[FairfieldLife] Re: ‘Pirated’ Boeing 777 may return t o skies as stealth nuclear weapon
Yes...just not as hunky.
[FairfieldLife] Re: ‘Pirated’ Boeing 777 may return t o skies as stealth nuclear weapon
My friends are all talking about a UFO connection.the entire plane was beamed up
[FairfieldLife] RE: Churning the Ocean of Milk
On my siddhis course (20+ years ago) the administrator said the grinding rocks were analogies for the two hemispheres of the brain.
[FairfieldLife] RE: Meanings of Sanskrit prefix 'aa'...
Ah!
[FairfieldLife] RE: Meanings of Sanskrit prefix 'aa'...
A = not AA = not not or, definitely not as in quite the opposite of unhappy etc.
[FairfieldLife] RE: MMY's Gunas
This interpretation is very helpful.
[FairfieldLife] RE: Understanding Homosexuality
Nature did make them homosexuals - possibly based on their past choices. MMY taught that every state of consciousness has physiological correlates... so yes, "they" were born that way. Everyone has a huge, infinite storehouse of karma..therefore, judging others for their peccadilloes is kinda odd when you think about it...because somewhere in everyone's storehouse of impressions is the complete range of possible human desires. So part of loving our brothers and sisters as ourselves is simply acknowledging that we're all in the same boat. So don't worry about gay people so much...you'll get your turn. Christ also taught us the shortcut to resolving our personal and family karma - forgiveness.
[FairfieldLife] RE: Military Solution to Syria Is Futile: Pope Francis
[FairfieldLife] Re: Buck now offers free seminars in Fairfield on the dangers of porn
Young horny boy practicing abstinence visits "helpful older minister"...I don't think the movie will end well.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Idiot Michael Graham
Shouldn't he have just gone back to the mantra? Everyone's having these experiences, yes? is it easy? Now let's just close our eyes and return to the mantra, just like any other thought. On a serious note, I think he had a profound encounter and is now living out his interpretation of what it meant. He has that right. What I don't think is right is telling other people that their religion is wrong. I believe he will outgrow this, as I have seen many others do.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Did Maharishi screw us out of knowing Guru Dev?
I wasn't defending anything. Just saying what I thought he was doing and why he did it. Sorry you are so angry.
[FairfieldLife] Re: marshy and hitler
40 years ago I read a document in the TM center about "The Absolute Theory of Greatness." In this document various people from history were mentioned. The premise, as I recall (and I could have this all wrong, due to time) was that from the perspective of the absolute, a person's impact on the world (Greatness) is based on how many people his life affects. Both Hitler and Alexander the great were mentioned. Nature allows a truly great person to live a very long time (108 years?) I believe Veda Vyasa was mentioned as the greatest. I could have this all wrong.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Did Maharishi screw us out of knowing Guru Dev?
If he had used the language of GD, there would have been no movement. Translating GDs teachings for the west is what MMY was doing...He did a fairly good job of it...but it could only go so far. The idea that all the teachings could be explained in "the language of science" probably created limitations that were too hard to accommodate because at a certain point one must accept the woo woo parts on faith.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Unexpected Effects of Pot Farms
All farming damages the environment. Growing pot is illegal in California. If if were legal, these hidden pot farms could be moved to ordinary farm land and regulated and less damage would occur. Additionally, legalizing the use of the non-high-inducing relative hemp would save our forests, produce alternative fuels, clothing materials etc. I would say that the growth of the "pot industry" is a sign of the growth of consciousness in the world. Any TM meditator knows that pot is not good for the physiology as far as the experience of clear transcending is concerned - which is why they make you wait two weeks before initiation. But, that doesn't mean there aren't legitimate spiritual paths or experiences that can be engendered by proper use of marijuana. As you know, ganja is associated with worship of Siva in the Hindu traditionwhich makes it holy.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Trayvon Martin was a Homophobic bigot
Travon Martin was a minor...that would have made him suspicious the person following him was a perverted pederastand therefore not a homophobic bigot - simply a young man who was frightened. Teens shouldn't fight pederasts off? But in any case, this argument is based on argumentum ad ignorantium...and is entirely based on assumptions for which there is no proof - because none of us were there and none of us were privy to either party's thought process. The only thing we do know is that Travon Martin had a right to be where he was and died standing his ground.
[FairfieldLife] Re: 10 Spiritually Transmitted Diseases
I think the list is helpful in a general way: like little mirrors to help you see your own blind spots. The problem is you might start to think you've handled all your "stuff" and can now finger point issues for people who don't "see life as clearly" as you do. 11.) Don't develop the spiritual shortcoming of pointing out other people's spiritual shortcomings.
[FairfieldLife] Re: "Table for one? No problem."
When I was younger I used to be self conscious about going to the movie theater alone...like everyone's eyes are on me and they know my social life is a complete disaster. I enjoy going alone now just to get away from my other half. About ten years ago while vacationing on Vashon Island, which is a short ferry ride from Seattle, a friend and I randomly selected a restaurant. It was explained by the greeter that we would be seated at our table with strangers - as this was their tradition. I was horrified, but too hungry to complain. Much to my relief, the place was empty when we were first seated. A few minutes later, however, four individuals were seated at our table. It made me very uncomfortable...until they uncorked a nice bottle of wine to share with us. Properly lubricated, I can hang with just about anyone. They turned out to be very interesting people. Two of them were professors from the University of Washington who had just returned from a photo safari in Africa where they had gone to film the mountain gorillas. It turned out to be quite a nice evening that I remember fondly to this day. As far as I can tell from a quick google, I believe the place is no longer there... so much for social engineering projects.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Is the age of the touch typist ending?
