: Robin wasn't trying to 
take over the TM movement; rather, he wanted Maharishi's approval to make 
some reforms and additions/modifications to the TM teaching (including the 
TM-Sidhi techniques). Ann could tell you more about that; but what I understand 
from his own writings is that he felt Maharishi's knowledge wasn't being 
presented effectively at MIU. Robin was certain Maharishi would back him up (as 
he's explained here in some detail), but that didn't happen, and Robin had to 
get out of Dodge.
 

 I never made any objections to studying Robin's interactions with the TMO, 
BTW. But it doesn't seem to me that they'd be of more than mild interest even 
to cult scholars  Don't know how much of the court transcripts would be that 
fascinating either. Again as I understand it, the lawsuits had to do primarily 
with Robin's claim that MIU's actions in excommunicating or otherwise 
sanctioning the students who became involved with his group, and prohibiting 
him and his group from proselytizing on campus, were detrimental to his 
business.
 

 Much more interesting than the legal wrangling, I should think, would be the 
content of the proselytizing and Robin's tactics in implementing it.
 

 Frankly, I don't think you've paid enough attention to what Robin (and Ann and 
a couple of others) wrote on FFL about those days to have a clear idea of 
what's worth studying and what isn't. I seriously doubt any academic theses 
will be written on the court transcripts.
 

 But my real objection, as I thought I'd made clear, was to the application of 
mental health diagnoses to Robin, as he was then and is now (but especially 
now), by folks who are eminently unqualified to do so.
 
Buck wrote:

  The TM-Robin Carlsen court transcripts are proly someone's academic thesis 
  in the future for modern example of someone by personality coming broadside 
  to try to take over an existing group or movement. Historically sort of like 
  Count Leon did with George Rapp and the experience of fragmentation in the 
  Harmonists where you get the battle of character playing out in a spiritual 
  group by personality. It is really interesting story that one can see in 
  life and also learn to recognize as you go along. Seems very much part of 
  any of our adaptation in doing groups and dealing with the aspect of 
  charismatic leadership of whatever personality.
 

  Practically this is sort of like, how far do you let someone run on with 
  their seeming mystical associations before you pull them up short?
 

 Is that even up to you? (Unless the person is interfering with your rights to 
live your life as you choose.) I might remind you that there's more than one 
FFL participant who thinks you need to be pulled up short.
 

  Like this guy who evidently is extremely clever showing up last week in 
  Fairfield trying to figure things out and get a foothold. It's noteworthy in 
  the field of study of mysticism and communal spiritual movements. What is 
  reality and what is mental illness in the range of things? Engraved gold 
  plates and angels?
 -Buck in the Dome 
 

 That question is way premature given the very little you've told us about this 
guy and how recently this has come up.
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

  
 Buck wrote:
  Whatutalking about? Robin Carlsen is a very interesting chapter in TM. He 
  and TM are going to be studied 
  by historical and social-science scholars for a long time to come.
 

 Maybe, maybe not. This was 30 years or so ago now, and there has been hardly 
any evidence of any such studying of Robin in connection with TM so far.
 
 
   I guess that makes you and some others 
   who went off with him part of TM that way too. That is okay. If nothing 
   else the court transcripts will 
   always be part of the study of TM. No need to get defensive.  I am glad 
   you turned up here on FFL to 
   share your experience with it too.  It is very interesting,  -Buck
 

 What's most interesting, it seems to me, is the difference between what we 
know of Robin in his cult days, from Ann and a couple of others who were around 
him then, and what we know of Robin firsthand from his presence on FFL in the 
past couple of years. No study of Robin's psychopathology, such as it may have 
been decades ago, would be complete if it didn't take that very striking 
difference into account.
 

 Yet Barry, who did not know Robin 30-some years ago, labeled him as having NPD 
based on Robin's participation on FFL.
 

 Take another look at the NPD characteristics that were mysteriously posted 
here. Many of them do fit the picture of Robin we have from those who knew him 
back then, but almost none of them fit his behavior on FFL. Yet according to 
Barry, NPD is incurable even with professional therapy (which Robin never had; 
any change 

RE: RE: RE: Re: Re: Re: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: RE: RE: Growing up transgendered or, confused?

2013-11-04 Thread authfriend
Neo is the Web site interface, Share, not Yahoo Mail. In Yahoo Mail, the basic 
version lists each post; in the new version, the posts in a thread are grouped 
together and only the latest appears in the list. 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 As I've mentioned before, Judy, I have 2 versions of email inboxes. One is 
Basic and one is Neo. Neo inbox only shows the most recent post of a thread. 
This morning I found a way to access and reply to previous posts.  

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 Again, you make no sense, Share. What's on the Web site, of course, is Neo, so 
that excuse holds no water, sorry.
 

 Share bleated:
 
  Yes, Judy I was replying to BillyG but Neo was no longer showing his post 
  and I didn't 
  want to take the time to go to the website to reply from there. 
 
 
 
 On Saturday, November 2, 2013 8:57 PM, authfriend@... authfriend@... wrote:
 
   Did you mean to respond to BilllyG's post, Share, rather than this one? 
 

Share wrote:

  William, I wasn't referring to Judy in terms of posters scolding about 
  people not 
  snipping. She wasn't the one who was doing that.
 

 On Saturday, November 2, 2013 4:58 PM, authfriend@... authfriend@... wrote:
 
   Oh, did you think you were making a snappy, relevant comment here, Share?
 

 Share flubbed:

 
  OTOH, some posters have scolded some other posters for NOT snipping! Go 
  figure!
 

 You really just don't seem to be getting it about not posting any old thing 
that comes to your mind without giving it a bit of a think first.
 

 

 
 
 On Saturday, November 2, 2013 3:06 PM, wgm4u no_re...@yahoogroups.com wrote:
 
   Thanks for the tip 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 The post a person is responding to (and sometimes a whole string of posts in 
an exchange) always appears when you click on the three dots in the bottom left 
of the Reply box--unless the person who wrote the post has deleted everything, 
which is what BillyG does. Apparently he doesn't like to feel that he's part of 
a discussion, so he gets rid of it all before posting.
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 It all depends on what software you're using. I've been monitoring FFL 
messages in IE and Firefox and I've noticed that some posts don't include what 
the person is responding to. However, when you hit reply sometimes the messages 
appear when you scroll down.
 
 And, I've also noticed that hardly anyone follows the netiquette protocols for 
formatting messages anymore. It sure would be helpful if people would do some 
formatting using the old style right angle bracket, but now I realize that's 
really asking to much of people, since mainly they are just shooting from the 
hip with one-liner snickers. There seem to be only about two serious 
respondents left here anyway.
 
