[FairfieldLife] Re: Things I can laugh at now...

2007-07-07 Thread TurquoiseB
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Rory Goff [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, jim_flanegin jflanegi@ 
 wrote:
  
  Too bad you missed the siddhis course. It is all about sutras, 
  which use minimal expressions to accomplish big results, like 
  my 14 words bringing about a response of 330 words (yow!) 
  from you.:-)
 
 Ohh! He never took the siddhis course!  Many thanks, Jim, I'm 
 thinking that may clarify some things. My apologies, Barry; I 
 suspect I have been overly hard on you. Did Vaj perchance miss 
 them too? 
 
 Suddenly a number of puzzling anomalies may be coming into much 
 clearer focus. I think I've been sitting in the wrong class! :-)

Uh...the basis of Jim's putdown above has as much
truth in it as his declaration a while back that
Buddha said God is love.  :-)

I'm pretty sure that all of us fell for the siddhis
swindle. I flew the first day, was bored by it by 
the second day, and by the third day I'd realized
that I'd just spent 5000 dollars on a set of English-
language phrases that I could have gotten from a 
$3.95 paperback edition of the Yoga Sutras (and that
probably came from that source).

But you can consider the TM siddhis special, and
yourself special for having learned them if you
want. Think of it as just a form of play, like
tripping on your name. And with as much value.  :-)

As for sitting in the wrong class, I suspect that
the problem may be more related to where you think
you are positioned in that classroom. You seem to
be of the impression that you're sitting in front
of the class and that, like Maharishi, this means
that the students owe you something as a result.
Respect, belief in what you say, obedience,...
whatever. If you're expecting something, that's
your samskara, not anyone else's.

Just to clarify, I think that the point that Geez
and I have been making lately about you and Jim is
a simple one. Both of you, from my point of view,
are cruising this group for attention. You rarely
go very long without mentioning your supposed real-
ization and your supposed high state of consciousness.
*As with Maharishi*, I think that Geez and I are 
suggesting that what you guys *say* about your sup-
posed states of consciousness is meaningless; it's
what you choose to *DO* with it.

And in both cases, especially lately, what you have
chosen to do with it is put down other people, point
out how much more advanced you are than they are,
and then put a smiley face at the end of your posts.

If that's your idea of what a spiritual teacher is 
like and what one can learn from them, then you 
should definitely sign up to study from Jim and Rory. 
If you're lookin' for a little more, you might want 
to keep lookin'.





[FairfieldLife] Re: Things I can laugh at now...

2007-07-07 Thread jim_flanegin
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, TurquoiseB [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
wrote:

 --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Rory Goff rorygoff@ 
wrote:
 
  --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, jim_flanegin jflanegi@ 
  wrote:
   
   Too bad you missed the siddhis course. It is all about sutras, 
   which use minimal expressions to accomplish big results, like 
   my 14 words bringing about a response of 330 words (yow!) 
   from you.:-)
  
  Ohh! He never took the siddhis course!  Many thanks, Jim, I'm 
  thinking that may clarify some things. My apologies, Barry; I 
  suspect I have been overly hard on you. Did Vaj perchance miss 
  them too? 
  
  Suddenly a number of puzzling anomalies may be coming into much 
  clearer focus. I think I've been sitting in the wrong class! :-)
 
 Uh...the basis of Jim's putdown above has as much
 truth in it as his declaration a while back that
 Buddha said God is love.  :-)
 
 I'm pretty sure that all of us fell for the siddhis
 swindle. I flew the first day, was bored by it by 
 the second day, and by the third day I'd realized
 that I'd just spent 5000 dollars on a set of English-
 language phrases that I could have gotten from a 
 $3.95 paperback edition of the Yoga Sutras (and that
 probably came from that source).
 
 But you can consider the TM siddhis special, and
 yourself special for having learned them if you
 want. Think of it as just a form of play, like
 tripping on your name. And with as much value.  :-)
 
 As for sitting in the wrong class, I suspect that
 the problem may be more related to where you think
 you are positioned in that classroom. You seem to
 be of the impression that you're sitting in front
 of the class and that, like Maharishi, this means
 that the students owe you something as a result.
 Respect, belief in what you say, obedience,...
 whatever. If you're expecting something, that's
 your samskara, not anyone else's.
 