The perfection of voice-to-text technologies, coupled with the inevitable acceptance of simplified English (like u, ur, etc.) and anticipatory word selection (from a limited corporate-approved dictionary) may eliminate even the two-finger technique and change what acceptable written text looks and "sounds" like. Further, topic based writing requirements using data defining techniques (XML)to satisfy the need to write once and display everywhere (phone, terminal, help screens, web) will create completely uniform output eliminating the "voice" of the writer. Eventually meta-writing techniques, which enable systems to become self documenting, will emerge. Here's what it may look like :-) Press zee red boottun tu stert zee system. Veeet fur system ineetielizeshun und zeen oopee zee inpoot cufer. http://www.tuco.de/home/jschef.htm
[FairfieldLife] Re: Yugas of Sri Yukteswar
I've seen programs on stone blocks cut in South America also. Some are so perfectly linear and flush that you can't slide paper between them. We seem to be unable to replicate this precision using the tools we believe they had available. It will be interesting to find out how they did it.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Yugas of Sri Yukteswar
How did they build the great pyramid around the tools without using the tools? Or is there a second set of tools in another pyramid somewhere? Or is there an infinite succession of pyramids, each hiding the tools of the previously-built pyramid? If they only used one set of tools and then stashed them after the pyramid was built, I think they would be easy to find, unless they were astral tools or the aliens took them back up in the mother ship... Personally, I would have stashed them under the Pharaoh's bed with the rest of the exercise equipment he was gonna use someday. On a serious note: I recall viewing a tape on a residence course thirty + years ago in which Maharishi addressed the dwapara yuga idea. Did anyone else ever see it?
[FairfieldLife] Re: Are you in a cult?
I think you would might find this interesting: http://blog.ted.com/2013/04/22/texting-as-a-miraculous-thing-6-ways-our-generation-is-redefining-communication/
[FairfieldLife] Re: Are you in a cult?
Consensus reality is probably more accurate than the word "Cult" which actually means something like subculture. When you make statements like: "everyone is crazy", or "everyone is in a cult" - you reduce the meaning of words "Crazy" or "Cult" to logical absurdities that renders them useless as terms that can be used in a rational discussion. When I ask myself questions like:"Do I know anyone who is not a little crazy?" or "Do I know anyone who doesn't participate in a cult?" The answer is always "no" - everyone I know seems a little crazy and everyone I know also identifies with some group or other. It's really just a matter of perspective isn't it? I mean to a west coast Bay Area person, such as myself - most people east and south of here are Obviously Insane ;-) Therefore as a practical matter, the words "crazy" and "cult" should be reserved for discussions about people and groups that have behaviors and ideas that are so variant with society at large that they are rendered dysfunctional in a major way. (i.e., can't sustain a relationship or a job.) Having preached that - I actually do think everyone is both crazy and in a cult...but you won't catch me sayin' it.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Time to Get Enlightened, Part 2
I clearly remember being told 5 to 7 years to attain "CC" at some point after 1973. I don't remember who said it. Later someone else (I believe it was MMY on a tape) said that "CC begins as a sense of wholeness in one's life." I think it's fairly easy to have a sense wholeness growing even after "just a few sittings." Yes? ;-) The idea that a person can have a "sense of wholeness" after five years of meditating is very possible and realistic, in my opinion. Further confounding of the issue is that the development of consciousness is probably a continuum: CC and other growth markers may just be concepts and pointers and not discrete states anyway. More like first grade primer language. Never-the-less, it was probably a mistake to put a time scale on it, because everyone brought their own baggage and emotional skill set (or lack thereof) to "the Movement".
[FairfieldLife] Re: Today! Our Conscious Future
That was the moderator "kiki" talking about himself...
[FairfieldLife] Re: Starbucks is in trouble!
The main reason Sbucks is in trouble is that young people think it's where gramps goes to get a cup o' joe. The current trend is privately-owned, coffee shops with free super fast wifi - which is a probably good thing. Most don't seem to really care what the coffee tastes like as long as the joint is unique and all four genders are equally represented (gay, straight, mixed, neutral.)
[FairfieldLife] Re: Sweaty balls?!
Reduced systemic inflammation = increased blood flow and increased testosterone level (usually experienced as warmth) and more efficient metabolism. Enjoy! --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "card" wrote: > > > One of the most curious phenomena after I started gluten-free diet > has been sweaty balls, especially when sleeping. Haven't had > those for years now, as I recall it! > > I just came up with a possible explanation: improved blood flow > in my genitals. But, then again, it might have something > to do with some hormones, perhaps through improved liver functions, > or stuff... blah, blah, blah... :o >
[FairfieldLife] Re: Gay man deserves credit for so much of TM success
Thanks for letting us know Merv was gay...that's so important. Really quite life-changing in fact. I'll never meditate again ;-)
[FairfieldLife] Re: Drones in Your Backyard
I already own a small remote-controlled helicopter with a built in video recorder. $80 dollars from Fry's Electronics. A fairly fun toy.
[FairfieldLife] Re: How Reincarnation explains so much about human behavior.
Being homosexual isn't a plight - it's a beautiful gift from the Creator. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, wgm4u wrote: > > > > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, wgm4u wrote: > > > > Yet, western culture remains ignorant. Whether it be Mozart, Liberace, or > > (the current outrage, Jodi Arias), all of these behaviors stem from > > *choices* make in previous lives! > > > > Mozart wasn't just hatched, he had a past in previous lives as a musician, > > hence he was considered a 'genius' in this one. > > > > Liberace, considered a 'flaming fagot', (not my words) became so because > > because of the exacting law of cause and effect or karma in previous lives. > > > > Jodi Arias, (most likely had murdered in the past), so now, when > > opportunity presents itself, she does it again. > > > > So you see, ignorant *secularism* limits our understanding of life itself, > > wake up, read scripture which is a beautiful, logical understanding of life > > itself! > > > > So, we got homosexuals running around blaming God or nature for their plight, > and we all know, (especially on this group) that reincarnation explains it > all! Unless of course you don't believe in eastern philosophy or the mmy. >
[FairfieldLife] Re: Islamic sexual equations in society
Actually those kinds of threats increase the behavior... --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Michael Jackson wrote: > > You must never have traveled to a country where being known to be gay can be > a death sentence >
[FairfieldLife] Re: Islamic sexual equations in society
This is quite hyperbolic and written with the intention of justifying disdain for one of the world's main religious faiths. I think that Islamic people are probably as diverse in their predilections as everyone else. I suspect your intentions with this series of posts on Islam is fear-based and hate motivated and obviously quite insensitive. Having traveled the world quite extensively, I have come to the conclusion that fear of one's homosexual attractions is uniquely American
[FairfieldLife] Re: Chris Christie shows class while Romney shows stupidity
Nice to see some apparent graciousness from a politician, though I'm not believing it. I think he's just being practical. My impression was that he knows who holds the purse strings...and delayed funding for restoring his state will affect his electability in the future. He is probably also miffed that he wasn't selected as the VP candidate and this is just tit for tat. Actually, IMO, Romney might have an improved chance at winning if Christie had been the VP choice...he would humanize their campaign.. and he is relate-able is an odd way as if he were a "regular guy" in the same way that Joe Biden is (appears to be) a regular guy. Of course we know it doesn't really matter who wins - as the secret world government (the great corporate puppet masters) actually control everything... :-)
[FairfieldLife] Re: "Going Postal," Dutch style
Sorry for lurking, but damn - that's hilarious > > From the title of your post , I was expecting somebody beating up fellow > workers with wooden shoes. >
[FairfieldLife] Re: Global warming stopped 16 years ago! Latest research!