 So, I'm using Thunderbird to send and reply to text only posts, but when I 
want to include an image I use Chrome, which has a nice feature to key in the 
location of the image URL. I haven't figured out what happened to the 'source 
view' in Neo to include an image URL. I've also noticed that several people 
have not figured out how to make an active URL link in any program. Go figure.
 
 P.S. At this point, I'm not even posting with the expectation that anyone but 
lurkers would read this stuff, so it's mostly for them to be amused with.
 
 On 11/2/2013 10:40 AM, authfriend@... mailto:authfriend@... wrote:
 
   BillyG, you know, it's courteous to quote a bit of what you're responding 
to, or at least to identify the writer you're responding to. You don't do that, 
and it makes it look as though you don't want to actually have a discussion but 
rather only to make proclamations.
 
 
 
 
 




 
 

 
 




 
 
 
 




 
 

 




 
 
 
 



 
 

 
 



 
 
 
 









RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: Michelle Pfeiffer escaped from a cult

2013-11-04 Thread authfriend
Share, your thoughts and motivations are way more transparent than you realize. 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 Judy of course assumes incorrectly that she knows what's going on in my mind. 
Plus she projects that I will decide that she is wrong, which is what she does! 
Actually I skimmed her post on this topic and took it as more input about the 
topic rather than as right or wrong. This points to a fundamental difference 
between us and why IMO she just about always is inaccurate in her opinions 
about me. 

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 Share will, of course, take this single article as conclusive proof of type 3 
diabetes and decide that I was wrong. Yet what I said was that there is as yet 
no scientific consensus as to its existence.
 

 She and Xeno might want to have a look at this study (published two years 
after the one Xeno cited), just for one example:
 

 Curr Neuropharmacol. 2011 December; 9(4): 693–705.
 Consequences of Aberrant Insulin Regulation in the Brain: Can Treating 
Diabetes be Effective for Alzheimer’s Disease

 




 This study does mention type 3 diabetes in passing:
 

 It has even been suggested that AD could be considered as 'type 3 diabetes' 
since insulin can be produced in brain.

 

 Obviously has even been suggested indicates these authors do not consider 
this as much more than speculation at this point.
 

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 J Diabetes Sci Technol. 2008 November; 2(6): 1101–1113.
 Published online 2008 November.
 

 Alzheimer's Disease Is Type 3 Diabetes–Evidence Reviewed
 

 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2769828/

 







RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: Michelle Pfeiffer escaped from a cult

2013-11-04 Thread emilymaenot
Share, just put together a simple list.  Are you not aware of the fact you need 
to sleep at the age of 65?  
 

 Keep it simple Share and pull it all together into a list such as:
 

 Sleep
 Eat
 Drink
 Exercise
 Read
 Practice Accountability to yourself and others (past and present)
 Practice Humility
 Enjoy
 

 

 

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 That makes sense, Bhairitu. I was also reading recently that lack of sleep 
disallows the needed flushing out of toxins in the brain. Basically this 
vehicle, the body, requires a lot of maintenance!
 

 
 
 On Monday, November 4, 2013 10:31 AM, Bhairitu noozguru@... wrote:
 
   
 When all is said and done I'll bet that the basic cause of  Alzheimer's is 
poor blood flow to the brain.  And there can be multiple reasons for that and 
multiple solutions.
 
 On 11/04/2013 04:42 AM, Share Long wrote:
 
   Thanks, Xeno and exercise still best bet to prevent Alzheimers according to 
Mayo Clinic.
 http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/alzheimers/MY2
 
 
 
 
 
 On Sunday, November 3, 2013 9:26 PM, anartaxius@... mailto:anartaxius@... 
anartaxius@... mailto:anartaxius@... wrote:
 
   J Diabetes Sci Technol. 2008 November; 2(6): 1101–1113.
 Published online 2008 November.
 
 
 Alzheimer's Disease Is Type 3 Diabetes–Evidence Reviewed 
 
 
 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2769828/ 
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2769828/
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 




 
 
 
 






[FairfieldLife] Pamela Anderson...shown with the Science of Being...on ABC news

2013-11-04 Thread Dick Mays
 On ABC TV news this morning (Nov. 4), a Pamela Anderson photo was shown, of 
 her resting after Sunday's NYC marathon. 
  
 On her twitter account, click on the photo of the ice on her knee, and you 
 see that she has a Maharishi book, Science of Being and Art of Living, next 
 to the ice on her hip..
  
 https://twitter.com/PamelaDAnderson



RE: RE: RE: Re: Re: Re: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: RE: RE: Growing up transgendered or, confused?

2013-11-04 Thread wgm4u
 the clucking sound of Judy and Share.
 

 

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FJ_Mt7Zm5hM 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FJ_Mt7Zm5hM

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 As I've mentioned before, Judy, I have 2 versions of email inboxes. One is 
Basic and one is Neo. Neo inbox only shows the most recent post of a thread. 
This morning I found a way to access and reply to previous posts.  

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 Again, you make no sense, Share. What's on the Web site, of course, is Neo, so 
that excuse holds no water, sorry.
 

 Share bleated:
 
  Yes, Judy I was replying to BillyG but Neo was no longer showing his post 
  and I didn't 
  want to take the time to go to the website to reply from there. 
 
 
 
 On Saturday, November 2, 2013 8:57 PM, authfriend@... authfriend@... wrote:
 
   Did you mean to respond to BilllyG's post, Share, rather than this one? 
 

Share wrote:

  William, I wasn't referring to Judy in terms of posters scolding about 
  people not 
  snipping. She wasn't the one who was doing that.
 

 On Saturday, November 2, 2013 4:58 PM, authfriend@... authfriend@... wrote:
 
   Oh, did you think you were making a snappy, relevant comment here, Share?
 

 Share flubbed:

 
  OTOH, some posters have scolded some other posters for NOT snipping! Go 
  figure!
 

 You really just don't seem to be getting it about not posting any old thing 
that comes to your mind without giving it a bit of a think first.
 

 

 
 
 On Saturday, November 2, 2013 3:06 PM, wgm4u no_re...@yahoogroups.com wrote:
 
   Thanks for the tip 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 The post a person is responding to (and sometimes a whole string of posts in 
an exchange) always appears when you click on the three dots in the bottom left 
of the Reply box--unless the person who wrote the post has deleted everything, 
which is what BillyG does. Apparently he doesn't like to feel that he's part of 
a discussion, so he gets rid of it all before posting.
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 It all depends on what software you're using. I've been monitoring FFL 
messages in IE and Firefox and I've noticed that some posts don't include what 
the person is responding to. However, when you hit reply sometimes the messages 
appear when you scroll down.
 