 Just to clarify, I think that the point that Geez
 and I have been making lately about you and Jim is
 a simple one. Both of you, from my point of view,
 are cruising this group for attention. You rarely
 go very long without mentioning your supposed real-
 ization and your supposed high state of consciousness.
 *As with Maharishi*, I think that Geez and I are 
 suggesting that what you guys *say* about your sup-
 posed states of consciousness is meaningless; it's
 what you choose to *DO* with it.
 
 And in both cases, especially lately, what you have
 chosen to do with it is put down other people, point
 out how much more advanced you are than they are,
 and then put a smiley face at the end of your posts.
 
 If that's your idea of what a spiritual teacher is 
 like and what one can learn from them, then you 
 should definitely sign up to study from Jim and Rory. 
 If you're lookin' for a little more, you might want 
 to keep lookin'.

This time I posted 40 words, and you blathered on for 377! And I'm 
the one cruising this group for attention!? Even your mom would 
find that one funny.:-)



[FairfieldLife] Re: Things I can laugh at now...

2007-07-06 Thread jim_flanegin
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, TurquoiseB [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
wrote:

 ...but once couldn't even see as the silliness they were:
 
 * Allowing Maharishi to have the last word and declare
 the absolute truth about something, when I felt in my
 heart and with every minute of my life experience that
 what he was saying wasn't true. 
 
 * Paying lip service to an organization I no longer 
 believed in and that I felt was on the wrong track, both
 spiritually and ethically...just out of habit. 
 
 * Feeling guilty about missing a meditation, when what I
 was doing was so much more beneficial to someone else than
 shutting my eyes and thinking a word I'd paid 35 bucks for.
 
 * Thinking that the word I'd paid 35 bucks for was special.
 
 * Believing that Bad Things Would Happen if I spoke the
 word I'd paid 35 bucks for aloud.
 
 * Being asked to carry a large sum of money illegally across 
 international borders by the TMO, and actually considering 
 doing it for a few seconds because the person asking me to 
 do it said, Maharishi says it's Ok.
 
 * Borrowing money from people who worked for a living so
 that I didn't have to, and could go to the Next Big Course
 instead. That only happened once, and I paid them back as 
 soon as I got home, but it still makes me shake my head 
 and laugh at how incredibly *arrogant* I was to believe 
 that this was acceptable behavior.
 
 * Telling people in intro lectures that TM had no potential
 negative side effects, after seeing with my own eyes the
 twitching group at Fiuggi, 10 to 20 people with spasms
 so uncontrollable that they were not allowed to leave their
 hotels for fear they'd be arrested as crazy people.
 
 * Seeing someone sent home from an ATR course *for* develop-
 ing uncontrollable muscle spasms, after having been told that
 it was their fault and that not only would the money they
 paid for the course not be refunded, but that they would not
 be allowed to enter the TM center back home until the embar-
 rassing symptoms had gone away...and not advising them to 
 call a lawyer and sue the shit out of the TMO.
 
 * Watching other TM teachers blackball someone and prevent
 them from going to TM Teacher Training because they were
 living with their girlfriend or because they had admitted
 reading books by Carlos Castaneda and, after standing up
 for both applicants and seeing the TM teachers turn thumbs 
 down on them anyway, not advising *them* to call a lawyer.
 
 * Watching as books were edited to remove embarrassing 
 statements by Maharishi or as tapes were burned because he'd
 said something on them that the TM movement now wanted to
 pretend he'd never said...and not speaking up.
 
 * Being told by a good friend, upon her return from one of
 the first TM siddhi courses, that flying was a total hoax 
 and that -- despite the frequent claims of leaders of the
 TMO at the time -- no one had even come close to actually
 flying...and not believing her.
 
 * Paying big bucks to go the next TM siddhis course in 
 spite of what she said, realizing the truth of what she had
 said, and not even being angry at the people who'd stood 
 up in front of large groups of people back at the National
 TM Center in L.A. and told us that people were hovering
 on a daily basis
 
 * Being told by Maharishi, Wear your suit at all times, 
 even to the beach, and not laughing out loud.
 
 So many moments, so much silliness. Sometimes I look back on
 some of the silly things I did because I'd been told to do
 them, or because they were Standard Operating Procedure in
 the TMO, and I just *howl* with laughter and with the 
 realization of how incredibly silly and stupid I was.
 