Get a grip - warmest September ever recorded http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/15/warmest-september-ever-2012_n_1967398.html
[FairfieldLife] Re: More on Rumors
"refined sugar (is) for (people with) refined consciousness." Maybe what he meant is that you could eat lots of refined sugar after you already had refined consciousness/physiology and were producing soma and all that. (Problem is many (most) people think they are much more "evolved" than they actually arejust a thot.) Caveat, most of the nutrition ideas we had "back in the day", have turned out to be false notions. I for one, cannot live on an all carbohydrate veggie diet...unless being pasty, jiggly and low energy is acceptable.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Fairfield Life is so much fun
My experience is that organizations are more alike than different - because the human need for conformity and belonging creates such bizarre behavior that emerges from the desperation to belong. Christ's organization produced people like Judas... I get that Judas was actually the most important player and all that - because he helped get the whole crucifixion/redemption thing going. Maybe the "difficult" administrators in "the movement" actually have a role to play too? I've given up on figuring out if people are enlightened or not... I've also given up on me being enlightened too. And I've given up on belonging to groups who require my conformity. Life is much easier now.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Buddhist Meditation: A Management Skill?
Google has been teaching mindfulness practice for years. They have an advanced engineer/instructor, Chade-Meng Tang whose official title is "Jolly Good Fellow." The course is one of the Company's most popular. His new book is "Search Inside Yourself." I am currently reading it.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Quality control died with Steve Jobs?!
Apple products are very, very well thot out. However, I've played extensively with both the Apple and the Galaxy S3 - and the S3 is a very nice phone...it is rather large though - like it want to be a IPad. The navigation is extremely well functioning - and of course it uses Google maps which is a big plus. I was using the "Galaxy" feature (android siri) and was able to lock up the phone by asking the following question: "Galaxy, what is the definition of antidisestablishmentarianism?" The phone basically just sat there and locked up...until I rebooted. Failed a repeated test too. My only real beef with it is that it is totally fragile because it is too thin, so one small drop and the screen shatters...which I witnessed personally ...ahem!
[FairfieldLife] Re: Curiosity Has Landed!
I agree this is big news and I'm quite enthusiastic about it...but many of my associates show little interest. Seems like it's getting very little play in the media...perhaps the Olympics overshadows it a bit...or landing rovers on Mars has become so 2004? When the high quality image stream starts, we'll see more interest. Better yet, if they detect an algae or such, then we'll see some momentum forming . --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "John" wrote: > > NASA timed this landing perfectly along with the Olympics. They won the gold > medal tonight, and rightfully so! >
[FairfieldLife] Re: WOW-What a cool President! Aren't you just tickled?
Unfortunately, in California, that figure is barely enough to raise a family.
[FairfieldLife] Re: The Obamacare disaster (take the penality, it's cheaper).
That's an easy one: http://naturalhealthdossier.com/2011/04/the-economics-of-obesity-why-are-poor-people-fat/ --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, wgm4u wrote: > > > > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Emily Reyn wrote: > > > > Billy - *access* to healthy food for low-income populations is an issue. > > Â *Access* to good education, *access* to affordable healthcare, *access* > > to opportunity for many across the economic spectrum is an increasing > > problem for those that have lost jobs, lost their retirement, are raising a > > family, are maintaining households and who may have health issues or are in > > an older demographic. Â Your tendency to throw out these simplistic > > conclusion based on uninformed prejudice is pathetic. Â Please go move to > > a severely economically depressed area that lacks real food and try and do > > something to change the situation. Â Your worldview seems far too narrow. > > Â Do you live in a gated community? Â > > > > http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=high-and-dry-in-the-food > > > You are so right! We need to socialize everything!! That's the solution!! > > PS Why are 'poor' people fat? >
[FairfieldLife] Very intersesting blog on personal growth
http://beyondgrowth.net/spirituality/authentic-spirituality-and-the-double-binds-of-power/ Also has a great post about the world "not" being your mirror.
[FairfieldLife] Re: The result of indulging in the afflictive emotions, redux
I got picked on in high school by a bully or two. As a freshman, I was the second shortest guy in the school. The shortest guy used to feel better when he picked on me. I knew what he was doing, so I just let it be. The first day of school he pushed me against the wall and called me names...that was it...I could see he felt better. Sophomore year he waited for me to get off the bussame treatment...again he felt better. Junior year (a year in which I grew 11 inches...ouch) I got off the bus a full head taller than him. As I ducked my head to get off the bus, he turned around and dejectedly walked awayI actually felt sorry for the poor guy...he never grew an inch after the eighth grade. One of my more jock-ish coworkers likes to say: I used to beat up people like younow you're my boss! Revenge of the nerds! It's quite sweet.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Obama's scary socialist past revealed, (breaking).
At least he wasn't beating up other students...
[FairfieldLife] Re: Eating well: Moringa on Dr. Oz Show
This tree is also called horseradish tree in many places. The leaves, roots and pods are prepared and eaten in different ways. I ate quite a lot of this plant when I was in traveling around the Philippines (PI). There, it is often served with steamed/boiled fish, sort of like spinach - and is similar in texture/flavor. In PI, it grows everywhere like (ahem...) a weed. One thing I notice about PI, is once you get away from the large cities - the "poor people" are extremely healthy, muscular, fit and long-lived (Did I mention happy?). (Fish, veggies,fruit, sweet potato & just a little rice). I did buy some moringa last week at the local Asian Market in the Bay Areajust for kicks. It was five dollars for a small branch. I do not believe in "magic" foods anymore, but,I think we all (Americans) probably need to eat more leaves and stuff...