 And, I've also noticed that hardly anyone follows the netiquette protocols for 
formatting messages anymore. It sure would be helpful if people would do some 
formatting using the old style right angle bracket, but now I realize that's 
really asking to much of people, since mainly they are just shooting from the 
hip with one-liner snickers. There seem to be only about two serious 
respondents left here anyway.
 
 So, I'm using Thunderbird to send and reply to text only posts, but when I 
want to include an image I use Chrome, which has a nice feature to key in the 
location of the image URL. I haven't figured out what happened to the 'source 
view' in Neo to include an image URL. I've also noticed that several people 
have not figured out how to make an active URL link in any program. Go figure.
 
 P.S. At this point, I'm not even posting with the expectation that anyone but 
lurkers would read this stuff, so it's mostly for them to be amused with.
 
 On 11/2/2013 10:40 AM, authfriend@... mailto:authfriend@... wrote:
 
   BillyG, you know, it's courteous to quote a bit of what you're responding 
to, or at least to identify the writer you're responding to. You don't do that, 
and it makes it look as though you don't want to actually have a discussion but 
rather only to make proclamations.
 
 
 
 
 




 
 

 
 




 
 
 
 




 
 

 




 
 
 
 



 
 

 
 



 
 
 
 









RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: Michelle Pfeiffer escaped from a cult

2013-11-04 Thread emilymaenot
smile.  Share, come down off your throne - you might find the way home.  
Here, listen to this and relax.  
 

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VT-SFgkVlno 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VT-SFgkVlno 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 Share, your thoughts and motivations are way more transparent than you 
realize. 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 Judy of course assumes incorrectly that she knows what's going on in my mind. 
Plus she projects that I will decide that she is wrong, which is what she does! 
Actually I skimmed her post on this topic and took it as more input about the 
topic rather than as right or wrong. This points to a fundamental difference 
between us and why IMO she just about always is inaccurate in her opinions 
about me. 

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 Share will, of course, take this single article as conclusive proof of type 3 
diabetes and decide that I was wrong. Yet what I said was that there is as yet 
no scientific consensus as to its existence.
 

 She and Xeno might want to have a look at this study (published two years 
after the one Xeno cited), just for one example:
 

 Curr Neuropharmacol. 2011 December; 9(4): 693–705.
 Consequences of Aberrant Insulin Regulation in the Brain: Can Treating 
Diabetes be Effective for Alzheimer’s Disease

 




 This study does mention type 3 diabetes in passing:
 

 It has even been suggested that AD could be considered as 'type 3 diabetes' 
since insulin can be produced in brain.

 

 Obviously has even been suggested indicates these authors do not consider 
this as much more than speculation at this point.
 

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 J Diabetes Sci Technol. 2008 November; 2(6): 1101–1113.
 Published online 2008 November.
 

 Alzheimer's Disease Is Type 3 Diabetes–Evidence Reviewed
 

 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2769828/

 









RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: Astrology in the New Testament

2013-11-04 Thread wgm4u
I don't think John meant the moon signified the mind, rather the moon in Pieces 
affects the mind (like all of the other signs affect each other as a composite 
whole) in an emotional, imaginative way depending on the aspects and other 
indicators.
  
 Moon in Pieces makes one very sensitive, perhaps too much depending on the 
other aspects. FWIW
 
---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:


 John, I still a bit perplexed about why jyotish calls the Moon the 
significator of the mind, rather than Mercury.
 

 
 
 On Sunday, November 3, 2013 1:10 PM, jr_esq@... jr_esq@... wrote:
 
   Share,
 

 Pisces is a dual sign and is watery by astrological definition.  If the Moon 
is placed here, the Moon becomes more sensitive since the Moon is already 
wavering and watery by nature.
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, jr_esq@... wrote:

 Why was it written that Jesus was born in a manger?  Because he was born on 
December 25 which astrologically lies between the signs of Sagittarius, a 
horse, and Capricorn, the goat.  Interesting?  Bill Donohue explains more of 
his observations as follows: 

 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4M6j6DwBWBgamp;list=PL4HZ228v9duPReHJuT6prrAUc9BzFEo_t
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4M6j6DwBWBglist=PL4HZ228v9duPReHJuT6prrAUc9BzFEo_t


 

 
 

 
 




 
 
 
 






RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: Michelle Pfeiffer escaped from a cult

2013-11-04 Thread authfriend
Oo, so nice, Emily. 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 smile.  Share, come down off your throne - you might find the way home.  
Here, listen to this and relax.  
 

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VT-SFgkVlno 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VT-SFgkVlno 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 Share, your thoughts and motivations are way more transparent than you 
realize. 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 Judy of course assumes incorrectly that she knows what's going on in my mind. 
Plus she projects that I will decide that she is wrong, which is what she does! 
Actually I skimmed her post on this topic and took it as more input about the 
topic rather than as right or wrong. This points to a fundamental difference 
between us and why IMO she just about always is inaccurate in her opinions 
about me. 

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 Share will, of course, take this single article as conclusive proof of type 3 
diabetes and decide that I was wrong. Yet what I said was that there is as yet 
no scientific consensus as to its existence.
 

 She and Xeno might want to have a look at this study (published two years 
after the one Xeno cited), just for one example:
 

 Curr Neuropharmacol. 2011 December; 9(4): 693–705.
 Consequences of Aberrant Insulin Regulation in the Brain: Can Treating 
Diabetes be Effective for Alzheimer’s Disease

 




 This study does mention type 3 diabetes in passing:
 

 It has even been suggested that AD could be considered as 'type 3 diabetes' 
since insulin can be produced in brain.

 

 Obviously has even been suggested indicates these authors do not consider 
this as much more than speculation at this point.
 

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 J Diabetes Sci Technol. 2008 November; 2(6): 1101–1113.
 Published online 2008 November.
 

 Alzheimer's Disease Is Type 3 Diabetes–Evidence Reviewed
 

 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2769828/

 











RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: Astrology in the New Testament

2013-11-04 Thread authfriend
I think moon in Pieces would make us all extremely sensitive, BillyG.
 

 I mean, unless we've been taking First Quarter and Third Quarter 
literally...
 

 (Sorry, couldn't resist that one.)
 
BillyG wrote:

  I don't think John meant the moon signified the mind, rather the moon in 
  Pieces affects the mind (like all of 
  the other signs affect each other as a composite whole) in an emotional, 
  imaginative way depending on 
  the aspects and other indicators.
  
  Moon in Pieces makes one very sensitive, perhaps too much depending on the 
  other aspects. FWIW
 





Re: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: Astrology in the New Testament

2013-11-04 Thread Share Long
wgm, I've heard or read several jyotishi refer to the Moon as mind. But maybe 
they meant manos and Mercury signifies buddhi, intellect?





