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Is Advaita just another Cult??

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*** Advaita ***

Advaita is one of a large number of teachings that offers " Spiritual

Enlightenment. " You could substitute almost any other teaching of

" Enlightenment " in the discussion below.

 

 

*** Is Advaita a Cult?? ***

Do you really want to believe there is something more than just this

mundane, misery-filled, earthly life, and then that's it? Or do you

really WANT to believe there is something more? Advaita offers that

for which we have all been seeking: Enlightenment, Heaven on Earth,

the One True Way, Freedom from all suffering, and Oneness with God.

But is it just another Cult? Is it Brainwashing? Are its believers

Delusional or suffering from Psychosis? Is it just another religion?

There are zillions of people and zillions of groups who claim to have

" The Answer " to all your problems. Advaita is one of those teachings.

The people who " believe " in Advaita and claim that it has changed

their lives for the better say MANY of the EXACT same things that Cult

believers do. How can you ever know if THIS set of beliefs is finally

" The Answer " ?

 

 

*** SUMMARY ***

Advaita can be seen as the ultimate self-help program because it

solves 100% of ALL of your problems. That is because you actually

transcend this life, there is no " you " any more, you are one with

everyone and everything in the universe. You now realize your " true

natural state, " you " awaken from the dream " which was the entire life

you had lived up until this moment. You are now " One with God " (you

and everything else IS God, you just didn't know it before Advaita),

you reach " Nirvana " , " The Real Truth " , " Constant Bliss " , " Innate

Happiness " , " True Freedom " , etc. This is truly the answer to all your

problems. Who wouldn't want all that?!

 

To achieve this, proponents often study ancient, obscure spiritual or

semi-religious documents, usually with guidance of a Guru, ideally

from India. What you have to get is " ineffable " -- it can never

actually be explained, it must be experienced. But once you experience

it you will never want to (or even be able to?) go back. Many cool

Eastern-sounding paradoxes abound: You must search for it, but you

can't get it until you stop searching for it.

 

You realize that there is no such thing as " time " any more. You

believe you are eternal, and this is just one of many of your lives.

If you are killed that is OK, that is just your body dying, that is

not the real you, you are Eternal. All of your thoughts and emotions

really don't exist, you realize there is no such thing as free choice,

you therefore have no responsibility.

 

Proponents of Advaita say that if you call them a cult, then you just

don't get it. Just like all cults do.

 

 

 

*** Reality, or Mental Disorder ***

Why do you believe what you believe? Most people don't even know WHAT

they believe, let alone the reasons WHY they believe those things.

SOME of the reasons WHY you believe what you believe are:

1. an authority figure you trust told you (parents, news reporter, etc.)

2. you are afraid not to (authoritarian religious belief)

3. you really want to (there must be life after death, I don't want to

believe this is all there is)

4. you engaged in groupthink (everyone else believes it, so you do as

well)

5. you had an EXPERIENCE that convinced you something was true

 

Note that the strongest beliefs we ever have are #5 -- things we

believe because we actually experienced them ourselves. And the only

way a person can get Enlightened in Advaita is by having a particular

mysterious experience. Then they " know " it is true. But how can they

share an EXPERIENCE with you? They can't! Therefore the *ONLY* way for

you to " know " what it is like to be Enlightened in Advaita is to have

the required experience yourself. But once you have the experience,

there's no turning back!

 

It is 100% possible that believers of Advaita experience reality " the

way it really is " , and are forever changed for the better, and they

know something that the vast majority of humans have never known and

will never know.

 

Also, it is 100% possible that the believers of Advaita have an

experience, and now they believe what they are experiencing, but they

are actually " Delusional " -- that is, they really, truly, totally

believe something that is in fact NOT TRUE. Obviously if you ask them,

they will say that is ridiculous, they " know " what is " true " and you

do not.

 

You have now entered the realm of Epistemology -- the philosophical

study of what is TRUE and what is REALITY and what are BELIEFS. You

will find NO definitive answers here.

 

SHOCKING Implication: It MUST be that EITHER people who are

Enlightened, or the rest of us, are DELUSIONAL. By classical medical

definitions, one group is mentally ill! And neither one can know which

is right. Ever. This may be a truly impossible problem.

 

But look at the amazing implications of this! First off, is it

possible to have an experience that completely screws up your sense of

reality? Are there other cases in regular medicine where this is known

to be true?

* Something you experienced, so you " know " it is true, but it

actually is not true at all, but you really believe it is, since you

actually experienced it? What is true reality? If it makes you feel

better, is that wrong? What if is actually right? But what if it makes

you feel bad, does that make it wrong or not true?

* Some people suffer a break with reality when traumatized by an

experience (shell-shocked, PTSD, victim of a crime) and they don't

know what reality is any more. Dissociation is a symptom of PTSD, and

it sounds shockingly similar to Enlightenment: " Dissociation is

another " defense " that includes a variety of symptoms including

feelings of depersonalization and derealization, disconnection between

memory and affect so that the person is " in another world, " and in

extreme forms can involve apparent multiple personalities and acting

without any memory ( " losing time " ). "

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-traumatic_stress_disorder#Symptoms

* And since you now feel really much better about yourself, you stick

with that belief, even if the old " you " tries to pull yourself back

into the old belief of reality.

* If you had an experience that completely changed your view of

reality FOR THE WORSE, you would think you were sick and had a mental

breakdown, and would work really hard to get your old view of reality

back.

* So we seem to have a measure of what reality is: if our view of

reality changes for the better, than that must be the REAL reality,

but if it changes for the worse, then that can't be real and we have

to be cured.

* That is why you rarely hear of anyone who gets Enlightened and then

goes and seeks a " cure " for this ailment. But there is one REALLY good

(actually bad) example: Suzanne Segal, discussed below.

 

More implications: A Psychotic Break is a loss of contact with

reality, which is a mental disorder.

 

MEDICAL PROFESSIONALS: You should be alarmed that there seems to be a

growing trend of people who are seeking out this " enlightenment " thing

-- they are actively seeking to have a mental breakdown on purpose!