[FairfieldLife] Re: Fly me to the Moon
If they appear to "spin backwards" and then pop out of existence, I think what you are seeing is prana. If you go to the countryside on a warm day, it can be very thick. Just my opinion on what they are.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Homosexuality *IS* a choice!
Yeah he would...if you are very lucky, he makes you gay. Otherwise, you spend your life merely hetero. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, wgm4u wrote: > > Do you think a fair and just God would make some people homosexual and some > not?, where's the fairness in that? No, everything is governed by law, IMHO. > Down to the last "jot" and "tittle", > > Matt 5:18 "For assuredly, I say to you, till heaven and earth pass away, one > jot or one tittle will by no means pass from the law till all is fulfilled." > > > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Emily Reyn wrote: > > > > ORwhile karma and reincarnation may be true, perhaps they don't dictate > > sexuality, which could operate outside the paradigm and be determined by > > perhaps more "random" disbursement of hormones, etc. that occurs as part of > > the uniqueness of biology in reproduction. Â Or, maybe they do, I don't > > know. Â > > > > > > > > From: wgm4u > > To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com > > Sent: Wednesday, May 9, 2012 12:20 PM > > Subject: [FairfieldLife] Homosexuality *IS* a choice! > > > > > > Â > > Either in this life or in a previous life! That's right, Reincarnation! > > Human Beings aren't just 'hatched' as if they just came from nowhere. Every > > human being is the product of the choices he's made in this life and/or > > past lives, what could be simpler than that? > > > > The Gay lobby wants to wash their hands of ANY responsibility for their > > sexual proclivities, blaming nature or God, hey! time to start taking on > > your own responsibility! Let God and nature off the hook, what a red > > herringright, and Mozart was "just born that way" too, GMAB! > > >
[FairfieldLife] Re: Homosexuality *IS* a choice!
He also said something like: be careful, you become what you hate. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, wgm4u wrote: > > > > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "martyboi" wrote: > > > > Remember the story of the Demons who became enlightened because they hated > > Krishna? Spent so much time pissed off and thinking about him, they got > > enlightened. > > > > So which one of the three genders, described in the Vedic literature, are > > you gonna be next time around? > > We will all be what we merit to be according to the just workings out of the > law of karma, "as ye sow, so shall ye reap", even MMY knows that! >
[FairfieldLife] Re: Homosexuality *IS* a choice!
Remember the story of the Demons who became enlightened because they hated Krishna? Spent so much time pissed off and thinking about him, they got enlightened. So which one of the three genders, described in the Vedic literature, are you gonna be next time around?
[FairfieldLife] Re: Here's one for the wannabe Hindus here...
You Said: Right, and Mozart was just 'born that way'! What a scam by the Gay lobby left!! Nyuk! Mozart was just born that way, as a result of previous incarnations Scam and Nyuk? Those words seem to imply anger, which is the opposite of Compassion. Who are you having this argument with anyway? Yourself? > > So you see, it was his free will choice that he was born gay, nature didn't > make him that way nor did God. And as far as people on the right being > homophobic, that's just a red herring. They're as compassionate as any on the > left, IMO. >
[FairfieldLife] Re: Here's one for the wannabe Hindus here...
I believe you are correct. He was born "gay" as a result of previous decisions and behavior is previous life times. I also believe he was born at this time, in this generation, to show people (on "the right" perhaps) that there are many things about themselves they are in denial about...to help them to finally grow up, to understand the that gender is a continuum, and to learn to love people with "differences". I'm glad he was born.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Here's one for the wannabe Hindus here...
I know a gay couple who recently adopted a five-year old child. The child was given away by his parents because he exhibited a preference for feminine behavior. The parents tried to "pray away the gay", but when informed by a "shrink" that "he was born that way," they opted for giving him away.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Mahamudra and Dzogchen: Thought-Free Wakefulness
The world is as you areMMY
[FairfieldLife] Re: Sex-Starved Male Flies Go for the Booze
...well that explains a lotI wonder if they spend all their time on-line after they drink? ;-)
[FairfieldLife] Re: Bill to Limit Viagra Access?
It was a sarcastic response to the recent legislation - by male legislators - that interferes with women's reproductive health choices.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Sri Sri 'playing' (playing with) the piano.
I'm quite sure that is the case. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "authfriend" wrote: > > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "seventhray1" wrote: > > > > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "martyboi" > > I was going to ask Martyboi whether the piano playing was > equivalent to the mechanical potted plant, i.e., folks > were supposed to find it absurd. >
[FairfieldLife] Re: Sri Sri 'playing' (playing with) the piano.
You make a cogent point, surrounding oneself with adoring sycophants is very dangerous - it destroys company presidents, ministers, college professors - nobody is immune because adoration is intoxicating. The classic case in this generation could be Michael Jackson. I hung around AOL for a while, a big part of the teaching is not taking yourself/life too seriously. One of his main teachings is that too much focus on spirituality can make a person uptight and "dry." Sri Sri's lectures are usually serious subjects punctuated with lots of silly big hats, gags and laughter.. The last time I saw him he had a mechanical potted plant that spontaneously twirled a flower every so often. Whenever someone got too serious, he just turned it on. If TM is "yoga light for modernity" AOL is yoga light without a chastity belt!
[FairfieldLife] Re: Chris Rocks!
At my company's Christmas dinner, I went to pick up my napkin, and much to my horror, instead grabbed a pile of hair in my lap. I realised it was the adjacent women's hair extension. I covertly slipped it to her and she made a mad dash to the restroom to repair the situation. The scene repeated itself about an hour later. I don't sit next to her anymore. The juxtaposition of hair and food has an w factor.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Will homosexuals go to heaven or hell?
...Sounds like they are stuck in the don't-ask-don't-tell military shower scenario that made everyone so nervous... (and titillated?) --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, turquoiseb wrote: > > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "martyboi" wrote: > > > > Perhaps a better question to ask is: "Will homophobes go to > > heaven or hell?" > > I have it on good authority that homophobes, after > death, go to a special world in which everyone is > the same sex as they are, and naked. They spend a > number of eons there. Whether they consider it > heaven or hell is pretty much up to them. > > :-) >
[FairfieldLife] Re: Will homosexuals go to heaven or hell?