On Monday, November 4, 2013 12:58 PM, authfri...@yahoo.com 
authfri...@yahoo.com wrote:
 
  
I think moon in Pieces would make us all extremely sensitive, BillyG.

I mean, unless we've been taking First Quarter and Third Quarter 
literally...

(Sorry, couldn't resist that one.)

BillyG wrote:


 I don't think John meant the moon signified the mind, rather the moon in 
 Pieces affects the mind (like all of 
 the other signs affect each other as a composite whole) in an emotional, 
 imaginative way depending on 
 the aspects and other indicators.
 
 Moon in Pieces makes one very sensitive, perhaps too much depending on the 
 other aspects. FWIW



RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: Astrology in the New Testament

2013-11-04 Thread sharelong60
wgm, I've heard or read several jyotishis say that Moon signifies mind. Maybe 
they mean manos and Mercury is buddhi, intellect?
  
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 I don't think John meant the moon signified the mind, rather the moon in 
Pieces affects the mind (like all of the other signs affect each other as a 
composite whole) in an emotional, imaginative way depending on the aspects and 
other indicators.
  
 Moon in Pieces makes one very sensitive, perhaps too much depending on the 
other aspects. FWIW
 
---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:


 John, I still a bit perplexed about why jyotish calls the Moon the 
significator of the mind, rather than Mercury.
 

 
 
 On Sunday, November 3, 2013 1:10 PM, jr_esq@... jr_esq@... wrote:
 
   Share,
 

 Pisces is a dual sign and is watery by astrological definition.  If the Moon 
is placed here, the Moon becomes more sensitive since the Moon is already 
wavering and watery by nature.
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, jr_esq@... wrote:

 Why was it written that Jesus was born in a manger?  Because he was born on 
December 25 which astrologically lies between the signs of Sagittarius, a 
horse, and Capricorn, the goat.  Interesting?  Bill Donohue explains more of 
his observations as follows: 

 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4M6j6DwBWBgamp;list=PL4HZ228v9duPReHJuT6prrAUc9BzFEo_t
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4M6j6DwBWBglist=PL4HZ228v9duPReHJuT6prrAUc9BzFEo_t


 

 
 

 
 




 
 
 
 








Re: [FairfieldLife] Pamela Anderson...shown with the Science of Being...on ABC news

2013-11-04 Thread Michael Jackson
right photo, wrong conclusion

She has paper over her face and ice on her body because she's in shock from 
reading the bullshit

On Mon, 11/4/13, Dick Mays dickm...@lisco.com wrote:

 Subject: [FairfieldLife] Pamela Anderson...shown with the Science of 
Being...on ABC news
 To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
 Date: Monday, November 4, 2013, 5:11 PM
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
   
 
 
 
   
   
   On
 ABC TV news this morning (Nov. 4), a Pamela Anderson photo
 was shown, of her resting after Sunday's NYC
 marathon.   On her twitter account, click on the photo
 of the ice on her knee, and you see that she has a Maharishi
 book, Science of Being and Art of Living, next to the ice on
 her hip.. https://twitter.com/PamelaDAnderson
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: Astrology in the New Testament

2013-11-04 Thread emilymaenot
Here Share is an answer; I googled it. Although I know nothing of jyotish 
astrology, it speaks to your question. 
 

 One of the confusing things in Vedic Astrology is how two planets, the Moon 
and Mercury, are both said to signify the Mind. The way this happens is that 
the Rational Intellect gets assigned to Mercury, while everything else having 
to do with Mind gets given to the Moon 

 

 http://www.livingskillfully.com/moon.html 
http://www.livingskillfully.com/moon.html

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 wgm, I've heard or read several jyotishis say that Moon signifies mind. Maybe 
they mean manos and Mercury is buddhi, intellect?
  
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 I don't think John meant the moon signified the mind, rather the moon in 
Pieces affects the mind (like all of the other signs affect each other as a 
composite whole) in an emotional, imaginative way depending on the aspects and 
other indicators.
  
 Moon in Pieces makes one very sensitive, perhaps too much depending on the 
other aspects. FWIW
 
---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:


 John, I still a bit perplexed about why jyotish calls the Moon the 
significator of the mind, rather than Mercury.
 

 
 
 On Sunday, November 3, 2013 1:10 PM, jr_esq@... jr_esq@... wrote:
 
   Share,
 

 Pisces is a dual sign and is watery by astrological definition.  If the Moon 
is placed here, the Moon becomes more sensitive since the Moon is already 
wavering and watery by nature.
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, jr_esq@... wrote:

 Why was it written that Jesus was born in a manger?  Because he was born on 
December 25 which astrologically lies between the signs of Sagittarius, a 
horse, and Capricorn, the goat.  Interesting?  Bill Donohue explains more of 
his observations as follows: 

 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4M6j6DwBWBgamp;list=PL4HZ228v9duPReHJuT6prrAUc9BzFEo_t
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4M6j6DwBWBglist=PL4HZ228v9duPReHJuT6prrAUc9BzFEo_t


 

 
 

 
 




 
 
 
 










[FairfieldLife] RE: Astrology in the New Testament

2013-11-04 Thread jr_esq
 Share and Billy,
 

 In jyotish and western astrology, the Moon is the significator of the mind and 
emotions since the Moon is the quickest moving object in the skies.  It is also 
associated with Soma, the mother and the ocean tides.
 

 In vedic literature, Soma is the plant that provided bliss in the mind.  And, 
the Moon is the ruler of Cancer, the fourth house from Aries, which pertains to 
the mother (the one who cares and nurtures us), and inward feelings of the 
chest.
 

 Further, the cycle of the Moon affects the tides of the oceans, and the 
menstrual cycles and emotions of females.
 

 Hence, in combining all of these factors, the Moon is the natural significator 
for the mind and emotions.
 

 On the other hand, Mercury, in jyotish, represents logic and reasoning.  The 
sanskrit word for Mercury is the Buddha which signifies the intelligence in 
human beings.  In Greek and Roman mythology, Mercury or Hermes is associated 
with speed in delivering the message.  Thus, a person with a strong Mercury in 
the chart will be excellent in his or her speaking, writing, and reasoning 
skills.
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, no_re...@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 I don't think John meant the moon signified the mind, rather the moon in 
Pieces affects the mind (like all of the other signs affect each other as a 
composite whole) in an emotional, imaginative way depending on the aspects and 
other indicators.
  
 Moon in Pieces makes one very sensitive, perhaps too much depending on the 
other aspects. FWIW
 
---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:


 John, I still a bit perplexed about why jyotish calls the Moon the 
significator of the mind, rather than Mercury.
 

