*************
The following message is relayed to you by  [email protected]
************
At that fleeting moment of a win you stop playing the game you were playing and 
have not yet found a new game to play so you feel at peace and happy. yes, but 
this suggests that you need to play games and win games to reach this feeling. 

in fact what you are saying is that when you stop playing games you feel good. 
so Lester Levenson's directed meditation consisiting of holding the point of 
view:
simply being, that is existing
Joy filled, lacking nothing, feeling you have everything you need
and harmless to everyone, not playing any games

is the method to directly arrive at Nirvana

this fits nicely with the whole operation of TROM of finding the games i am 
playing and timebreaking them till i am playing no games.


Keep On TROMing
Pete 

Sent from my iPad

On Jul 3, 2012, at 12:09 AM, Paul Tipon <[email protected]> wrote:

> *************
> The following message is relayed to you by  [email protected]
> ************
> I wanted to clarify the concept of Nirvana. 
>  
> I find that the Buddhist and Hindu explanations to be quite involved beyond 
> necessity.  It is really very simple.  It is not a place or a beingness in 
> the sense of relating to anything in the physical universe.  It is certainly 
> not a place.  It is simply the state of one's spiritualness.  Only in the 
> state of Theta or spirit can it be achieved.
>  
> An interesting aspect is that LRH never defined it that I know of.
>  
> It is stated in its most simplest form as: any place of complete bliss and 
> delight and peace. Now there you see the concept of 'place' being included.  
> Let's just eliminate both words 'any' and 'place'.  It now becomes 'complete 
> bliss and delight and peace'.
>  
> The interesting fact is that now one can see that one has many moments of 
> Nirvana or of being in Nirvana.  A simple description of such a moment is a 
> 'Win'.  "Deciding to do something and doing it; deciding not to do something 
> and not doing it."  And I might add, DO NOT ADD ANYTHING ELSE TO THIS.  This 
> is LRH's definition of a 'Win'.
>  
> Can you see that at that very fleeting moment of a 'Win' that one has 
> achieved Nirvana.  It can become all encompassing and infinite as one only 
> ever decides to do something and does it or decides to do nothing and does 
> nothing.
>  
> Try that on.  I think you will see that it is true.
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