Perhaps a better question to ask is: "Will homophobes go to heaven or hell?"
[FairfieldLife] Re: Does Transcendental Meditation open the third eye?
When reality is no longer perceived in terms of duality, the light dawns. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, wgm4u wrote: > > "The light of the body is the eye, if therefore thine eye be single, thy > whole body shall be full of light." Matthew 6:22 >
[FairfieldLife] Re: Stockton, CA-City Council votes to start bankruptcy process!
Stockton's used to be a lively town and due to its inland port it was one of the shipping and manufacturing hubs of California and the USA. Steel mills, flour mills etc. I stopped there recently in the middle of the night to get gas. The streets were filled with homeless-looking people milling around with nothing to do. Under the amber glow of the sodium-based street lights, it looked like a scene from night of the living dead. Unfortunately, all of their jobs went overseas Regardless of whether you believe it was due to the burden of "entitlements" or the the fact that multinational corporations control Congress and influence legislation that creates tax structures which encourage profits over people... The fact is you can't have a successful, prosperous country if it doesn't manufacture anything... As one of our more notorious posters is fond of saying: "it just doesn't make any sense!"
[FairfieldLife] Re: 9 Foreign Words The English Language Desperately Needs
Funnily enoughI do all of those things...
[FairfieldLife] Re: All Dead Mormons are Now Gay
Your prejudice knows no bounds. http://www.galva108.org/Tritiya_prakriti.html According to the Vedic Literature there are three genders. One of which was designed -created by God - to prefer same gender relations. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "wgm4u" wrote: > > > > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "raunchydog" wrote: > > > > Last month Mormons baptized the deceased parents of Nazi-hunter Simon > > Wiesenthal. Now they're sorry. > > http://www.newser.com/story/139725/mormons-baptised-parents-of-nazi-hunter-wiesenthal.html > > > > As you click on the "Choose-a-Mormon" button, contemplate a image of 12 > > oxen pissing in the Salt Lake baptismal font. > > http://www.utlm.org/images/twelveoxen_color.jpg > > > God did not create 'gay', (nor did nature), actually there is no such thing > as 'gay'. I've hear homosexuals in the media use the excuse that they were > just, "created that way", they weren't created that way, they made themselves > that way through the many incarnations on earth through the use of free will, > that's why they're 'gay'!!! Please don't blame nature or God for this useless > behavior. > > Men and Men, and Woman and Woman can love each other, they can Hugh and even > kiss, but why do they have to have to have sexual relations? >
[FairfieldLife] Re: Obama's New Campaign Slogan...
Your words seem racist and bitter...have you ever been unemployed? MMY: ...the parental role of government, which is to prevent problems for the nation." A perfect man will be naturally harmonious within himself and will naturally radiate that harmony into his surroundings. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "wgm4u" wrote: > > "Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you > Food Stamps and Unemployment Checks." Da King James (soul version), Matthew > 11:28, (Special Ebonics translation). >
[FairfieldLife] Re: Levels of Evolution
http://www.arunachala-ramana.org/forum/index.php?topic=6313.0
[FairfieldLife] Re: Levels of Evolution
http://tiny.cc/xl2r2
[FairfieldLife] Re: The Halleluia Chorus - Like you've Never seen it.
Nice, thanks for posting. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "raunchydog" wrote: > > This video from the small Yupiq Eskimo Village of Quinhagak, Alaska, was a > school computer project intended for the other Yupiq villages in the area. > Much to the villagers' shock, over a half million people have viewed it. > > http://www.youtube.com/watch_popup?v=LyviyF-N23A >
[FairfieldLife] Re: 'Spirituality' is the bi-product of Religion.
Q: Dear Guruji, I have never been a spiritual or a true religious person. How can I learn to let go and believe? Sri Sri Ravi Shankar: You don't have to label yourself- I am spiritual, religious person etc. No need for it. Just be natural, beautiful, good human being. That's it! If someone is not a beautiful human being and says, `I am a spiritual person or a religious person', what is the use of that? What good he or she is for? Isn't it? The purpose of spirituality is to make you a beautiful human being, the purpose of religion is to make you a righteous person, connected to the universe, to the universal spirit. And that's what spirituality is and that's what a simple, natural, normal human being is! Got it? Right, so it is better not to label yourself.
[FairfieldLife] Re: 'Spirituality' is the bi-product of Religion.
Dude, is that coffee shop a little smokey this morning? Are you saying that religious people are usually dicks? > Hear hear. Either that or religion is the condom and > spirituality is the dick. > > Religions that involve a lot of costumes and dress-up > are like French ticklers. > > :-) >
[FairfieldLife] Re: Dickhead Cheney wants more "Killing for Capitalism"
I believe it to be a Trojan Horseit's probably sniffing and listening as we speak.
[FairfieldLife] Re: 'Spirituality' is the bi-product of Religion.
Sri Sri Ravi Shankar: "Religion is the banana skin and spirituality is the banana. The misery in the world is because we throw away the banana and are holding on to the skin."