 It's a great exercise in humility, and in self acceptance.
 I found ways to excuse all these things and rationalize 
 them away, or found ways to never even notice that I was 
 doing them. And I would bet that a few people here have a 
 similar list of similar sillinesses that they managed to
 rationalize away or pretend weren't happening.
 
 It's normal. People on strong spiritual paths do silly shit.
 It's almost the *definition* of being on a strong spiritual
 path -- being willing to do silly shit. 
 
 And if it feels right to do it, I say Go For It. Make no
 excuses for the silly shit you do. *Revel* in the glory of
 silly shitness. 
 
 But if you ever get to a point where you can *recognize* it
 as silly shit, I would suggest not being afraid to laugh 
 at the behavior, and at yourself for having behaved that way. 
 It's very liberating, and frees you to go out and do *new* 
 silly shit that you'll look back on and laugh about someday 
 in the future.
 
 :-)

You forgot to mention abusing your authority as a spiritual teacher 
to seduce women.:-)



Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Things I can laugh at now...

2007-07-06 Thread Peter

--- jim_flanegin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, TurquoiseB
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 wrote:
 
  ...but once couldn't even see as the silliness
 they were:
  
  * Allowing Maharishi to have the last word and
 declare
  the absolute truth about something, when I felt in
 my
  heart and with every minute of my life experience
 that
  what he was saying wasn't true. 
  
  * Paying lip service to an organization I no
 longer 
  believed in and that I felt was on the wrong
 track, both
  spiritually and ethically...just out of habit. 
  
  * Feeling guilty about missing a meditation, when
 what I
  was doing was so much more beneficial to someone
 else than
  shutting my eyes and thinking a word I'd paid 35
 bucks for.
  
  * Thinking that the word I'd paid 35 bucks for was
 special.
  
  * Believing that Bad Things Would Happen if I
 spoke the
  word I'd paid 35 bucks for aloud.
  
  * Being asked to carry a large sum of money
 illegally across 
  international borders by the TMO, and actually
 considering 
  doing it for a few seconds because the person
 asking me to 
  do it said, Maharishi says it's Ok.
  
  * Borrowing money from people who worked for a
 living so
  that I didn't have to, and could go to the Next
 Big Course
  instead. That only happened once, and I paid them
 back as 
  soon as I got home, but it still makes me shake my
 head 
  and laugh at how incredibly *arrogant* I was to
 believe 
  that this was acceptable behavior.
  
  * Telling people in intro lectures that TM had no
 potential
  negative side effects, after seeing with my own
 eyes the
  twitching group at Fiuggi, 10 to 20 people with
 spasms
  so uncontrollable that they were not allowed to
 leave their
  hotels for fear they'd be arrested as crazy
 people.
  
  * Seeing someone sent home from an ATR course
 *for* develop-
  ing uncontrollable muscle spasms, after having
 been told that
  it was their fault and that not only would the
 money they
  paid for the course not be refunded, but that they
 would not
  be allowed to enter the TM center back home until
 the embar-
  rassing symptoms had gone away...and not advising
 them to 
  call a lawyer and sue the shit out of the TMO.
  
  * Watching other TM teachers blackball someone and
 prevent
  them from going to TM Teacher Training because
 they were
  living with their girlfriend or because they had
 admitted
  reading books by Carlos Castaneda and, after
 standing up
  for both applicants and seeing the TM teachers
 turn thumbs 
  down on them anyway, not advising *them* to call
 a lawyer.
  
  * Watching as books were edited to remove
 embarrassing 
  statements by Maharishi or as tapes were burned
 because he'd
  said something on them that the TM movement now
 wanted to
  pretend he'd never said...and not speaking up.
  
  * Being told by a good friend, upon her return
 from one of
  the first TM siddhi courses, that flying was a
 total hoax 
  and that -- despite the frequent claims of leaders
 of the
  TMO at the time -- no one had even come close to
 actually
  flying...and not believing her.
  
  * Paying big bucks to go the next TM siddhis
 course in 
  spite of what she said, realizing the truth of
 what she had
  said, and not even being angry at the people who'd
 stood 
  up in front of large groups of people back at the
 National
  TM Center in L.A. and told us that people were
 hovering
  on a daily basis
  
  * Being told by Maharishi, Wear your suit at all
 times, 
  even to the beach, and not laughing out loud.
  