 
 
 On Sunday, November 3, 2013 1:10 PM, jr_esq@... jr_esq@... wrote:
 
   Share,
 

 Pisces is a dual sign and is watery by astrological definition.  If the Moon 
is placed here, the Moon becomes more sensitive since the Moon is already 
wavering and watery by nature.
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, jr_esq@... wrote:

 Why was it written that Jesus was born in a manger?  Because he was born on 
December 25 which astrologically lies between the signs of Sagittarius, a 
horse, and Capricorn, the goat.  Interesting?  Bill Donohue explains more of 
his observations as follows: 

 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4M6j6DwBWBgamp;list=PL4HZ228v9duPReHJuT6prrAUc9BzFEo_t
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4M6j6DwBWBglist=PL4HZ228v9duPReHJuT6prrAUc9BzFEo_t


 

 
 

 
 




 
 
 
 





 


RE: RE: RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: Astrology in the New Testament

2013-11-04 Thread wgm4u
Could be, what does Jyotish say about the moon (Chandra) in particular?, it 
seems to me Western and Eastern astrology are pretty consistent as to it's 
peculiar characteristics, per se.
 

 Max Heindel used to say the short hour hand of a clock is the Sun, the long 
minute hand is the Moon, by exactly comparing these movements (of the sun and 
moon) to the natal and progressed horoscope one can predict the exact moment of 
an occurrence in one's life.  
 

 

 
---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:


 wgm, I've heard or read several jyotishis say that Moon signifies mind. Maybe 
they mean manos and Mercury is buddhi, intellect?
  
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 I don't think John meant the moon signified the mind, rather the moon in 
Pieces affects the mind (like all of the other signs affect each other as a 
composite whole) in an emotional, imaginative way depending on the aspects and 
other indicators.
  
 Moon in Pieces makes one very sensitive, perhaps too much depending on the 
other aspects. FWIW
 
---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:


 John, I still a bit perplexed about why jyotish calls the Moon the 
significator of the mind, rather than Mercury.
 

 
 
 On Sunday, November 3, 2013 1:10 PM, jr_esq@... jr_esq@... wrote:
 
   Share,
 

 Pisces is a dual sign and is watery by astrological definition.  If the Moon 
is placed here, the Moon becomes more sensitive since the Moon is already 
wavering and watery by nature.
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, jr_esq@... wrote:

 Why was it written that Jesus was born in a manger?  Because he was born on 
December 25 which astrologically lies between the signs of Sagittarius, a 
horse, and Capricorn, the goat.  Interesting?  Bill Donohue explains more of 
his observations as follows: 

 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4M6j6DwBWBgamp;list=PL4HZ228v9duPReHJuT6prrAUc9BzFEo_t
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4M6j6DwBWBglist=PL4HZ228v9duPReHJuT6prrAUc9BzFEo_t


 

 
 

 
 




 
 
 
 










[FairfieldLife] RE: Pamela Anderson...shown with the Science of Being...on ABC news

2013-11-04 Thread jr_esq
 She may have inadvertently become the new poster woman for the TMO. Can she 
outdo Oprah or Chopra?  
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, dickmays@... wrote:

 On ABC TV news this morning (Nov. 4), a Pamela Anderson photo was shown, of 
her resting after Sunday's NYC marathon.  
  
 On her twitter account, click on the photo of the ice on her knee, and you see 
that she has a Maharishi book, Science of Being and Art of Living, next to the 
ice on her hip..
  
 https://twitter.com/PamelaDAnderson https://twitter.com/PamelaDAnderson





 


[FairfieldLife] RE: RE: Astrology in the New Testament

2013-11-04 Thread wgm4u
Looks like Share had it right... 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

  Share and Billy,
 

 In jyotish and western astrology, the Moon is the significator of the mind and 
emotions since the Moon is the quickest moving object in the skies.  It is also 
associated with Soma, the mother and the ocean tides.
 

 In vedic literature, Soma is the plant that provided bliss in the mind.  And, 
the Moon is the ruler of Cancer, the fourth house from Aries, which pertains to 
the mother (the one who cares and nurtures us), and inward feelings of the 
chest.
 

 Further, the cycle of the Moon affects the tides of the oceans, and the 
menstrual cycles and emotions of females.
 

 Hence, in combining all of these factors, the Moon is the natural significator 
for the mind and emotions.
 

 On the other hand, Mercury, in jyotish, represents logic and reasoning.  The 
sanskrit word for Mercury is the Buddha which signifies the intelligence in 
human beings.  In Greek and Roman mythology, Mercury or Hermes is associated 
with speed in delivering the message.  Thus, a person with a strong Mercury in 
the chart will be excellent in his or her speaking, writing, and reasoning 
skills.
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, no_re...@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 I don't think John meant the moon signified the mind, rather the moon in 
Pieces affects the mind (like all of the other signs affect each other as a 
composite whole) in an emotional, imaginative way depending on the aspects and 
other indicators.
  
 Moon in Pieces makes one very sensitive, perhaps too much depending on the 
other aspects. FWIW
 
---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:


 John, I still a bit perplexed about why jyotish calls the Moon the 
significator of the mind, rather than Mercury.
 

 
 
 On Sunday, November 3, 2013 1:10 PM, jr_esq@... jr_esq@... wrote:
 
   Share,
 

 Pisces is a dual sign and is watery by astrological definition.  If the Moon 
is placed here, the Moon becomes more sensitive since the Moon is already 
wavering and watery by nature.
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, jr_esq@... wrote:

 Why was it written that Jesus was born in a manger?  Because he was born on 
December 25 which astrologically lies between the signs of Sagittarius, a 
horse, and Capricorn, the goat.  Interesting?  Bill Donohue explains more of 
his observations as follows: 

 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4M6j6DwBWBgamp;list=PL4HZ228v9duPReHJuT6prrAUc9BzFEo_t
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4M6j6DwBWBglist=PL4HZ228v9duPReHJuT6prrAUc9BzFEo_t


 

 
 

 
 




 
 
 
 





 




[FairfieldLife] RE: RE: Astrology in the New Testament

2013-11-04 Thread wgm4u
 
 Then *love* (not emotion, being watery) would be given over to the fire signs 
and the sun, yes? Here's a distinction between love and emotion?
 


---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:


  Share and Billy,
 

 In jyotish and western astrology, the Moon is the significator of the mind and 
emotions since the Moon is the quickest moving object in the skies.  It is also 
associated with Soma, the mother and the ocean tides.
 

 In vedic literature, Soma is the plant that provided bliss in the mind.  And, 
the Moon is the ruler of Cancer, the fourth house from Aries, which pertains to 
the mother (the one who cares and nurtures us), and inward feelings of the 
chest.
 

 Further, the cycle of the Moon affects the tides of the oceans, and the 
menstrual cycles and emotions of females.
 