[FairfieldLife] Re: I defy anyone to say it more succinctly than this
You've been had! > > You don't have a soul. > You are a soul. > You have a body. > - C. S. Lewis >
[FairfieldLife] Re: Merv Griffin sighting in Fairfield
New Theory: They actually saw Phil Donahue.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Merv Griffin sighting in Fairfield
DYOR Mervyn Edward "Merv" Griffin, Jr. (July 6, 1925 August 12, 2007) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merv_Griffin
[FairfieldLife] Re: Spiritual Capital sold to Ravi Shankar
I've been on retreats with a few different groups. Most have similar dynamics and similar personalities: 1.) Your ass-kissing sycophants 2.) Self-styled -new age guru wannabees 3.) Movement police types 4.) Spiritually greedy - take every course they can find 5.) Permanently unhappy complainers 6.) Fixers, who wanna fix everybody 7.) Needy sex players - who use courses to get laid 8.) The know-it-all doctrine parrots 9.) Let's not forget - genuine seekers...there are a few. There are a couple of things I like about AOL - 1.) They let you own your own stuff - that is, they don't coddle you. 2.) They really do know how to have a very fun time. Haven't been for a few years, but I was very shocked on my first course when after is was over everyone piled into a van to go see Amma - and the course leaders thought that was cool. I genuinely like the people I've met there. I am on hiatus from groups though.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Vimanas - Ancient Indian flying machines
Thanks for answering. That's very interesting to know. I still think something would have been found by now. We have ground-penetrating satellites that can determine below-soil objects. We have Google earth displaying pictures of the entire globe - with thousands of eyes looking for stuff. We have also surveyed the Moon's surface and Mar's too. I believe some irrefutable anomaly would have to be spotted somewhere. I hope they do find something. I think and expanded view of history and the possibility of life on other planets would do the world - as in politics, religion, society, etc. a lot of good. --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Mark Landau wrote: > > Did anyone answer the question at the bottom? He spoke as if there were no > question that the ancients had aircraft and humans and civilizations walked > the earth millions of years ago. And he disparaged modern science regarding > human history saying things like "They find a bone and push history back > 100,000 years." > >
[FairfieldLife] Re: The Persistence Of Woo Woo
Dude, nobody in "Cali" smokes doobies anymore...everyone is vaporizing. That is to say, they "vape." Just in case anyone doesn't know... A vaporizer heats the "contents" to a specific temperature that allows you to determine (by temperature) which aspects of the contents you would like to imbibe. FYI, the heater on a vaporizer is more than hot enough to ignite feathers. No smoke is emitted- after all smokers are considered "evil" here and are properly sneered at with long condescending faces. There are three stores within walking distance of my home in San Jose that sell the devices and/or the "medicine." One location has a "medicine sharing room" to help the "underprivileged". There is a lounge downtown where you are allowed to bring your own medicine. It is basically like a very well appointed bar filled with young, extremely beautiful ladies whose job it is to up-sell you overly-priced "munchies" after the "medicine" kicks in. One dispensary is appropriately located next to my favorite Starbucks. Other than seeing one elderly person in a walker, most of the clients appear to be in their early to mid twentiesI didn't know our youth were so ill. Here's a link to a video of the lounge: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YgoewwiaWqo P.S. The city just voted to reduce the number of dispensaries to 10. The Fed are also coming up with creative ways to hassle the landlords and are issuing threats of jail time..to the building owners..not the dispensary operators. -- > Closer to home, if a doobie lights up you need to blow it out or you risk > ejecting the contents by shaking it and igniting the feathers in the chick's > hair next to you. Turns out that burning off one side of a chick wearing the > hemp vest's hair is a deal killer for hooking up that night even if you point > out that now she is so hideous that she is lucky that you are even hitting on > her. Chicks are so inscrutable. >
[FairfieldLife] Re: Colonoscopy
I have had three, they are not really that uncomfortable and they can save your life. They found two large polyps during one of mine and removed them during the procedure (I didn't feel a thing.) If they had not removed them, big trouble might have shown up later. Think of it as "preventing the danger that has not yet come." Colonoscopies revealed precancerous polyps in two of my siblings which literally saved their lives. They also revealed early cancer in my father...and thankfully saved his life. I will forever be grateful for this! I wish people didn't see them as such a big deal, they really do save people's lives. It's actually quite interesting to watch them on the monitor if you want.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Vimanas - Ancient Indian flying machines
You've certainly provided me with something to ponder. Fascinating!
[FairfieldLife] Re: Vimanas - Ancient Indian flying machines
Seems like they would have found metal pieces or remnants of crafts built 3000 to 5000 years ago by now. Or at least they would have found their version of the "Lockheed Skunk Works" as it would have required huge factories to build and maintain them. The Vamana descriptions are very intriguing when analysed in terms of modern technology...but so are Jules Verne's ideas from the 1800's whose descriptions of modern technology were quite prescient. Perhaps they were following the "prime directive" and made sure to clean up after themselves. I wonder if MMY ever discussed these "fables"?
[FairfieldLife] Re: Steve Jobs RIP
Actually, we were quite alone in the atrium...not that it matters..it was just cool to know that the bigwigs take an afternoon once in a while to chill too! I call them "mental health days." My boss and I have a code. When I say I am having "eye problems", he knows I mean..."I" don't want to work!
[FairfieldLife] Re: Steve Jobs RIP
After the movie Avatar had been released for about a week or so, I decided to cut out of work early and watch it at a local IMAX theater. The theater is located in a failing shopping mall in Cupertino, and the thought is that the theater is going to help revive it. The theater is well attended - the stores..not so much. After the movie was over, I headed back to my secret parking spot, through a part of the mall that has very little foot traffic. In that area is a nice atrium filled with Ficus trees and showered with ample sunshine through it's large windows and skylights. On my way to the atrium, I happened to be following a middle-aged guy wearing a black turtleneck sweater. He stood there for a bit as I approached the area, and then our eyes met. It was Steve Jobs. I nodded, he nodded back, and I went on my way. Somehow, knowing that we had both cut out of work in the middle of the day to see a movie made him seem very human, very normal and relatable.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Guru Dev's last will & testimony
Here's MUM's latest course honoring the "Buddhist" universe...might help. http://www.tm.org/emailing/2011_09_05.html > Relax. He is only projecting the disturbing "facts" of nonsense he finds in > his "Buddhist" universe. He can't help it. >
[FairfieldLife] Re: Guru Dev's last will & testimony
Here's MIU latest course honoring the "Buddhist" universe...might help. http://www.tm.org/emailing/2011_09_05.html > Relax. He is only projecting the disturbing "facts" of nonsense he finds in > his "Buddhist" universe. He can't help it. >
[FairfieldLife] Re: Obama incompetence costs US taxpayers 500 Million
Just sayin' http://www.rense.com/general12/believe.htm
[FairfieldLife] Excuses for avoiding liberation? [was Re: Blissy vs. Happy]
That false part of "me" that experiences itself as a "me" and is in reality something I can't locate anymore in the vastness of my not-self ...foolishly finds this hilarious! > > I'm writing this post from the nurse's station in > the psychiatric wing of the Betty Ford Centre in Rancho Mirage. In the event > the > nurse returns, I apologize in advance if my post ends abruptly. As part of my > recovery program, I'm not allowed any connection that might allow me to post > on > FFL or any Internet forum where I could announce my recent ascendance to a > higher state of consciousness. > >
[FairfieldLife] Re: Why Maharishi School students achieve so much...