  So many moments, so much silliness. Sometimes I
 look back on
  some of the silly things I did because I'd been
 told to do
  them, or because they were Standard Operating
 Procedure in
  the TMO, and I just *howl* with laughter and with
 the 
  realization of how incredibly silly and stupid I
 was.
  
  It's a great exercise in humility, and in self
 acceptance.
  I found ways to excuse all these things and
 rationalize 
  them away, or found ways to never even notice that
 I was 
  doing them. And I would bet that a few people here
 have a 
  similar list of similar sillinesses that they
 managed to
  rationalize away or pretend weren't happening.
  
  It's normal. People on strong spiritual paths do
 silly shit.
  It's almost the *definition* of being on a strong
 spiritual
  path -- being willing to do silly shit. 
  
  And if it feels right to do it, I say Go For It.
 Make no
  excuses for the silly shit you do. *Revel* in the
 glory of
  silly shitness. 
  
  But if you ever get to a point where you can
 *recognize* it
  as silly shit, I would suggest not being afraid to
 laugh 
  at the behavior, and at yourself for having
 behaved that way. 
  It's very liberating, and frees you to go out and
 do *new* 
  silly shit that you'll look back on and laugh
 about someday 
  in the future.
  
  :-)
 
 You forgot to mention abusing your authority as a
 spiritual teacher 
 to seduce women.:-)

Hey, life has really 

[FairfieldLife] Re: Things I can laugh at now...

2007-07-06 Thread curtisdeltablues
Dr Pete: Hey, life has really big learning curve, doesn't it? A
friend of mine used to make passes at women when he
was checking their meditation. He'd lean over and kiss
them. I was flabbergasted at this and asked him why he
did it and what did they do. He said he did it because
he like to kiss pretty girls and most of them kissed
back. He had sex with a few of them. Really weird
stuff. He now works as a chiropractor. Probably
adjusts people in the nude!

Now you freak'n tell me this!  Where was this checking point when I
was checking hottie after hottie in the DC center. I was soo pure
that when chicks came on to me I was professional.  Oh the idealism
of youth!  I do remember that certain hot chicks used to get very long
checkings from another teacher.  I thought they were just gabbing
(something my purity would never allow).  Now I realize that it was
much more likely that there was a little slowly open the thighs
action going on.

Most of them kissed him back, what a world I missed in my sattvic
lifestyle!  I'm so glad rajas and tamas rule the day now.  I'm not
missing out on anything these days!



--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Peter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 
 --- jim_flanegin [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
  --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, TurquoiseB
  no_reply@ 
  wrote:
  
   ...but once couldn't even see as the silliness
  they were:
   
   * Allowing Maharishi to have the last word and
  declare
   the absolute truth about something, when I felt in
  my
   heart and with every minute of my life experience
  that
   what he was saying wasn't true. 
   
   * Paying lip service to an organization I no
  longer 
   believed in and that I felt was on the wrong
  track, both
   spiritually and ethically...just out of habit. 
   
   * Feeling guilty about missing a meditation, when
  what I
   was doing was so much more beneficial to someone
  else than
   shutting my eyes and thinking a word I'd paid 35
  bucks for.
   
   * Thinking that the word I'd paid 35 bucks for was
  special.
   
   * Believing that Bad Things Would Happen if I
  spoke the
   word I'd paid 35 bucks for aloud.
   
   * Being asked to carry a large sum of money
  illegally across 
   international borders by the TMO, and actually
  considering 
   doing it for a few seconds because the person
  asking me to 
   do it said, Maharishi says it's Ok.
   
   * Borrowing money from people who worked for a
  living so
   that I didn't have to, and could go to the Next
  Big Course
   instead. That only happened once, and I paid them
  back as 
   soon as I got home, but it still makes me shake my
  head 
   and laugh at how incredibly *arrogant* I was to
  believe 
   that this was acceptable behavior.
   
   * Telling people in intro lectures that TM had no
  potential
   negative side effects, after seeing with my own
  eyes the
   twitching group at Fiuggi, 10 to 20 people with
  spasms
   so uncontrollable that they were not allowed to
  leave their
   hotels for fear they'd be arrested as crazy
  people.
   
