Living in the moment?
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Posted by:
old Timer ®

10/01/2009, 11:25:10
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An excerpt from Mitch Ditkoff's blog:

http://www.ideachampions.com/heart/archives/2009/09/asheville_posts.shtml

"Maharaji, somehow, has the knack for facilitating an experience that
enables people, from all walks of life, to feel the fullness of the
moment -- to be totally receptive. Receptive to life. Receptive to
love. Receptive to the realization that everything is perfect just the
way it is.

At moments like this, I am filled with an extraordinary tidal wave of gratitude -- and I had one of those moments being with Maharaji in Asheville, on September 23rd."

It is interesting that many people with knowledge still identify that experience with Maharaji's presence. This feeling could have happened anywhere and at any anytime. It really has nothing to do with being in Rawat's presence. It cost him the price of an air flight to connect the two.

Maharaji's hypnotic spell keeps one's inner being in a state of  suspension like the characters frozen by the White Witch in 'The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe' by C S Lewis.

I still feel that I was kept in a time warp for many years and re-adapting to the real world has and is still in some ways a challenge professionally and psychologically. Being a cult member for 25 years plus is bound to damage the way we live and it takes time and considerable effort to adjust to a life which is ultimately far more rewarding on every level. A life that does not always have to be referenced back to Rawat.

I had a ---------- day because it was ------

Old Timer








Modified by old Timer at Thu, Oct 01, 2009, 11:28:20

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re: White Witch in 'The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe' by C S Lewis.
Re: Living in the moment? -- old Timer Top of thread Archive
Posted by:
johnnyboy ®

10/01/2009, 12:45:34
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Hi Old Timer!

An amazing analogy - quite astonishing for the fact that, as a premie, the exact opposite seemed true.

Hands up those who thought Maharaj ji was Aslan???

Me! Me! Me!  I hear??

Aslan's motives, although not always understood, were always clear in the end!  The White Witch, however; no one knew just where they stood, always running around ingratiating themselves - and yet - always getting turned into stone.

By taking away our birthright and creating dependency M sought to also turn all into stone.  Frozen in inactivity, lifeless devotion, robbed of all life and posessions.

Our birthright is the true knowledge; the knowledge that we are the source of all that we need and all that we can give.

He took our birthright and claimed it as his by claiming to provide us with a glimpse of where and what it was.

He is therefore a deceiver and a fraud and perhaps the most despicable soul ever to have walked this Earth!

It may be true that he never murdered a soul, or promoted mass suicide, but he definitely robbed the life of thousands to sustain his materialistic appetites.

Phew!

Thank you Old Timer!

best wishes to you - john







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Ah - you were faster than me!
Re: re: White Witch in 'The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe' by C S Lewis. -- johnnyboy Top of thread Archive
Posted by:
Ash ®

10/01/2009, 12:55:31
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While I was not going to go into the C.S. Lewis story, I felt an urge to express that Rawat was and still is the big disowner!

He disowned all his premies of their genuine OWN feelings, emotions, realizations ... he occupied all this and claimed it was *his* --- when that is merely not possible at all.

Just like there is no logic reason whatsoever to "occupy" people's breath and claim it to be "his" way to enlightenment and realization (whatever the latter was supposed to mean!).

Expressions by premies such as this Ditchkoff's stuff just show how much and how deeply believing premies are immersed in Maharaji's building of LIES, and in the end: how thoroughly BRAINWASHED they are!




As far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality, they are not certain, and as far as they are certain, they do not refer to reality. Albert Einstein
Avoiding a problem does not make it go away, avoiding feeling does not make it go away either. (me)



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