Here is a person writing about such an experience in a relatively

mainstream publication:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/stacey-lawson/who-are-you-really_b_67506.html?view\

=screen

 

BELIEVERS IN ENLIGHTENMENT: If you are an Advaita believer, even

though you don't really feel compelled to Enlighten anyone else, if

you speak the language of medical professionals to show them that YOU

have the correct view of reality, and they and everyone else is

actually suffering a mental illness known as psychosis. They will take

it from there -- it is the job and responsibility of medical

professionals to cure people of their illnesses, so if you can

demonstrate to them that they are mentally ill, and cure them, then

they will also cure others. Then it will become the medical mainstream

to fix the mental illness most people suffer from, and " cure " them by

Enlightening them. Finally the world will be filled with people who

are cured of mental illness. A world of people who are Enlightened/no

longer mentally ill would be a entirely different world than anything

else in history.

 

Here is a scholarly work that compares Mysticism (such as

Enlightenment) and Psychosis.

" IT IS REFRESHING to read a paper that manages at once to be

interdisciplinary and intercultural in its range of reference, and

that also confronts a difficult and controversial question about how

we are to assess the similarities and differences between psychotic

and mystical experiences. Many psychiatrists have been skeptical about

whether there are any genuine differences... "

http://muse.jhu.edu/login?uri=/journals/philosophy_psychiatry_and_psychology/v00\

9/9.4mcghee.html

 

Here is the only guy I found who is a proponent of Enlightenment, yet

has any criticism of the potential psychosis of Enlightenment. But he

also makes fun of other teachers of Enlightenment, and you end up

having no idea what the heck is the " right kind " of Enlightenment at

all! http://www.infinitesmile.org/?p=172

 

Long paper comparing Psychosis and Mysticism. You will see that the

Enlightenment promised by Advaita isn't all that special after all...

The Relationship Between Schizophrenia & Mysticism: A Bibliographic Essay

http://sandra.stahlman.com/schizo.html

" As awareness increases to include more external and internal

information, a sense of self, a boundary between self and environment,

expands, seems to dissipate. The experience is one of unity with

information formerly defined as non-self. This expansion of the self,

often referred to as loss of self, may not be beneficial for someone

who does not have a " strong " sense of self to begin with. To these

people, a mystical experience can be frightening and confusing, to say

the least. "

 

" Addressing the concepts " unifying " and " ego-transcending " seems vital

because the sorts of phrases turn up again and again in literature on

mysticism. F.C. Happold (1975) writes " unless the idea of non-duality

can be grasped the range of mystical experience is incomprehensible "

(p.71). " Duality " describes the manner in which we usually perceive

our self in relation to the environment. A division of " self " and

" other " occurs. " Ego " can be used to refer to that self which we are

aware of. What happens during a mystical experience has been described

as transcending this ego, or going through a process of temporary

" ego-loss. " As multiplicity ceases, the experience is of a mode of

consciousness often referred to as " the One. " "

 

" Kenneth Wapnick (1980) explains that mystics tend to follow a very

structured, common process, culminating with the mystical experience.

He refers to an outline of this process created by Underhill in 1961,

in which the mystic moves from " an awakening of self " (p.323) to the

purgation of attachments to the social world and the self, resulting

in an experience of " a state of pure consciousness, in which the

individual experiences nothing " (p.324). "

 

 

*** Positives ***

Here are some POSITIVE things that Advaita proponents say, that makes

them sound like they are NOT a cult:

 

1. " Real " Advaita leads you to an understanding such that you do NOT

feel compelled to teach others at all. Therefore all those teachers,

Gurus, etc. are suspect and may very well be frauds.

2. Those who experience Advaita claim to see everything in the world

as " unconditional love, " including themselves and other people.

Presumably they don't want to do anything `bad' to things they love,

including other people, animals, the earth, etc.

3. There are proponents who say they have been " Enlightened " by the

teachings of Advaita, and they appear to live normal, productive lives

within the rest of society. They don't seem to do anything too extreme

like meditate on a mountaintop for the rest of their lives, or go kill

lots of people, or try to " convert " everyone around them.

4. There are only a FEW people whose teachings may be considered

Advaita who are obviously out to make money (such as Eckhart Tolle).

5. There do not seem to be any hard-core brainwashing techniques used

(google `Scientology Brainwashing' if you want to see ALL the

techniques). Mostly it is up to every individual to seek out this

knowledge and continue to seek it out even when difficult.

 

 

*** ALL CULTS ***

ALL cults share a large number of these properties. (Longer

definitions of Cults are below, or search the internet for more

definitions. They all say and do the same things.)

1. They teach the " REAL " way to find God, bliss, enlightenment,

eternal happiness, etc.

2. They solve ALL of your problems.

3. They can't really explain it.

4. Only a select few ever get it.

5. There is a difficult journey to get it.

6. To get it requires resolve, faith, seeking -- often times for many

years or decades, or a lifetime.

7. Most followers got into it because of some pain in their life that

made them seek a solution to their pain, which makes them

committed/gullible.

8. There are always leaders that teach or have the special method that

followers have to seek out.

9. The leaders have special powers, and followers get a " feeling " just

being in their presence.

10. They use lots of weird language and mumbo-jumbo.

11. SEPARATENESS. Members are set apart from the rest of society

because they are special. <-- IMPORTANT!

12. There are often cool mystical, spiritual, or religious ancient/old

teachings and sacred documents.

13. Cult members " know " what is " true " and everyone else does not, so

they form groups to be able to interact with other who " know " the " truth. "

14. The actual destination is debated or mysterious, and is often

never really clear.

15. If you don't get it, that would be really bad.

 

 

*** NEGATIVE, Cult-like teachings of Advaita ***

Here are some NEGATIVE things that Advaita proponents say, that makes

them sound like they ARE a cult:

 

1. Look at the DEFINITION of a cult: they ALL offer the REAL solution

to your problems. The rewards for an Enlightened Advaita believer are

astonishing! Here are just some of the things you hear Advaita

believers saying you will get:

 

Awakening from The Dream, The Ultimate Truth, God, Bliss, Heaven on

Earth, Unconditional Love, Liberation, True Freedom, The Highest

Happiness, Perfect Peace, Nirvana, Salvation, Metamorphosis, Universal

Law, Paradise, Dharma, Dhamma, Bodhi, Satori, Kensho, Prajna, Death of

the Ego, Perfect Sanity, An Illuminated Soul, Ancient Wisdom, Merging

of the Human and the Divine, Brilliant Infinite Self of Awakened

Consciousness, The Vastness of all Being, the Enormity of who We

Really Are, One with the Universe -- to name just a few.