   * Seeing someone sent home from an ATR course
  *for* develop-
   ing uncontrollable muscle spasms, after having
  been told that
   it was their fault and that not only would the
  money they
   paid for the course not be refunded, but that they
  would not
   be allowed to enter the TM center back home until
  the embar-
   rassing symptoms had gone away...and not advising
  them to 
   call a lawyer and sue the shit out of the TMO.
   
   * Watching other TM teachers blackball someone and
  prevent
   them from going to TM Teacher Training because
  they were
   living with their girlfriend or because they had
  admitted
   reading books by Carlos Castaneda and, after
  standing up
   for both applicants and seeing the TM teachers
  turn thumbs 
   down on them anyway, not advising *them* to call
  a lawyer.
   
   * Watching as books were edited to remove
  embarrassing 
   statements by Maharishi or as tapes were burned
  because he'd
   said something on them that the TM movement now
  wanted to
   pretend he'd never said...and not speaking up.
   
   * Being told by a good friend, upon her return
  from one of
   the first TM siddhi courses, that flying was a
  total hoax 
   and that -- despite the frequent claims of leaders
  of the
   TMO at the time -- no one had even come close to
  actually
   flying...and not believing her.
   
   * Paying big bucks to go the next TM siddhis
  course in 
   spite of what she said, realizing the truth of
  what she had
   said, and not even being angry at the people who'd
  stood 
   up in front of large groups of people back at the
  National
   TM Center in L.A. and told us that people were
  hovering
   on a daily basis
   
   * Being told by Maharishi, Wear your suit at all
  times, 
   even to the beach, and not laughing out loud.
   
   So many moments, so much silliness. Sometimes I
  look back on
   some of the silly things I did because I'd been
  told 

[FairfieldLife] Re: Things I can laugh at now...

2007-07-06 Thread shempmcgurk
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Peter [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
wrote:

[snip]
 

 Hey, life has really big learning curve, doesn't it? A
 friend of mine used to make passes at women when he
 was checking their meditation. He'd lean over and kiss
 them. I was flabbergasted at this and asked him why he
 did it and what did they do. He said he did it because
 he like to kiss pretty girls and most of them kissed
 back. He had sex with a few of them. Really weird
 stuff. He now works as a chiropractor. Probably
 adjusts people in the nude!


Robert Crumb used to complain how he never ever got any of that free 
love that was supposed to be so prevalent in the '60s.  I empathize 
because I never got any of that free love in the '70s.

When I read stuff like that above, I imagine that I would have 
eagerly joined the Children of God cult had just one good-
looking Flirty Fishy female allowed me to partake of her honeypot.  
I would have been so grateful that I would have willingly signed away 
both my life and my then meager $800 net worth.



[FairfieldLife] Re: Things I can laugh at now...

2007-07-06 Thread TurquoiseB
   You forgot to mention abusing your authority as a
   spiritual teacher to seduce women.:-)
 
  Dr Pete: Hey, life has really big learning curve, doesn't it? 
  A friend of mine used to make passes at women when he
  was checking their meditation. He'd lean over and kiss
  them. I was flabbergasted at this and asked him why he
  did it and what did they do. He said he did it because
  he like to kiss pretty girls and most of them kissed
  back. He had sex with a few of them. Really weird
  stuff. He now works as a chiropractor. Probably
  adjusts people in the nude!
 
 Now you freak'n tell me this!  Where was this checking point 
 when I was checking hottie after hottie in the DC center. I was 
 soo pure that when chicks came on to me I was professional.  
 Oh the idealism of youth! I do remember that certain hot chicks 
 used to get very long checkings from another teacher. I thought 
 they were just gabbing (something my purity would never allow).  
 Now I realize that it was much more likely that there was a little 
 slowly open the thighs action going on.
 
 Most of them kissed him back, what a world I missed in my sattvic
 lifestyle!  I'm so glad rajas and tamas rule the day now.  I'm not
 missing out on anything these days!

It's really great to see you guys having fun with
Jim's rather...uh...jealous snitlet at the top. I
think it's good to consider that (if I remember
correctly) Jim's never been a TM teacher. His ideas
of what TM teachers are like -- or what the life of a
TM teacher is like, period -- are just that...ideas.