 Hence, in combining all of these factors, the Moon is the natural significator 
for the mind and emotions.
 

 On the other hand, Mercury, in jyotish, represents logic and reasoning.  The 
sanskrit word for Mercury is the Buddha which signifies the intelligence in 
human beings.  In Greek and Roman mythology, Mercury or Hermes is associated 
with speed in delivering the message.  Thus, a person with a strong Mercury in 
the chart will be excellent in his or her speaking, writing, and reasoning 
skills.
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, no_re...@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 I don't think John meant the moon signified the mind, rather the moon in 
Pieces affects the mind (like all of the other signs affect each other as a 
composite whole) in an emotional, imaginative way depending on the aspects and 
other indicators.
  
 Moon in Pieces makes one very sensitive, perhaps too much depending on the 
other aspects. FWIW
 
---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:


 John, I still a bit perplexed about why jyotish calls the Moon the 
significator of the mind, rather than Mercury.
 

 
 
 On Sunday, November 3, 2013 1:10 PM, jr_esq@... jr_esq@... wrote:
 
   Share,
 

 Pisces is a dual sign and is watery by astrological definition.  If the Moon 
is placed here, the Moon becomes more sensitive since the Moon is already 
wavering and watery by nature.
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, jr_esq@... wrote:

 Why was it written that Jesus was born in a manger?  Because he was born on 
December 25 which astrologically lies between the signs of Sagittarius, a 
horse, and Capricorn, the goat.  Interesting?  Bill Donohue explains more of 
his observations as follows: 

 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4M6j6DwBWBgamp;list=PL4HZ228v9duPReHJuT6prrAUc9BzFEo_t
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4M6j6DwBWBglist=PL4HZ228v9duPReHJuT6prrAUc9BzFEo_t


 

 
 

 
 




 
 
 
 





 




[FairfieldLife] Re: Pamela Anderson...shown with the Science of Being...on ABC news

2013-11-04 Thread TurquoiseB
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Dick Mays  wrote:

  On ABC TV news this morning (Nov. 4), a Pamela Anderson
  photo was shown, of her resting after Sunday's NYC marathon.
 
  On her twitter account, click on the photo of the ice on her
  knee, and you see that she has a Maharishi book, Science of
  Being and Art of Living, next to the ice on her hip..
 
  https://twitter.com/PamelaDAnderson

I figure it's just a case of tit (so to speak) for tat.
She found out Maharishi used to have photos
of her on his bedside table.  :-)






Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: RE: Astrology in the New Testament

2013-11-04 Thread Share Long
wgm, thinking again about Jesus as a Pisces and being the embodiment of agape, 
it's interesting to me that Venus, airy in Libra and earthy in Taurus, is THE 
planet of love and exalted in Pisces, a watery sign. As for emotions, I think 
of Scorpio as deep emotions, like deep, still lakes. I think of Cancer as the 
flowing emotions, like rivers. And Pisces as expanded, more universal emotions, 
like the ocean.

Fire signs I associate more with the level or action and will to action. But 
these are just my way of having fun with all this. I'm not a trained jyotishi. 
I think John has more formal knowledge about it.





On Monday, November 4, 2013 1:55 PM, wgm4u no_re...@yahoogroups.com wrote:
 
  
 
Then *love* (not emotion, being watery) would be given over to the fire signs 
and the sun, yes? Here's a distinction between love and emotion?



---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:


 Share and Billy,

In jyotish and western astrology, the Moon is the significator of the mind and 
emotions since the Moon is the quickest moving object in the skies.  It is also 
associated with Soma, the mother and the ocean tides.

In vedic literature, Soma is the plant that provided bliss in the mind.  And, 
the Moon is the ruler of Cancer, the fourth house from Aries, which pertains to 
the mother (the one who cares and nurtures us), and inward feelings of the 
chest.

Further, the cycle of the Moon affects the tides of the oceans, and the 
menstrual cycles and emotions of females.

Hence, in combining all of these factors, the Moon is the natural significator 
for the mind and emotions.

On the other hand, Mercury, in jyotish, represents logic and reasoning.  The 
sanskrit word for Mercury is the Buddha which signifies the intelligence in 
human beings.  In Greek and Roman mythology, Mercury or Hermes is associated 
with speed in delivering the message.  Thus, a person with a strong Mercury in 
the chart will be excellent in his or her speaking, writing, and reasoning 
skills.


---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, no_re...@yahoogroups.com wrote:


I don't think John meant the moon signified the mind, rather the moon in Pieces 
affects the mind (like all of the other signs affect each other as a composite 
whole) in an emotional, imaginative way depending on the aspects and other 
indicators.
 
Moon in Pieces makes one very sensitive, perhaps too much depending on the 
other aspects. FWIW

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:


John, I still a bit perplexed about why jyotish calls the Moon the significator 
of the mind, rather than Mercury.





On Sunday, November 3, 2013 1:10 PM, jr_esq@... jr_esq@... wrote:
 
  
Share,

Pisces is a dual sign and is watery by astrological definition.  If the Moon is 
placed here, the Moon becomes more sensitive since the Moon is already wavering 
and watery by nature.


---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, jr_esq@... wrote:


Why was it written that Jesus was born in a manger?  Because he was born on 
December 25 which astrologically lies between the signs of Sagittarius, a 
horse, and Capricorn, the goat.  Interesting?  Bill Donohue explains more of 
his observations as follows:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4M6j6DwBWBgamp;list=PL4HZ228v9duPReHJuT6prrAUc9BzFEo_t





Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Pamela Anderson...shown with the Science of Being...on ABC news

2013-11-04 Thread Bhairitu

When I was in India everything stopped in that country when Baywatch was on.

On 11/04/2013 12:02 PM, TurquoiseB wrote:


--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Dick Mays wrote:

  On ABC TV news this morning (Nov. 4), a Pamela Anderson
  photo was shown, of her resting after Sunday's NYC marathon.
 
  On her twitter account, click on the photo of the ice on her
  knee, and you see that she has a Maharishi book, Science of
  Being and Art of Living, next to the ice on her hip..
 
  https://twitter.com/PamelaDAnderson

I figure it's just a case of tit (so to speak) for tat.
She found out Maharishi used to have photos
of her on his bedside table. :-)






RE: Re: [FairfieldLife] RE: RE: Astrology in the New Testament

2013-11-04 Thread wgm4u
Nicely put. 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 wgm, thinking again about Jesus as a Pisces and being the embodiment of agape, 
it's interesting to me that Venus, airy in Libra and earthy in Taurus, is THE 
planet of love and exalted in Pisces, a watery sign. As for emotions, I think 
of Scorpio as deep emotions, like deep, still lakes. I think of Cancer as the 
flowing emotions, like rivers. And Pisces as expanded, more universal emotions, 
like the ocean.