 

Everything that all ancient Eastern philosophies ever taught, and

arguably much of what Western religion teaches, is yours for free!

 

2. Very few self-help programs claim to ever be able to solve all of

your problems. Even New Age teachings often refer to the " spiritual

path " or your " journey towards Enlightenment " but they rarely if ever

claim any sort of final destination. Only cults and religions do: They

TELL you what you MUST do in order to be rewarded, and not punished.

Cults vaguely tell you that you must continue to follow their

teachings forever, because there is always something more, some higher

level to achieve, some mysterious secret yet to be revealed and

learned but maybe if you're really lucky you will be The One who

actually gets it. Many religions tells you that you must do certain

things here on this earth and struggle for an unachievable perfection

in this life, in order to get some reward or avoid some punishment

after death.

 

But not Advaita! They tell you that you will receive all rewards,

right now. All problems are solved. Heaven on earth. In an instant.

Well, maybe longer.

 

" When you see that that is what you are, then the very subtleness

expresses itself. That is the uncaused joy. Nisargadatta puts it

beautifully. He puts it in the negative. 'There is nothing wrong any

more.' "

http://sailorbob.net/home/books.html

 

3. All cults have some " difficult, " " incomprehensible, " or completely

" ineffable " concepts that only a very small, select-few people know

about or can explain. If you take The Landmark Forum they repeatedly

tell you that you will " get it " but they never, EVER tell you what

" IT " is. IT is inexplicable, apparently. All Cults use have concepts

that are somehow spiritual, they just can't be explained rationally,

and even trying to understand things rationally shows what problems

you have, and how much you need whatever they are offering. Why can't

you just " let go? "

 

Advaita is arguably the most intense in this respect. The whole

problem is that you are not really YOU. YOU are actually something

else. So whenever you try to understand YOU, you is just getting in

the way. Only when you -- in some absolutely indescribable,

incommunicable manner " lets go " can the real YOU be set free,

liberated, enlightened.

 

4. This Advaita Enlightenment is not widely known, so only a select

few special people are seeking it, and even fewer ever " get it " .

Before you get it, you get to belong to a cool, small, underground

group of seekers-of-truth who study ancient manuscripts and wise old

spiritual guys from India who got Enlightenment spontaneously, so they

are really special.

 

5. Getting Advaita Enlightenment is also described as a paradox: It is

actually staring you in the face right now, all you have to do is see

it. But almost no one in history ever has. So getting it is really

hard, but once you get it (often times after decades of trying) you

will see how easy it was to have gotten it. The struggle and the fight

to get it is necessary, but you only get it when you stop struggling

and fighting.

 

6. Getting Advaita Enlightenment is sometimes (not always) described

as requiring great discipline and resolve. Which sounds a lot like

religious faith, or faith in the teachings of a cult leader.

 

Andrew Cohen - Embracing Heaven & Earth, Page 23:

To succeed, we must be convinced beyond any doubt from our own

experience that Liberation is a living possibility, that it is real.

But from that moment on, whether that which was directly experienced

in the spiritual revelation is apparent or not, we must choose to be

free in every moment no matter what. That's when we become true

spiritual warriors. That's when we have finally become serious about

attaining victory over ignorance in this life.

 

7. Like any self help program or group you can join that promised to

help you solve your problems, Advaita offers to solve ALL your

problems. And everyone who gets Advaita Enlightenment describes it in

incredibly colorful language, often in flowery poetry, and almost

always as an amazingly awesome, reality-changing experience for the

better. Now imagine you have some pain in your life, and someone comes

by and offers you all of this peace, love, happiness, eternal bliss.

Why wouldn't you spend the rest of your life trying to find Heaven on

Earth? I know damn well from personal experience that if you try to

sell this to people who are HAPPY with their lives, they will think

you are nuts. So therefore in my experience, the ONLY people who seek

out Advaita are those who are in pain, weak, gullible, open to their

teachings, etc. If you need to believe there is something more to this

life, Advaita offers all the answers, the Real Truth.

 

8. Advaita teaches that anyone can get Enlightenment right here, right

now, nothing special is required, you don't have to buy anything,

follow some teacher, or even do anything like meditate. And Advaita

teaches the ultimate Egalitarianism -- you aren't really you, you are

just part of all the universe, so the thought that any person is more

or less than any other is nonsensical.

 

Well, sometimes they say it really helps to learn from someone who is

already Enlightened, and is a master at teaching, known as a Guru or

Sage or something. Uh oh! In fact there is overwhelming praise for

their master teachers, they are revered as important historical

figures and spiritual leaders, and they have followers and some

Advaita students stridently argue their Guru is better than other

Gurus. And ANYONE who got Enlightenment *spontaneously* is

extra-revered! But people who get Enlightened by studying under one

of the special, well-known Gurus can and often do go on to become

teachers themselves. Then they set up a cool thing called a " Lineage "

which presumably shows how good/special they are because they are a

teacher descended from one of these revered masters.

http://www.gangaji.org/satsang/library/lineage.asp

http://nisargadatta.net/Navnath_Sampradaya.html

http://www.ex-premie.org/video/pages/lineage.html

http://www.realization.org/page/doc0/doc0097c.htm

http://www.advaita.org.uk/teachers/lineages.htm

 

Also there is a really strong feeling that these revered, wise,

mystical ancient old Indian dudes must know something the rest of us

don't know. They really figured out the mystery of life. Wouldn't it

be cool if you could know what they knew? How could those mystical old

guys be just some sort of cult? No way. They must know something

really special. Magical. Spiritual. Mystical. God-like.

 

 

9. There are many stories about how people tried to get Enlightenment

on their own for a really long time, but when they finally met with

their Guru they " felt " a special " presence " and shortly thereafter

their lifelong quest for Enlightenment was over!