The reality was sorta like...uh...everyday reality.
For example, back when I was a full-time TM teacher,
it *was* the TM movement, with all its surface 
prudery, but it was also the late 70's, and L.A.
People were coming on to each other right and left
because that's what people *did* in the late 70s in
L.A. In the TM movement, outside the TM movement;
it didn't matter. It was the tenor of the times --
post-pill and pre-AIDS.

I hate to break it to you straight types, but the
Friday night lectures at Charley Lutes' in Santa
Monica were regarded as The Best Pickup Spot In
Town. Even non-TMers knew about it. 

And let me tell you, during that time of the TM
movement, there was no seduction involved in
hooking up with a female TM teacher. So many of
the male TM teachers were into investigating their
inner celibacy that being a guy who wasn't was 
like being a straight guy in San Francisco. We
straight and willing guys were in such short sup-
ply at that time in L.A. TM circles that if there
was any seduction goin' down, it was usually on 
the part of the women. 

There was also a great deal of foolin' around on
ATR courses. One course I was on in Northern
California had so many people sneakin' from cabin
to cabin in the middle of the night that I thought
I'd stepped into an episode of The Young And The
Restless.

If you missed seeing this stuff in your journey
through the TM movement, it's not that it wasn't
going on, it's just that you missed it.





[FairfieldLife] Re: Things I can laugh at now...

2007-07-06 Thread geezerfreak
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, TurquoiseB [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

You forgot to mention abusing your authority as a
spiritual teacher to seduce women.:-)
  
   Dr Pete: Hey, life has really big learning curve, doesn't it? 
   A friend of mine used to make passes at women when he
   was checking their meditation. He'd lean over and kiss
   them. I was flabbergasted at this and asked him why he
   did it and what did they do. He said he did it because
   he like to kiss pretty girls and most of them kissed
   back. He had sex with a few of them. Really weird
   stuff. He now works as a chiropractor. Probably
   adjusts people in the nude!
  
  Now you freak'n tell me this!  Where was this checking point 
  when I was checking hottie after hottie in the DC center. I was 
  soo pure that when chicks came on to me I was professional.  
  Oh the idealism of youth! I do remember that certain hot chicks 
  used to get very long checkings from another teacher. I thought 
  they were just gabbing (something my purity would never allow).  
  Now I realize that it was much more likely that there was a little 
  slowly open the thighs action going on.
  
  Most of them kissed him back, what a world I missed in my sattvic
  lifestyle!  I'm so glad rajas and tamas rule the day now.  I'm not
  missing out on anything these days!
 
 It's really great to see you guys having fun with
 Jim's rather...uh...jealous snitlet at the top. I
 think it's good to consider that (if I remember
 correctly) Jim's never been a TM teacher. His ideas
 of what TM teachers are like -- or what the life of a
 TM teacher is like, period -- are just that...ideas.
 
 The reality was sorta like...uh...everyday reality.
 For example, back when I was a full-time TM teacher,
 it *was* the TM movement, with all its surface 
 prudery, but it was also the late 70's, and L.A.
 People were coming on to each other right and left
 because that's what people *did* in the late 70s in
 L.A. In the TM movement, outside the TM movement;
 it didn't matter. It was the tenor of the times --
 post-pill and pre-AIDS.
 
 I hate to break it to you straight types, but the
 Friday night lectures at Charley Lutes' in Santa
 Monica were regarded as The Best Pickup Spot In
 Town. Even non-TMers knew about it. 
 
 And let me tell you, during that time of the TM
 movement, there was no seduction involved in
 hooking up with a female TM teacher. So many of
 the male TM teachers were into investigating their
 inner celibacy that being a guy who wasn't was 
 like being a straight guy in San Francisco. We
 straight and willing guys were in such short sup-
 ply at that time in L.A. TM circles that if there
 was any seduction goin' down, it was usually on 
 the part of the women. 
 
 There was also a great deal of foolin' around on
 ATR courses. One course I was on in Northern
 California had so many people sneakin' from cabin
 to cabin in the middle of the night that I thought
 I'd stepped into an episode of The Young And The
 Restless.
 
 If you missed seeing this stuff in your journey
 through the TM movement, it's not that it wasn't
 going on, it's just that you missed it.