Fire signs I associate more with the level or action and will to action. But 
these are just my way of having fun with all this. I'm not a trained jyotishi. 
I think John has more formal knowledge about it.
 

 
 
 On Monday, November 4, 2013 1:55 PM, wgm4u no_re...@yahoogroups.com wrote:
 

 Then *love* (not emotion, being watery) would be given over to the fire signs 
and the sun, yes? Here's a distinction between love and emotion?
 


---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:


  Share and Billy,
 

 In jyotish and western astrology, the Moon is the significator of the mind and 
emotions since the Moon is the quickest moving object in the skies.  It is also 
associated with Soma, the mother and the ocean tides.
 

 In vedic literature, Soma is the plant that provided bliss in the mind.  And, 
the Moon is the ruler of Cancer, the fourth house from Aries, which pertains to 
the mother (the one who cares and nurtures us), and inward feelings of the 
chest.
 

 Further, the cycle of the Moon affects the tides of the oceans, and the 
menstrual cycles and emotions of females.
 

 Hence, in combining all of these factors, the Moon is the natural significator 
for the mind and emotions.
 

 On the other hand, Mercury, in jyotish, represents logic and reasoning.  The 
sanskrit word for Mercury is the Buddha which signifies the intelligence in 
human beings.  In Greek and Roman mythology, Mercury or Hermes is associated 
with speed in delivering the message.  Thus, a person with a strong Mercury in 
the chart will be excellent in his or her speaking, writing, and reasoning 
skills.
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, no_re...@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 I don't think John meant the moon signified the mind, rather the moon in 
Pieces affects the mind (like all of the other signs affect each other as a 
composite whole) in an emotional, imaginative way depending on the aspects and 
other indicators.
  
 Moon in Pieces makes one very sensitive, perhaps too much depending on the 
other aspects. FWIW
 
---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:


 John, I still a bit perplexed about why jyotish calls the Moon the 
significator of the mind, rather than Mercury.
 

 
 
 On Sunday, November 3, 2013 1:10 PM, jr_esq@... jr_esq@... wrote:
 
   Share,
 

 Pisces is a dual sign and is watery by astrological definition.  If the Moon 
is placed here, the Moon becomes more sensitive since the Moon is already 
wavering and watery by nature.
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, jr_esq@... wrote:

 Why was it written that Jesus was born in a manger?  Because he was born on 
December 25 which astrologically lies between the signs of Sagittarius, a 
horse, and Capricorn, the goat.  Interesting?  Bill Donohue explains more of 
his observations as follows: 

 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4M6j6DwBWBgamp;list=PL4HZ228v9duPReHJuT6prrAUc9BzFEo_t
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4M6j6DwBWBglist=PL4HZ228v9duPReHJuT6prrAUc9BzFEo_t


 

 
 

 
 




 
 
 
 





 



 
 

 
 




 
 
 
 






[FairfieldLife] Geronimo#39;s Cadillac!

2013-11-04 Thread cardemaister
Heard  Geronimo's Cadillac both yesterday and today on Groove FM, mainly 
 dedicated to old soul classics and stuff like that.
 

 Had to find out, who the performers are. Turned out they are the German duo
 Modern Talking!!
 

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A5C8AC6V2KQ 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A5C8AC6V2KQ



[FairfieldLife] Slow Blues

2013-11-04 Thread authfriend
Turn on the AC before you watch this if you don't want to get heat stroke. 
 

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embeddedamp;v=jBeuco0PgJs 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embeddedamp;v=jBeuco0PgJs



[FairfieldLife] RE: Slow Blues

2013-11-04 Thread emilymaenot
“Love is lak de sea. It’s uh movin’ thing, but still and all, it takes its 
shape from de shore it meets, and it’s different with every shore.” 
― Zora Neale Hurston 
http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/15151.Zora_Neale_Hurston, Their Eyes Were 
Watching God http://www.goodreads.com/work/quotes/1643555

 

 Dang girl, you win my vote for the best post of the year! 

 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 Turn on the AC before you watch this if you don't want to get heat stroke. 

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embeddedamp;v=jBeuco0PgJs 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embeddedamp;v=jBeuco0PgJs





[FairfieldLife] RE: Slow Blues

2013-11-04 Thread emilymaenot
And its better the second timeShet, I gotta go take a cold shower.  
Thank you Judy!  “Love makes your soul crawl out from its hiding place.” 
 ― Zora Neale Hurston 
http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/15151.Zora_Neale_Hurston 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 Turn on the AC before you watch this if you don't want to get heat stroke. 

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embeddedamp;v=jBeuco0PgJs 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embeddedamp;v=jBeuco0PgJs





[FairfieldLife] Happy Birthday Ann

2013-11-04 Thread emilymaenot
HAPPY DAY TO YOU ANN!  IS TODAY YOUR BIRTHDAY? 

 I know you aren't a huge country fan, but here's to you because it is a 
danceable tube!
 

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-XfthjK-bk 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-XfthjK-bk

 

 You get a line, I'll get a pole
 We'll go fishing in the crawfish hole
 Five-card poker on a Saturday night
 Church on Sunday morning.

   


[FairfieldLife] Post Count Tue 05-Nov-13 00:15:03 UTC

2013-11-04 Thread FFL PostCount
Fairfield Life Post Counter
===
Start Date (UTC): 11/02/13 00:00:00
End Date (UTC): 11/09/13 00:00:00
266 messages as of (UTC) 11/04/13 23:51:04

 42 authfriend
 28 Share Long 
 24 Bhairitu 
 19 wgm4u 
 16 emptybill
 15 dhamiltony2k5
 14 doctordumbass
 13 s3raphita
 13 TurquoiseB 
 12 awoelflebater
 12 Richard J. Williams 
 11 sharelong60
 10 jr_esq
 10 emilymaenot
  7 Michael Jackson 
  4 Richard Williams 
  3 Mike Dixon 
  3 Ann Woelfle Bater 
  2 j_alexander_stanley
  2 cardemaister
  2 anartaxius
  2 Rick Archer 
  2 Dick Mays 
Posters: 23
Saturday Morning 00:00 UTC Rollover Times
=
Daylight Saving Time (Summer):
US Friday evening: PDT 5 PM - MDT 6 PM - CDT 7 PM - EDT 8 PM
Europe Saturday: BST 1 AM CEST 2 AM EEST 3 AM
Standard Time (Winter):
US Friday evening: PST 4 PM - MST 5 PM - CST 6 PM - EST 7 PM
Europe Saturday: GMT 12 AM CET 1 AM EET 2 AM
For more information on Time Zones: www.worldtimezone.com 




[FairfieldLife] RE: Happy Birthday Ann

2013-11-04 Thread emilymaenot
That would be tune.  smile. 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 HAPPY DAY TO YOU ANN!  IS TODAY YOUR BIRTHDAY? 