 

10. Advaita is an ancient Hindu teaching. So modern Western

practitioners can -- and do -- use really cool kick-ass Sanskrit words

like Atman, Brahman, Prasthanatrayi, Upanishads, Bhagavad Gita, and

Brahma Sutras. And there are cool words like Non-Dualism, Delusion,

Extraordinary Ordinariness, and the word Advaita itself. Now you get

to make up cool sentences like this one I found on the net:

 

" a. Brahman alone is real b. The world is unreal c. The world is

Brahman. This is an ancient quote from the Upanishads which was

echoed by Shankara. Appearances are only Brahman, short and sweet. "

 

How do you like me now!!

 

 

11. SEPARATENESS -- Here we get into the culmination of a lot of

things that Cults do, and that Advaita does: separates people from the

mainstream. And yet another paradox: Advaita claims that when you get

their brand of Enlightenment, you will become one with all, but at the

same time you know damn well that very few other people actually are

Enlightened. So even though you now know we are all totally the same

thing, you are somehow different. Special. And get this: you now have

a cool new language to use -- JUST LIKE ALL CULTS DO, so when you talk

to people about what Advaita is and what happened to you, it will be

all cool sounding yet incomprehensible to them -- setting you APART

from the mainstream, just like ALL cults do. AND you have really cool

sounding concepts, but you really can't explain them to people, just

like ALL cults do. AND you know some sort of Ultimate Truth about The

Way Things Really Are -- just like ALL cult members ALWAYS say. The

only way for people to understand you is to join in, to get

Enlightened themselves, just like ALL cults. Otherwise, all those

people from your old life are now not as good as you because you know

what is real and they don't. You are now separate from the mainstream.

 

But that is totally OK, you know skeptics just say these things, and

that is fine. You *KNOW* what the truth *REALLY* is, and those OTHER

people are fine just the way they are. You aren't out to convert

anybody. You KNOW what the truth is, you are perfectly content at all

times, including when people tell you that you are bonkers. You know.

They don't. You are special. You are different. Just like ALL other

cult members.

 

 

12. There are ancient Advaita teachings, written in Sanskrit. They are

extremely sacred, opaque, and revered. Isn't it cool to be studying

some ancient mysterious wisdom that only a few people ever actually

" get " making them super-happy all the time? Dude, cool.

 

 

13. Enlightened people see almost everyone else as not-Enlightened

(or at best all other people are Enlightened they just don't know it

yet.) Therefore Enlightened people form groups of other

similarly-Enlightened people to interact with. How hard it must be to

talk to all those other people who " don't get it " and are living a

" delusion " and are " still dreaming " . We Advaita believers know what is

true, and we have our separate concepts and language. It is just

easier to hang out with other believers in The Truth. Just like *ALL*

cults that provide groups that allow you to indulge your separateness

from the mainstream.

 

 

14. What exactly is the Enlightenment offered by Advaita? As best I

can tell, Advaita is NOT just another self-help program that offers

infinite incremental changes to yourself to make you a little bit more

happy all the time. It is a full on 100% transformation of the way you

see the universe and your role in it.

 

But it is completely " ineffable " and the way to get it is also

ineffable. Here is an illustration of ineffable:

Say a young woman tells a little boy that she is " in love. " The boy

asks her what that means, and how did she get it. She will explain in

colorful language the process of falling in love (or she might even

say, " it just happened " ), and in very colorful language what it feels

like to be in love and how great it is. The boy, never having been in

love, will probably say he sort of gets it, and it sure seems great.

But he certainly does not now actually feel what she feels. Then a

friend of the girls comes in and says she is in love too. So she

explains it to the boy, and this next girl uses totally different

colorful language, and again it all seems great, but yet again the boy

doesn't actually feel what she feels. Then the two girls turn to each

other and wonder -- are we feeling the same thing? The fact is they

can never know!

 

And that is what Enlightenment is like -- since no one can ever

explain it, no one ever knows if they really got it or not, or if

anyone else ever got it.

 

And there are some things that seem to offer Enlightenment, but it

just isn't clear. For example, lots of people say that " dissolving the

ego " is the definition of Enlightenment.

http://www.google.com/search?num=100 & hl=en & safe=off & pwst=1 & sa=X & oi=spell & resnum=\

0 & ct=result & cd=1 & q=ego+death+enlightenment & spell=1

 

But believers in Advaita say you are " perfect " just as you are now, so

there is no need to dissolve your ego:

 

This is not about " giving up the search " or " transcending thought " or

" dropping the ego " . No, this message is simpler than any of that: it's

about life as it already is.

http://www.lifewithoutacentre.com/index.html

 

Finally, there are MANY different possible meanings of Enlightenment,

so the Advaita version must be something specific, yet ultimately

indescribable.

 

In religious use, enlightenment is most closely associated with South

and East Asian religious experience, being used to translate words

such as (in Buddhism) Bodhi or satori, or (in Hinduism) moksha. The

concept does also have parallels in the Abrahamic religions (in the

Kabbalah tradition in Judaism, in Christian mysticism, and in the Sufi

tradition of Islam).

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enlightenment_%28concept%29

 

 

15. Once you have tasted the promise of Advaita Enlightenment, how can

you stop trying to get it? Even though you didn't get it yet, you now

" know " that there is a whole magical world out there, and your current

life is just so small and meaningless. It isn't even " real " ,

everything you do isn't even real, your memories, beliefs and even

your thoughts are not real at all, you just need to " get it " and then

you will be free! How can you go back to your mundane life and just

forget about Advaita? This feeling that there must be more, just at

the verge of your knowing, will eat away at you forever. Think about

it all the time. Read books. Meet gurus. Join a group. JOIN US.

 

 

 

 

*** Cult Definitions ***

Here are some definitions of Cults off the internet, there are plenty

more. All that is really important is to notice that ALL cults have

similarities, and Advaita shares MANY of these traits:

 

1. Cult roughly refers to a cohesive social group devoted to beliefs

or practices that the surrounding culture considers outside the

mainstream, with a notably positive or negative popular perception. In

common or populist usage, " cult " has a positive connotation for groups

of art, music, writing, fiction, and fashion devotees, but a negative

connotation for new religious, extreme political, questionable

therapeutic, and pyramidal business groups. For this reason, most, if

not all, non-fan groups that are called cults reject this label. A

group's populist cult status begins as rumors of its novel belief

system, its great devotions, its idiosyncratic practices, its

perceived harmful or beneficial effects on members, or its perceived

opposition to the interests of mainstream cultures and governments.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cult

CHECK: Advaita = out of mainstream, great devotions, idiosyncratic

practices, perceived benefits.

