[FairfieldLife] Re: Reviews of Miller's Book

2008-04-01 Thread s3raphita
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, steveemming [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
wrote:

 Has Anyone read Jon Michael Millers' Book? It's called A Wave on 
the 
 Ocean: Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, Transcendental Meditation, Mallory 
and 
 Me. Please submit a review. This one book came out and I must of 
missed 
 it.

Jon Michael Miller was a former Governor-cum-Ambassador in the TM 
movement through the 1970s and has penned an autobiographical account 
of his ups and downs. (His book is on the Lulu label – a print-on-
demand, self-publishing outfit.) 
Be aware that the first half of the book has no reference to TM 
whatsoever but is an account of Miller's journey from poor country 
boy origins (Pennsylvania way) through to college lecturer in English 
(which doesn't prevent a lot of literals in the text, such as Jane 
AustIn and GinsbUrg). Mostly though we learn of his complicated 
love life. His very complicated love life. He alternates between 
hedonistic periods involving a succession of liberated ladies while 
pining for a more committed and meaningful relationship and then 
marrying more suitable (?) women (plural) who he then quickly tires 
of. Eventually Miller develops a habit of using porn on the one hand 
(no pun intended) and on the other romantically fixating on a former 
idealised lover - and fellow TMer - the Mallory of the book's 
title. It's not her real name but as his lady love used to teach 
Sanskrit at MIT and still lives in Fairfield, with the help of other 
details in the book she shouldn't be hard to identify for locals. As 
the lady doesn't approve of Miller's book, however, no doubt she 
deserves to be left in peace.
Miller lacks the dry humour and eye for telling detail of Gilpin's 
recent Maharishi Effect or the insider celebrity goss of Nancy Cooke 
de Herrera's All You Need Is Love (both those are surely essential 
reads for Fairfield Lifers?). However he tells a (painfully) honest 
tale and for a reader who wants an alternative slant on the Movement 
during its period of greatest public exposure this could be worth a 
read. Miller had an interesting encounter with Aryan security supremo 
Peter Heubner (aka Hubner) at Seelisberg and he later worked for the 
TV channel KSCI when it first launched. Miller eventually left the 
Movement at the end of the seventies disillusioned with the elitism 
and the emphasis on siddhis and he seems to have also eventually 
abandoned meditation to return to his beloved Keats and Wordsworth. 
His admiration for Maharishi is undimmed however. 



[FairfieldLife] Re: Reviews of Miller's Book

2008-04-01 Thread s3raphita
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, s3raphita [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
wrote:

 --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, steveemming 
steveemming@ 
 wrote:
 
  Has Anyone read Jon Michael Millers' Book? It's called A Wave on 
 the 
  Ocean: Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, Transcendental Meditation, Mallory 
 and 
  Me. Please submit a review. This one book came out and I must of 
 missed 
  it.
 
 Jon Michael Miller was a former Governor-cum-Ambassador in the TM 
 movement through the 1970s and has penned an autobiographical 
account 
 of his ups and downs. (His book is on the Lulu label – a print-on-
 demand, self-publishing outfit.) 
 Be aware that the first half of the book has no reference to TM 
 whatsoever but is an account of Miller's journey from poor country 
 boy origins (Pennsylvania way) through to college lecturer in English 
 (which doesn't prevent a lot of literals in the text, such as Jane 
 AustIn and GinsbUrg). Mostly though we learn of his complicated 
 love life. His very complicated love life. He alternates between 
 hedonistic periods involving a succession of liberated ladies while 
 pining for a more committed and meaningful relationship and then 
 marrying more suitable (?) women (plural) who he then quickly tires 
 of. Eventually Miller develops a habit of using porn on the one hand 
 (no pun intended) and on the other romantically fixating on a former 
 idealised lover - and fellow TMer - the Mallory of the book's 
 title. It's not her real name but as his lady love used to teach 
 Sanskrit at MIT and still lives in Fairfield, with the help of other 
 details in the book she shouldn't be hard to identify for locals. As 
 the lady doesn't approve of Miller's book, however, no doubt she 
 deserves to be left in peace.
 Miller lacks the dry humour and eye for telling detail of Gilpin's 
 recent Maharishi Effect or the insider celebrity goss of Nancy Cooke 
 de Herrera's All You Need Is Love (both those are surely essential 
 reads for Fairfield Lifers?). However he tells a (painfully) honest 
 tale and for a reader who wants an alternative slant on the Movement 
 during its period of greatest public exposure this could be worth a 
 read. Miller had an interesting encounter with Aryan security supremo 
 Peter Heubner (aka Hubner) at Seelisberg and he later worked for the 
 TV channel KSCI when it first launched. Miller eventually left the 
 Movement at the end of the seventies disillusioned with the elitism 
 and the emphasis on siddhis and he seems to have also eventually 
 abandoned meditation to return to his beloved Keats and 
Wordsworth. 
 His admiration for Maharishi is undimmed however.

Sorry -my literal! Should read: his lady love used to teach Sanskrit at 
MIU and still lives in Fairfield And not Sanskrit at MIT - unless they're 
getting wise to Vedic anticipations of the unified field, of course.