 I know you aren't a huge country fan, but here's to you because it is a 
danceable tube!
 

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-XfthjK-bk 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-XfthjK-bk

 

 You get a line, I'll get a pole
 We'll go fishing in the crawfish hole
 Five-card poker on a Saturday night
 Church on Sunday morning.

   




[FairfieldLife] RE: It#39;s starting already. We gonna line #39;em up on the wall!

2013-11-04 Thread emptybill
My My … so demanding!
  
 Let’s see … how about the final solution. Would that settle it? 
 Or better yet, how about if we return to a constitutional republican form of 
government? 
 Oh … that won’t work anymore. We’re beyond that antiquated 18th Century 
claptrap. 
  
 Then how about if we turn it all into a progressive socialism directed by the 
radical left elites? Utopia! Awakening! Enlightenment! Fulfillment!
  
  Amerika Erwachte! “We pretend to work and They pretend to pay us.”
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, noozguru@... wrote:

 You didn't answer my question.  Maybe because you are incapable of answering?  
What is your solution?  Jingoism?  Or is there no solution?
 
 
 On 11/03/2013 01:27 PM, emptybill@... mailto:emptybill@... wrote:
 

 
 
 
 
 
 ---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com mailto:fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, 
noozguru@... mailto:noozguru@... wrote:
 
 What's the alternative?  Fascism?  We have that now.  You are mistaking 
Obamacare for socialism.  It's fascism.
 
 On 11/03/2013 10:47 AM, emptybill@... mailto:emptybill@... wrote:
 
   Yes.
 
 
 It's called Peoples Justice.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 ---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com mailto:fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, 
sharelong60@... mailto:sharelong60@... wrote:
 
 Yikes, emptybill, who are we lining up against the wall? The docs? The 
patients? Everybody?
 
 
 
 On Sunday, November 3, 2013 11:16 AM, emptybill@... mailto:emptybill@... 
emptybill@... mailto:emptybill@... wrote:
 
   Virginia Democrat Calls For Forcing Doctors To Accept Medicare And Medicaid 
Patients 
 
http://masonconservative.typepad.com/the_mason_conservative/2013/11/virginia-democrat-calls-for-forcing-doctors-to-accept-medicare-and-medicaid-patients.html
 
http://masonconservative.typepad.com/the_mason_conservative/2013/11/virginia-democrat-calls-for-forcing-doctors-to-accept-medicare-and-medicaid-patients.html
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


[FairfieldLife] RE: Slow Blues

2013-11-04 Thread awoelflebater
The mean girls go weak at the knees, they got soul, they got the blues in their 
veins and they know the deep dark places where real feeling can and does exist. 
Never underestimate the MG.
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, emilymaenot@... wrote:

 And its better the second timeShet, I gotta go take a cold shower.  
Thank you Judy!  “Love makes your soul crawl out from its hiding place.” 
 ― Zora Neale Hurston 
http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/15151.Zora_Neale_Hurston 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 Turn on the AC before you watch this if you don't want to get heat stroke. 

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embeddedamp;v=jBeuco0PgJs 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embeddedamp;v=jBeuco0PgJs




 


[FairfieldLife] RE: Happy Birthday Ann

2013-11-04 Thread awoelflebater
I'll gladly accept this as an early birthday present, just one day premature. 
But I'll take all the presents I can get. Thanks EMILY. Now I'll turn this up 
nice and loud and burn a little rug.
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, emilymaenot@... wrote:

 That would be tune.  smile. 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 HAPPY DAY TO YOU ANN!  IS TODAY YOUR BIRTHDAY? 

 I know you aren't a huge country fan, but here's to you because it is a 
danceable tube!
 

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-XfthjK-bk 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-XfthjK-bk

 

 You get a line, I'll get a pole
 We'll go fishing in the crawfish hole
 Five-card poker on a Saturday night
 Church on Sunday morning.

   



 


[FairfieldLife] RE: RE: Happy Birthday Ann

2013-11-04 Thread emilymaenot
Oh dear.  I tell you, Ann, I will *NEVER* forget the real day of your birthday 
again.  Important details will not be forgotten.  I'll be out tomorrow, but 
will think of you.  Love, Em 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 I'll gladly accept this as an early birthday present, just one day premature. 
But I'll take all the presents I can get. Thanks EMILY. Now I'll turn this up 
nice and loud and burn a little rug.
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, emilymaenot@... wrote:

 That would be tune.  smile. 
 

---In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com wrote:

 HAPPY DAY TO YOU ANN!  IS TODAY YOUR BIRTHDAY? 

 I know you aren't a huge country fan, but here's to you because it is a 
danceable tube!
 

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-XfthjK-bk 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-XfthjK-bk

 

 You get a line, I'll get a pole
 We'll go fishing in the crawfish hole
 Five-card poker on a Saturday night
 Church on Sunday morning.

   



 




[FairfieldLife] India#39;s Mission to Mars

2013-11-04 Thread jr_esq
It appears that the mission controllers are using jyotish principles by 
launching their rocket on Tuesday, the day of Mars. 
 

 The mission is expensive and the costs could have been used for feeding the 
starving people in their country.  But it appears that the country wants to 
develop their space capability perhaps to retain their scientists in their 
country instead of letting them emigrate to the USA and other European 
countries.
 

 
http://news.yahoo.com/indias-first-mission-mars-launching-tuesday-233247300.html
 
http://news.yahoo.com/indias-first-mission-mars-launching-tuesday-233247300.html



Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Pamela Anderson...shown with the Science of Being...on ABC news

2013-11-04 Thread Michael Jackson
that's funny! and probably true!

On Mon, 11/4/13, TurquoiseB turquoi...@yahoo.com wrote:

 Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: Pamela Anderson...shown with the Science of 
Being...on ABC news
 To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com
 Date: Monday, November 4, 2013, 8:02 PM
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
   
 
 
 
   
   
   --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Dick Mays 
 wrote:
 
 
 
   On ABC TV news this morning (Nov. 4), a Pamela
 Anderson
 
   photo was shown, of her resting after Sunday's
 NYC marathon.
 
  
 
   On her twitter account, click on the photo of the
 ice on her
 
   knee, and you see that she has a Maharishi book,
 Science of
 
   Being and Art of Living, next to the ice on her
 hip..
 
  
 
   https://twitter.com/PamelaDAnderson
 
 
 
 I figure it's just a case of tit (so to speak) for tat.
 
 She found out Maharishi used to have photos
 
 of her on his bedside table.  :-)