 

2. CULT - Any group which has a pyramid type authoritarian leadership

structure with all teaching and guidance coming from the

person/persons at the top. The group will claim to be the only way to

God; Nirvana; Paradise; Ultimate Reality; Full Potential, Way to

Happiness etc, and will use thought reform or mind control techniques

to gain control and keep their members.

http://www.culthelp.info/index.php?option=com_content & task=view & id=17 & Itemid=5

CHECK: Advaita = does have revered leaders, offers ALL those great

rewards and a much more!

 

3. A group or doctrine with religious, philosophical or cultural

identity sometimes viewed as a sect, often existent on the margins of

society.

http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/cult

CHECK: Advaita = totally transcending society.

 

BONUS Definition:

New Age - New Age is a recent and developing belief system in North

America encompassing thousands of autonomous (and sometime

contradictory) beliefs, organizations, and events. Generally the New

Age borrows its theology from pantheistic Eastern religions and its

practices from 19th century Western occultism. The term " New Age " is

used herein as an umbrella term to describe organizations which seem

to exhibit one or more of the following beliefs: (1) All is one, all

reality is part of the whole; (2) Everything is God and God is

everything; (3) Man is God or a part of God; (4) Man never dies, but

continues to live through reincarnation; (5) Man can create his own

reality and/or values through transformed consciousness or altered

states of consciousness.

http://www.watchman.org/cat95.htm

CHECK: Advaita = 1. Yes, 2. Yes, 3. Yes, 4. Yes, 5. Yes.

 

 

 

*** Enlightenment Gone Wrong ***

Almost everyone who experiences Enlightenment describes it as the most

wonderful experience ever. But there is a whole book by a woman who

described it as a nightmare -- she thought she had gone out of her

mind! It makes you wonder: how many other people think this completely

different way to see yourself and the universe is actually a BAD

thing? How many are sitting in mental institutions right now,

diagnosed with an illness, but actually are " Enlightened " ?

 

The book is called " Collision With the Infinite: A Life Beyond the

Personal Self " by Suzanne Segal. I haven't read the book but

apparently she got Enlightened spontaneously, hated it, suffered for

10 years, then died a painful death. Now that doesn't sound so great.

 

Oh, and again we don't know if she got " real " enlightenment, or just

" lost her ego " or whatever!

 

Here are what a couple of reviewers have to say about her experience,

and " enlightenment " in general:

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/customer-reviews/1884997279/ref=cm_cr_dp_all_he\

lpful/002-8140000-6531229?ie=UTF8 & n=283155#customerReviews

 

1.

Most accounts of enlightenment deal with it from the perspective of

the blissful, exalted state it represents. Segal has given us a

roadmap of the potential suffering that can arise when such

transformations occur outside the traditional student teacher

relationship.

 

2.

OK, although I have found that most seekers are actually VERY DENSE

and have very ingrained ideas about what satori, or salvation, or the

enlightenment actually is, I am going to hope that my words above have

penetrated and you will not pick up and read this book lightly. It is

not interesting, amusing, entertaining, " a jolly good read " , funny,

intriguing or anything else other than a book that will open your eyes

to the potential of the UNREMITTING HORROR, repeat HORROR that

spiritual awakening can be. Is that how you saw it when you started

your quest? Didn't you hope for deep inner peace and some kind of

personal transcendence? Well you are mistaken. The culmination of all

your meditation and insight and all the rest is this: NOTHING.

Limitless, eternal void.

 

Although it has different flavours, depending on the author, all of

the books that deal with non-dual consciousness tell you the same

thing, and when you read them you are left with an intellectual

choice. Are they right, and your ego is an illusion, or have they gone

insane? There is no middle ground.

 

Sitting on this side of the " enlightenment " I think that they are insane.

 

 

 

Here is a guy who was " Enlightened " and nearly turned into a Zombie.

Of course he is HIGHLY REVERED by believers in Advaita. Just look at

how he " got it " so quickly... he is really special!

http://www.kktanhp.com/.htm

 

From the above description, one realizes that Ramana Maharshi had

destroyed the ego and from thence onwards was constantly aware of his

Self, the Spirit, which is also the Spirit and Self of every man. In

other words he was enlightened in that half-hour of experience. While

before the event he experienced an intense fear of death, but after

that he had no fear of death for the rest of his life. This is because

he was constantly with his deathless Self even though he was talking,

acting or walking. This awakening would have taken many other yogis

many lifetimes, but he accomplished it in half an hour without

previous spiritual practice. This is unique and truly phenomenal.

 

His character had changed. He was no more interested in those things

that he previously valued. He felt that conventional life appeared

unreal. This must have been a very difficult time for a boy who had no

training in the spiritual path, and suddenly thrown into a realm of

constant awareness of bliss. He also had to remain in the family and

go to school as well. His family noticed this change in him. There was

no more interest in his former relationship with friends and

relatives. He went through his studies mechanically with his book

opened, but the mind far away elsewhere. His dealings with people were

meek and submissive: there was now no complaint or retaliation as

before. He preferred to be alone to meditate and to be absorbed in the

Self or Spirit, rather than to play with friends. Whatever food was

given to him was consumed indifferently.

 

 

Oh, and of course when he died " ...in many places all over India,

there were independent reports of seeing a bright light rising into

the sky. "

Cool! I want to be special like that! Where do I sign up?!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/

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:

> Cool! I want to be special like that! Where do I sign up?!

> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/

>

 

You don't have to sign up anywhere. Just start by asking yourself:HOw

can I get my rocks off on everyone I can think of in as few words as

possible so I don't junk up the site with book-length posts like the

one above? Z

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Nisargadatta , " mikeerwilliams "

<mikeerwilliams wrote:

>

>

> *** Advaita ***

> Advaita is one of a large number of teachings that offers " Spiritual

> Enlightenment. " You could substitute almost any other teaching of

> " Enlightenment " in the discussion below.