I agree, the population is not really a random distribution, it is a collection of smart people who will usually have smart kids. Having said that, on a personal level, I feel that meditation refined and enhanced my intellect and contributed to my scholastic achievements. The main reason for this is that it slowed down my reactivity to environmental stimuli enough that I could actually sit still in my seat, listen to the teacher, and complete assignments. The other thing it did was reduce the use of pot, which gave me an edge over all the other stoned kids (which was just about everyone else.) Before TM - school was difficult! I was just too HDHD. I think many kids can benefit from a meditation practice.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Self narrative and belief
I tell myself this all the time : -) Do you think the self-narrative is gone or just ignored? --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "whynotnow7" wrote: > > If there is no self-narrative, there can be no belief. Even identified > realistically as formlessness, we continue to operate in the world, voice > opinions, act and react, think and feel, recount experiences, but there are > no beliefs, simply being in the moment. > > When the self-narrative unravels and the mind is left blank, unto itself, > there is no need for the burden of a belief system, which was constantly > reinforced by a self-narrative. Get rid of the self-narrative and our beliefs > vanish, yet in the moment it is amazing how the bodymind continues as our > specialized vehicle for discovery. > > Not only does the bodymind continue its functioning in the absence of > beliefs, it also functions more dynamically, healthier, and free of the > wrappings of a cumbersome and annoying self-narrative. It is free, and yet > fully synchronized with that which makes up the sum of its parts, expanding > its storehouse of experience and conclusion, in service to its universal > self, without beliefs. >
[FairfieldLife] Excuses for avoiding liberation? [was Re: Blissy vs. Happy]
> > That's part of what struck me about martyboi's story of > the restaurant encounter. We'll never know what was going > through his head, of course, but if *he* was thinking that > his smile was a "gift," it might have been an unwanted one. > It appeared to me to be an ordinary, natural moment without pretense, just like you or me going to get a drink at the fountain. It was just that the contrast between the person who appeared "happy" and the person who appeared "unhappy" was so stark. Neither of those fellows probably remember it. I am the one who perceived it as a gift...but that's just my take on smiles: In a perfect world, smiles bounce back. And yes, I have had the experience of not needing anyone's damn positivity. Haven't we all? How dare you disrupt my gloom biyatch!
[FairfieldLife] Re: Blissy vs. Happy
I felt a real integrity and naturalness at that moment. His smile made me happy! So I stole it form myself.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Blissy vs. Happy
Here's what I observed. I saw him in a local burrito place with his wife. He is a very noticeably healthy in person...that is he appears to have a lot personal vitality the way an athlete might. I watched him go up to the soda fountain to get a drink. He arrived at the fountain at the same time as a very sour-faced old curmudgeon. When he saw the old fellow, he opened up into a very broad and natural smile, stepped back, and let him fill up first. Unfortunately, the old guy walked away grumbling to himself as if determined to be even more sour. There was a lot of "power" in that smile as it was very real and genuine, it actually sort of rolled across the entire restaurant. I felt sorry for that old guy, as that smile felt like a gift refused.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Letter in today's Ledger
Apparently we are in a similar place...sounds like my resume. I am 55, initiated at 17. Did sidhis, lived on Staff at Cobb, hung out with Sri Sri and some Yogananda people. I always kept an emotional distance from the movement due to homophobia (theirs and mine) and which I now see as a great blessing. For me AOL was a more "mature" and humane version of the movement...however, movements are more alike than they are different - and the pressure for social conformity is ruinous. I think just as a young man moves out of his parent's house to strike out on his own, a mature man has to leave behind the safety of the belief systems he adopted as a kid to find his place in the world. Perhaps this is the project for all men in our decade. Indeed the fifties are a great decade of life...I just wish my joints didn't hurt when I get out of bed! --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "curtisdeltablues" wrote: > > > Thanks for the answers. > > > This is a false polarity: > > > years doesn't mean the opposite of everything you learned in the movement is > the > truth...dive for the pearls...they are there.> > > This is not the intellectual dynamic at play in my questions. I am a > meditator. TM is my pearl from that era. I am just questioning the beliefs > that surround the experience. The years I bought the whole ... were between > 16 and 31. It doesn't surprise me that I have reconsidered the beliefs I > held in that period in my 5th decade of life experience and study. I am > progressing in understanding, not just polarizing against what I believed as > a young man. Now I have more years out than I was in. These are the > formative experiences that are important to me now. > > > > > > > --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "martyboi" wrote: > > > > > > Answers interleaved: > > > > > This may be your own construction. Do you feel the same thing about > > > voodoo ceremonies? How about about a rasta smoke-in? A religious ritual > > > involving killing a goat? A human? > > > > > > Yes it might be my own construction - but its equally possible it is not. > > Never been to a voodoo ceremony. Seems creepy. > > Been to many smoke-ins...love Rastafarians. > > Don't think I like killing so much. Though I've eaten goat...very tasty > > after a smoke-in. > > > > > > > > > When our subconscious expectations are matched in the environment, our > > > brains reward us. We get flooded with the expected good feelings. We > > > have historically been shown to suck at evaluating such groups outside > > > us. You are judging what is outside by a feeling inside. It implies > > > only simultaneity, not causality. > > > > > > Yes...Actually I don't spend much of my time evaluating people or > > groups..I'm not looking for grace it just sorta randomly shows up. Can't > > explain it...and certainly don't need to justify or prove it. > > > > > > > > > > Here is what I propose: we get a curtain and you sit facing away from > > > it. Across the curtain we bring in a succession of followers of Sebud, > > > Thug hash smokers from Northern India (the original assassins) and a > > > variety of new age groups along with a group of guys who used to cut up > > > bodies for the mob. > > > > > > Without the visual clues, can you accurately tell what field effect they > > > are emanating? > > > > > > (I can get the Mafia guys and thugs, I need help gathering up the rest.) > > > > > > I don't choose when and where or how I get vibes from people or > > situations... It's just something that randomly happens. > > > > I dunno Curtis, just because you bought the whole stinkin' enchilada for > > many years doesn't mean the opposite of everything you learned in the > > movement is the truth...dive for the pearls...they are there. > > > > > > > > > > > > I do believe that individuals and groups of individuals can be conduits > > > > for grace to flow into this world...Each member of the group "tugging" > > > > each member along in a symbiotic manner. > > > > > > > > What I don't believe is that the manner in which that grace expresses > > > > itself in the world is predictable with respect to individuals: as we > > > > know, "God is no respecter of persons." (Acts 10:34) > > > > > > > > Grace influences our thoughts, behaviors and choices in the world and > > > > moves situations towards positive outcomes. But - it's only through > > > > action and behavior that it (grace)becomes meaningful. > > > > > > > > I am sure that sitting and radiating grace is great. But, Krishna told > > > > Arjuna to act for a reason...Action is the bridge through which that > > > > grace becomes manifest. > > > > > > > > > >