Man, you aren't kidding.  I gave a special techiniqueprobably the eating 
one...to one of 
Rindy's Rindette's. This was probably around '75 or so. This girl always wore 
white. In fact 
her room was always done up in all white. I finish puja, give her the technique 
and she 
promptly unwraps her white sari to reveal her vedic money maker.

Good times!

(PS: I passed on the offer.)










[FairfieldLife] Re: Things I can laugh at now...

2007-07-06 Thread jim_flanegin
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, TurquoiseB [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
wrote:
 It's really great to see you guys having fun with
 Jim's rather...uh...jealous snitlet at the top. I
 think it's good to consider that (if I remember
 correctly) Jim's never been a TM teacher. His ideas
 of what TM teachers are like -- or what the life of a
 TM teacher is like, period -- are just that...ideas.
 
 The reality was sorta like...uh...everyday reality.
 For example, back when I was a full-time TM teacher,
 it *was* the TM movement, with all its surface 
 prudery, but it was also the late 70's, and L.A.
 People were coming on to each other right and left
 because that's what people *did* in the late 70s in
 L.A. In the TM movement, outside the TM movement;
 it didn't matter. It was the tenor of the times --
 post-pill and pre-AIDS.
 
 I hate to break it to you straight types, but the
 Friday night lectures at Charley Lutes' in Santa
 Monica were regarded as The Best Pickup Spot In
 Town. Even non-TMers knew about it. 
 
 And let me tell you, during that time of the TM
 movement, there was no seduction involved in
 hooking up with a female TM teacher. So many of
 the male TM teachers were into investigating their
 inner celibacy that being a guy who wasn't was 
 like being a straight guy in San Francisco. We
 straight and willing guys were in such short sup-
 ply at that time in L.A. TM circles that if there
 was any seduction goin' down, it was usually on 
 the part of the women. 
 
 There was also a great deal of foolin' around on
 ATR courses. One course I was on in Northern
 California had so many people sneakin' from cabin
 to cabin in the middle of the night that I thought
 I'd stepped into an episode of The Young And The
 Restless.
 
 If you missed seeing this stuff in your journey
 through the TM movement, it's not that it wasn't
 going on, it's just that you missed it.

Too bad you missed the siddhis course. It is all about sutras, which 
use minimal expressions to accomplish big results, like my 14 words 
bringing about a response of 330 words (yow!) from you.:-)



Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: Things I can laugh at now...

2007-07-06 Thread Bhairitu
TurquoiseB wrote:
 You forgot to mention abusing your authority as a
 spiritual teacher to seduce women.:-)
 
 Dr Pete: Hey, life has really big learning curve, doesn't it? 
 A friend of mine used to make passes at women when he
 was checking their meditation. He'd lean over and kiss
 them. I was flabbergasted at this and asked him why he
 did it and what did they do. He said he did it because
 he like to kiss pretty girls and most of them kissed
 back. He had sex with a few of them. Really weird
 stuff. He now works as a chiropractor. Probably
 adjusts people in the nude!
   
 Now you freak'n tell me this!  Where was this checking point 
 when I was checking hottie after hottie in the DC center. I was 
 soo pure that when chicks came on to me I was professional.  
 Oh the idealism of youth! I do remember that certain hot chicks 
 used to get very long checkings from another teacher. I thought 
 they were just gabbing (something my purity would never allow).  
 Now I realize that it was much more likely that there was a little 
 slowly open the thighs action going on.

 Most of them kissed him back, what a world I missed in my sattvic
 lifestyle!  I'm so glad rajas and tamas rule the day now.  I'm not
 missing out on anything these days!
 

 It's really great to see you guys having fun with
 Jim's rather...uh...jealous snitlet at the top. I
 think it's good to consider that (if I remember
 correctly) Jim's never been a TM teacher. His ideas
 of what TM teachers are like -- or what the life of a
 TM teacher is like, period -- are just that...ideas.

 The reality was sorta like...uh...everyday reality.
 For example, back when I was a full-time TM teacher,
 it *was* the TM movement, with all its surface 
 prudery, but it was also the late 70's, and L.A.
 People were coming on to each other right and left
 because that's what people *did* in the late 70s in
 L.A. In the TM movement, outside the TM movement;
 it didn't matter. It was the tenor of the times --
 post-pill and pre-AIDS.