>

>

> *** Is Advaita a Cult?? ***

> Do you really want to believe there is something more than just this

> mundane, misery-filled, earthly life, and then that's it? Or do you

> really WANT to believe there is something more? Advaita offers that

>

 

Namaste,

 

If you mean like the advaitin group on and Sankara worship, then

it is a cult. It really goes no further than saguna........Tony

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Nisargadatta , " Tony OClery " <aoclery wrote:

>

> Nisargadatta , " mikeerwilliams "

> <mikeerwilliams@> wrote:

> >

> >

> > *** Advaita ***

> > Advaita is one of a large number of teachings that offers " Spiritual

> > Enlightenment. " You could substitute almost any other teaching of

> > " Enlightenment " in the discussion below.

> >

> >

> > *** Is Advaita a Cult?? ***

> > Do you really want to believe there is something more than just this

> > mundane, misery-filled, earthly life, and then that's it? Or do you

> > really WANT to believe there is something more? Advaita offers that

> >

>

> Namaste,

>

> If you mean like the advaitin group on and Sankara worship, then

> it is a cult. It really goes no further than saguna........

 

 

oh for christ's sake guys...

 

what the hell is not a cult?

 

..b b.b.

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Nisargadatta , " .b bobji baba "

<Roberibus111 wrote:

>

> Nisargadatta , " Tony OClery " <aoclery@> wrote:

> >

> > Nisargadatta , " mikeerwilliams "

> > <mikeerwilliams@> wrote:

> > >

> > >

> > > *** Advaita ***

> > > Advaita is one of a large number of teachings that

offers " Spiritual

> > > Enlightenment. " You could substitute almost any other

teaching of

> > > " Enlightenment " in the discussion below.

> > >

> > >

> > > *** Is Advaita a Cult?? ***

> > > Do you really want to believe there is something more than just

this

> > > mundane, misery-filled, earthly life, and then that's it? Or do

you

> > > really WANT to believe there is something more? Advaita offers

that

> > >

> >

> > Namaste,

> >

> > If you mean like the advaitin group on and Sankara

worship, then

> > it is a cult. It really goes no further than saguna........>

>

>

> oh for christ's sake guys...

>

> what the hell is not a cult?

>

> .b b.b.

>

most excellent b.b.b.

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Nisargadatta , " mikeerwilliams "

<mikeerwilliams wrote:

>

>

> *** Advaita ***

> Advaita is one of a large number of teachings that offers " Spiritual

> Enlightenment. " You could substitute almost any other teaching of

> " Enlightenment " in the discussion below.

>

>

> *** Is Advaita a Cult?? ***

> Do you really want to believe there is something more than just this

> mundane, misery-filled, earthly life, and then that's it? Or do you

> really WANT to believe there is something more? Advaita offers that

> for which we have all been seeking: Enlightenment, Heaven on Earth,

> the One True Way, Freedom from all suffering, and Oneness with God.

> But is it just another Cult? Is it Brainwashing? Are its believers

> Delusional or suffering from Psychosis? Is it just another religion?

> There are zillions of people and zillions of groups who claim to

have

> " The Answer " to all your problems. Advaita is one of those

teachings.

> The people who " believe " in Advaita and claim that it has changed

> their lives for the better say MANY of the EXACT same things that

Cult

> believers do. How can you ever know if THIS set of beliefs is

finally

> " The Answer " ?

>

>

> *** SUMMARY ***

> Advaita can be seen as the ultimate self-help program because it

> solves 100% of ALL of your problems. That is because you actually

> transcend this life, there is no " you " any more, you are one with

> everyone and everything in the universe. You now realize your " true

> natural state, " you " awaken from the dream " which was the entire

life

> you had lived up until this moment. You are now " One with God " (you

> and everything else IS God, you just didn't know it before Advaita),

> you reach " Nirvana " , " The Real Truth " , " Constant Bliss " , " Innate

> Happiness " , " True Freedom " , etc. This is truly the answer to all

your

> problems. Who wouldn't want all that?!

>

> To achieve this, proponents often study ancient, obscure spiritual

or

> semi-religious documents, usually with guidance of a Guru, ideally

> from India. What you have to get is " ineffable " -- it can never

> actually be explained, it must be experienced. But once you

experience

> it you will never want to (or even be able to?) go back. Many cool

> Eastern-sounding paradoxes abound: You must search for it, but you

> can't get it until you stop searching for it.

>

> You realize that there is no such thing as " time " any more. You

> believe you are eternal, and this is just one of many of your lives.

> If you are killed that is OK, that is just your body dying, that is

> not the real you, you are Eternal. All of your thoughts and emotions

> really don't exist, you realize there is no such thing as free

choice,

> you therefore have no responsibility.

>

> Proponents of Advaita say that if you call them a cult, then you

just

> don't get it. Just like all cults do.

>

>

>

> *** Reality, or Mental Disorder ***

> Why do you believe what you believe? Most people don't even know

WHAT

> they believe, let alone the reasons WHY they believe those things.

> SOME of the reasons WHY you believe what you believe are:

> 1. an authority figure you trust told you (parents, news reporter,

etc.)

> 2. you are afraid not to (authoritarian religious belief)

> 3. you really want to (there must be life after death, I don't want

to

> believe this is all there is)

> 4. you engaged in groupthink (everyone else believes it, so you do

as

> well)

> 5. you had an EXPERIENCE that convinced you something was true

>

> Note that the strongest beliefs we ever have are #5 -- things we

> believe because we actually experienced them ourselves. And the only

> way a person can get Enlightened in Advaita is by having a

particular

> mysterious experience. Then they " know " it is true. But how can they

> share an EXPERIENCE with you? They can't! Therefore the *ONLY* way

for

> you to " know " what it is like to be Enlightened in Advaita is to

have

> the required experience yourself. But once you have the experience,

> there's no turning back!

>

> It is 100% possible that believers of Advaita experience

reality " the

> way it really is " , and are forever changed for the better, and they

> know something that the vast majority of humans have never known and

> will never know.