[FairfieldLife] Re: Letter in today's Ledger
Answers interleaved: > This may be your own construction. Do you feel the same thing about voodoo > ceremonies? How about about a rasta smoke-in? A religious ritual involving > killing a goat? A human? Yes it might be my own construction - but its equally possible it is not. Never been to a voodoo ceremony. Seems creepy. Been to many smoke-ins...love Rastafarians. Don't think I like killing so much. Though I've eaten goat...very tasty after a smoke-in. > When our subconscious expectations are matched in the environment, our brains > reward us. We get flooded with the expected good feelings. We have > historically been shown to suck at evaluating such groups outside us. You > are judging what is outside by a feeling inside. It implies only > simultaneity, not causality. Yes...Actually I don't spend much of my time evaluating people or groups..I'm not looking for grace it just sorta randomly shows up. Can't explain it...and certainly don't need to justify or prove it. > > Here is what I propose: we get a curtain and you sit facing away from it. > Across the curtain we bring in a succession of followers of Sebud, Thug hash > smokers from Northern India (the original assassins) and a variety of new age > groups along with a group of guys who used to cut up bodies for the mob. > > Without the visual clues, can you accurately tell what field effect they are > emanating? > > (I can get the Mafia guys and thugs, I need help gathering up the rest.) I don't choose when and where or how I get vibes from people or situations... It's just something that randomly happens. I dunno Curtis, just because you bought the whole stinkin' enchilada for many years doesn't mean the opposite of everything you learned in the movement is the truth...dive for the pearls...they are there. > > > > I do believe that individuals and groups of individuals can be conduits for > > grace to flow into this world...Each member of the group "tugging" each > > member along in a symbiotic manner. > > > > What I don't believe is that the manner in which that grace expresses > > itself in the world is predictable with respect to individuals: as we know, > > "God is no respecter of persons." (Acts 10:34) > > > > Grace influences our thoughts, behaviors and choices in the world and moves > > situations towards positive outcomes. But - it's only through action and > > behavior that it (grace)becomes meaningful. > > > > I am sure that sitting and radiating grace is great. But, Krishna told > > Arjuna to act for a reason...Action is the bridge through which that grace > > becomes manifest. > > >
[FairfieldLife] Re: Letter in today's Ledger
I don't know the answer to that, Curtis! Actually, I don't know the answer to most important questions However I think you are right, we all project our own "stuff" on our experience and that influences how we interpret it. Isn't the whole world our own construction?...perhaps I subconsciously make up spiritual experiences to feel better about everything...but you must admit..it's possible that I am not, and I really do perceive grace and wholeness at times? I'm glad you've gone beyond any of that..It's not like your spending you life pissed off about the fact that you spent years in a world of your own making or anything.. About Rastafarians and Voodoo: I would join in the party in a heartbeat...voodoo not so much...seems creepy somehow. About tests: "Thou shalt not put the Lord they God to a test!" I would flunk anyway...I don't have anything to prove.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Letter in today's Ledger
Though not strictly a TM meditator, I tend to believe in the ME. I have often noticed an intense internal enlivening of "grace" in around spiritual groups of various sorts. I find this "enlivening" everywhere in so many settings - Christian churches and monasteries, Buddhist venues and Hindu temples...yes, and even around the lowly TM meditators ;-) I do believe that individuals and groups of individuals can be conduits for grace to flow into this world...Each member of the group "tugging" each member along in a symbiotic manner. What I don't believe is that the manner in which that grace expresses itself in the world is predictable with respect to individuals: as we know, "God is no respecter of persons." (Acts 10:34) Grace influences our thoughts, behaviors and choices in the world and moves situations towards positive outcomes. But - it's only through action and behavior that it (grace)becomes meaningful. I am sure that sitting and radiating grace is great. But, Krishna told Arjuna to act for a reason...Action is the bridge through which that grace becomes manifest.
[FairfieldLife] Re: Mitt Romney for President
I think the election of Kennedy (Catholic) and Obama (mixed ethnicity) has shown that the electorate can deflate the common "wisdom" about the kind of person that is electable: making the future quite unpredictable. Romney's religious orientation vis-a-vis Obama's "socialism" may be perceived as the lesser of two evils by quite a large number of people. Whomever is elected is going to "experience some roughness in activity."
[FairfieldLife] Re: What are the funniest stories from your days in the TMO?
When I was on staff at Cobb (1980), we had a lot of CP's (course participants)who had great truly experiences - others not so much. Sometimes we would have group meetings where individuals would share their experiences. On one occasion a CP proudly proclaimed they could see stars through the ceiling while laying down on the bed after program. Unfortunately celestial perception was not to be: a staff member had glued glow-in-the-dark stars to the ceiling as a decoration when they lived in that room. The staff member fessed up.. and we all had a good chuckle. On another occasion, a women was fascinated by "the hum of creation" that she heard during program and while she slept in her room. This, of course, was the cabin next to an old buzzing transformer hanging on a power pole. She seemed a little disappointed when source of the buzz was explained.
[FairfieldLife] Re: squid
Squid - marinated in it's own black ink sauce nothing compares!
[FairfieldLife] Re: Why Windows Phone will beat Android?
Sorry, my previous post was sort of a joke. I do find some to be materialistic..like most well-compensated silicon valley types. However, I really like the quality of simplicity and generosity that I experience with AOL people and Indians in particular.