 I hate to break it to you straight types, but the
 Friday night lectures at Charley Lutes' in Santa
 Monica were regarded as The Best Pickup Spot In
 Town. Even non-TMers knew about it. 

 And let me tell you, during that time of the TM
 movement, there was no seduction involved in
 hooking up with a female TM teacher. So many of
 the male TM teachers were into investigating their
 inner celibacy that being a guy who wasn't was 
 like being a straight guy in San Francisco. We
 straight and willing guys were in such short sup-
 ply at that time in L.A. TM circles that if there
 was any seduction goin' down, it was usually on 
 the part of the women. 

 There was also a great deal of foolin' around on
 ATR courses. One course I was on in Northern
 California had so many people sneakin' from cabin
 to cabin in the middle of the night that I thought
 I'd stepped into an episode of The Young And The
 Restless.

 If you missed seeing this stuff in your journey
 through the TM movement, it's not that it wasn't
 going on, it's just that you missed it.
I would have never done anything like that during checking and I doubt 
that you would have either not because of purity but it would have 
seemed unethical.  Besides there were plenty TM social activities like 
potlucks to supplant that.  And I do recall women running around in see 
through blouses at a Canadian weekend course I went on.  The TTC I was 
on which was the last mixed course had a lot of bed hopping too and that 
was before the flying technique.  :)





[FairfieldLife] Re: Things I can laugh at now...

2007-07-06 Thread Jason Spock
 
  
  Almost everyone in FFL at some point in his life thought that Maharishi 
was the 'real deal'.  That's the real reason people got attracted to Maharishi 
in the first place.
   
  If you guys later on changed your opinions due to various reasons, that's 
fine.  That's your karma.
   
  What interests me the most is how Rick Archer changed his opinion after 
being a Bug eyed Cult zombie.
   
  CurtisDelta was too enlightened to listen to the advice of his 
Chiropactor and continued to hop on his butt till his back got permanently 
damaged.
   
  If any 'flirty fishy' female was there in TM-mov't that was a bonus.

ShempMcGurk [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
  Date: Fri, 06 Jul 2007 14:54:52 -
Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: Things I can laugh at now...

   
  Robert Crumb used to complain how he never ever got any of that free 
love that was supposed to be so prevalent in the '60s. I empathize 
because I never got any of that free love in the '70s.

When I read stuff like that above, I imagine that I would have 
eagerly joined the Children of God cult had just one good-
looking Flirty Fishy female allowed me to partake of her honeypot. 
I would have been so grateful that I would have willingly signed away 
both my life and my then meager $800 net worth.
   
   

   
-
Ready for the edge of your seat? Check out tonight's top picks on Yahoo! TV. 

[FairfieldLife] Re: Things I can laugh at now...

2007-07-06 Thread Rory Goff
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, jim_flanegin [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
wrote:
 
 Too bad you missed the siddhis course. It is all about sutras, which 
 use minimal expressions to accomplish big results, like my 14 words 
 bringing about a response of 330 words (yow!) from you.:-)

Ohh! He never took the siddhis course!  Many thanks, Jim, I'm thinking 
that may clarify some things. My apologies, Barry; I suspect I have 
been overly hard on you. Did Vaj perchance miss them too? 

Suddenly a number of puzzling anomalies may be coming into much clearer 
focus. I think I've been sitting in the wrong class! :-)




[FairfieldLife] Re: Things I can laugh at now...

2007-07-06 Thread jim_flanegin
--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Rory Goff [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
wrote:

 --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, jim_flanegin jflanegi@ 
 wrote:
  
  Too bad you missed the siddhis course. It is all about sutras, 
which 
  use minimal expressions to accomplish big results, like my 14 
words 
  bringing about a response of 330 words (yow!) from you.:-)
 
 Ohh! He never took the siddhis course!  Many thanks, Jim, I'm 
thinking 
 that may clarify some things. My apologies, Barry; I suspect I 
have 
 been overly hard on you. Did Vaj perchance miss them too? 
 
 Suddenly a number of puzzling anomalies may be coming into much 
clearer 
 focus. I think I've been sitting in the wrong class! :-)

mechanical energy vs nuclear energy.:-)