>

> Also, it is 100% possible that the believers of Advaita have an

> experience, and now they believe what they are experiencing, but

they

> are actually " Delusional " -- that is, they really, truly, totally

> believe something that is in fact NOT TRUE. Obviously if you ask

them,

> they will say that is ridiculous, they " know " what is " true " and you

> do not.

>

> You have now entered the realm of Epistemology -- the philosophical

> study of what is TRUE and what is REALITY and what are BELIEFS. You

> will find NO definitive answers here.

>

> SHOCKING Implication: It MUST be that EITHER people who are

> Enlightened, or the rest of us, are DELUSIONAL. By classical medical

> definitions, one group is mentally ill! And neither one can know

which

> is right. Ever. This may be a truly impossible problem.

>

> But look at the amazing implications of this! First off, is it

> possible to have an experience that completely screws up your sense

of

> reality? Are there other cases in regular medicine where this is

known

> to be true?

> * Something you experienced, so you " know " it is true, but it

> actually is not true at all, but you really believe it is, since you

> actually experienced it? What is true reality? If it makes you feel

> better, is that wrong? What if is actually right? But what if it

makes

> you feel bad, does that make it wrong or not true?

> * Some people suffer a break with reality when traumatized by an

> experience (shell-shocked, PTSD, victim of a crime) and they don't

> know what reality is any more. Dissociation is a symptom of PTSD,

and

> it sounds shockingly similar to Enlightenment: " Dissociation is

> another " defense " that includes a variety of symptoms including

> feelings of depersonalization and derealization, disconnection

between

> memory and affect so that the person is " in another world, " and in

> extreme forms can involve apparent multiple personalities and acting

> without any memory ( " losing time " ). "

> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-traumatic_stress_disorder#Symptoms

> * And since you now feel really much better about yourself, you

stick

> with that belief, even if the old " you " tries to pull yourself back

> into the old belief of reality.

> * If you had an experience that completely changed your view of

> reality FOR THE WORSE, you would think you were sick and had a

mental

> breakdown, and would work really hard to get your old view of

reality

> back.

> * So we seem to have a measure of what reality is: if our view of

> reality changes for the better, than that must be the REAL reality,

> but if it changes for the worse, then that can't be real and we have

> to be cured.

> * That is why you rarely hear of anyone who gets Enlightened and

then

> goes and seeks a " cure " for this ailment. But there is one REALLY

good

> (actually bad) example: Suzanne Segal, discussed below.

>

> More implications: A Psychotic Break is a loss of contact with

> reality, which is a mental disorder.

>

> MEDICAL PROFESSIONALS: You should be alarmed that there seems to be

a

> growing trend of people who are seeking out this " enlightenment "

thing

> -- they are actively seeking to have a mental breakdown on purpose!

> Here is a person writing about such an experience in a relatively

> mainstream publication:

> http://www.huffingtonpost.com/stacey-lawson/who-are-you-

really_b_67506.html?view=screen

>

> BELIEVERS IN ENLIGHTENMENT: If you are an Advaita believer, even

> though you don't really feel compelled to Enlighten anyone else, if

> you speak the language of medical professionals to show them that

YOU

> have the correct view of reality, and they and everyone else is

> actually suffering a mental illness known as psychosis. They will

take

> it from there -- it is the job and responsibility of medical

> professionals to cure people of their illnesses, so if you can

> demonstrate to them that they are mentally ill, and cure them, then

> they will also cure others. Then it will become the medical

mainstream

> to fix the mental illness most people suffer from, and " cure " them

by

> Enlightening them. Finally the world will be filled with people who

> are cured of mental illness. A world of people who are

Enlightened/no

> longer mentally ill would be a entirely different world than

anything

> else in history.

>

> Here is a scholarly work that compares Mysticism (such as

> Enlightenment) and Psychosis.

> " IT IS REFRESHING to read a paper that manages at once to be

> interdisciplinary and intercultural in its range of reference, and

> that also confronts a difficult and controversial question about how

> we are to assess the similarities and differences between psychotic

> and mystical experiences. Many psychiatrists have been skeptical

about

> whether there are any genuine differences... "

> http://muse.jhu.edu/login?

uri=/journals/philosophy_psychiatry_and_psychology/v009/9.4mcghee.html

>

> Here is the only guy I found who is a proponent of Enlightenment,

yet

> has any criticism of the potential psychosis of Enlightenment. But

he

> also makes fun of other teachers of Enlightenment, and you end up

> having no idea what the heck is the " right kind " of Enlightenment at

> all! http://www.infinitesmile.org/?p=172

>

> Long paper comparing Psychosis and Mysticism. You will see that the

> Enlightenment promised by Advaita isn't all that special after

all...

> The Relationship Between Schizophrenia & Mysticism: A Bibliographic

Essay

> http://sandra.stahlman.com/schizo.html

> " As awareness increases to include more external and internal

> information, a sense of self, a boundary between self and

environment,

> expands, seems to dissipate. The experience is one of unity with

> information formerly defined as non-self. This expansion of the

self,

> often referred to as loss of self, may not be beneficial for someone

> who does not have a " strong " sense of self to begin with. To these

> people, a mystical experience can be frightening and confusing, to

say

> the least. "

>

> " Addressing the concepts " unifying " and " ego-transcending " seems

vital

> because the sorts of phrases turn up again and again in literature

on

> mysticism. F.C. Happold (1975) writes " unless the idea of non-

duality

> can be grasped the range of mystical experience is incomprehensible "

> (p.71). " Duality " describes the manner in which we usually perceive

> our self in relation to the environment. A division of " self " and

> " other " occurs. " Ego " can be used to refer to that self which we are

> aware of. What happens during a mystical experience has been

described

> as transcending this ego, or going through a process of temporary

> " ego-loss. " As multiplicity ceases, the experience is of a mode of

> consciousness often referred to as " the One. " "

>

> " Kenneth Wapnick (1980) explains that mystics tend to follow a very

> structured, common process, culminating with the mystical

experience.

> He refers to an outline of this process created by Underhill in

1961,

> in which the mystic moves from " an awakening of self " (p.323) to the

> purgation of attachments to the social world and the self, resulting

> in an experience of " a state of pure consciousness, in which the

> individual experiences nothing " (p.324). "

>

>

> *** Positives ***

> Here are some POSITIVE things that Advaita proponents say, that

makes

> them sound like they are NOT a cult:

>

> 1. " Real " Advaita leads you to an understanding such that you do NOT

> feel compelled to teach others at all. Therefore all those teachers,

> Gurus, etc. are suspect and may very well be frauds.

> 2. Those who experience Advaita claim to see everything in the world

> as " unconditional love, " including themselves and other people.

> Presumably they don't want to do anything `bad' to things they love,

> including other people, animals, the earth, etc.

> 3. There are proponents who say they have been " Enlightened " by the

> teachings of Advaita, and they appear to live normal, productive

lives

> within the rest of society. They don't seem to do anything too

extreme

> like meditate on a mountaintop for the rest of their lives, or go

kill

> lots of people, or try to " convert " everyone around them.

> 4. There are only a FEW people whose teachings may be considered

> Advaita who are obviously out to make money (such as Eckhart Tolle).

> 5. There do not seem to be any hard-core brainwashing techniques

used

> (google `Scientology Brainwashing' if you want to see ALL the

> techniques). Mostly it is up to every individual to seek out this

> knowledge and continue to seek it out even when difficult.

>

>

> *** ALL CULTS ***

> ALL cults share a large number of these properties. (Longer

> definitions of Cults are below, or search the internet for more

> definitions. They all say and do the same things.)

> 1. They teach the " REAL " way to find God, bliss, enlightenment,

> eternal happiness, etc.

> 2. They solve ALL of your problems.

> 3. They can't really explain it.

> 4. Only a select few ever get it.

> 5. There is a difficult journey to get it.

> 6. To get it requires resolve, faith, seeking -- often times for

many

> years or decades, or a lifetime.

> 7. Most followers got into it because of some pain in their life

that

> made them seek a solution to their pain, which makes them

> committed/gullible.

> 8. There are always leaders that teach or have the special method

that

> followers have to seek out.

> 9. The leaders have special powers, and followers get a " feeling "

just

> being in their presence.

> 10. They use lots of weird language and mumbo-jumbo.

> 11. SEPARATENESS. Members are set apart from the rest of society

> because they are special. <-- IMPORTANT!

> 12. There are often cool mystical, spiritual, or religious

ancient/old

> teachings and sacred documents.

> 13. Cult members " know " what is " true " and everyone else does not,

so

> they form groups to be able to interact with other who " know "

the " truth. "

> 14. The actual destination is debated or mysterious, and is often

> never really clear.

> 15. If you don't get it, that would be really bad.

>

>

> *** NEGATIVE, Cult-like teachings of Advaita ***

> Here are some NEGATIVE things that Advaita proponents say, that

makes

> them sound like they ARE a cult:

>

> 1. Look at the DEFINITION of a cult: they ALL offer the REAL

solution

> to your problems. The rewards for an Enlightened Advaita believer

are

> astonishing! Here are just some of the things you hear Advaita

> believers saying you will get:

>

> Awakening from The Dream, The Ultimate Truth, God, Bliss, Heaven on

> Earth, Unconditional Love, Liberation, True Freedom, The Highest

> Happiness, Perfect Peace, Nirvana, Salvation, Metamorphosis,

Universal

> Law, Paradise, Dharma, Dhamma, Bodhi, Satori, Kensho, Prajna, Death

of

> the Ego, Perfect Sanity, An Illuminated Soul, Ancient Wisdom,

Merging

> of the Human and the Divine, Brilliant Infinite Self of Awakened

> Consciousness, The Vastness of all Being, the Enormity of who We

> Really Are, One with the Universe -- to name just a few.

>

> Everything that all ancient Eastern philosophies ever taught, and

> arguably much of what Western religion teaches, is yours for free!

>

> 2. Very few self-help programs claim to ever be able to solve all of

> your problems. Even New Age teachings often refer to the " spiritual

> path " or your " journey towards Enlightenment " but they rarely if

ever

> claim any sort of final destination. Only cults and religions do:

They

> TELL you what you MUST do in order to be rewarded, and not punished.

> Cults vaguely tell you that you must continue to follow their

> teachings forever, because there is always something more, some

higher

> level to achieve, some mysterious secret yet to be revealed and

> learned but maybe if you're really lucky you will be The One who

> actually gets it. Many religions tells you that you must do certain

> things here on this earth and struggle for an unachievable

perfection

> in this life, in order to get some reward or avoid some punishment

> after death.

>

> But not Advaita! They tell you that you will receive all rewards,

> right now. All problems are solved. Heaven on earth. In an instant.

> Well, maybe longer.

>

> " When you see that that is what you are, then the very subtleness

> expresses itself. That is the uncaused joy. Nisargadatta puts it

> beautifully. He puts it in the negative. 'There is nothing wrong any

> more.' "

> http://sailorbob.net/home/books.html

>

> 3. All cults have some " difficult, " " incomprehensible, " or

completely

> " ineffable " concepts that only a very small, select-few people know

> about or can explain. If you take The Landmark Forum they repeatedly

> tell you that you will " get it " but they never, EVER tell you what

> " IT " is. IT is inexplicable, apparently. All Cults use have concepts

> that are somehow spiritual, they just can't be explained rationally,

> and even trying to understand things rationally shows what problems

> you have, and how much you need whatever they are offering. Why

can't

> you just " let go? "

>

> Advaita is arguably the most intense in this respect. The whole

> problem is that you are not really YOU. YOU are actually something

> else. So whenever you try to understand YOU, you is just getting in

> the way. Only when you -- in some absolutely indescribable,

> incommunicable manner " lets go " can the real YOU be set free,

> liberated, enlightened.

>

> 4. This Advaita Enlightenment is not widely known, so only a select

> few special people are seeking it, and even fewer ever " get it " .

> Before you get it, you get to belong to a cool, small, underground

> group of seekers-of-truth who study ancient manuscripts and wise old

> spiritual guys from India who got Enlightenment spontaneously, so

they

> are really special.

>

> 5. Getting Advaita Enlightenment is also described as a paradox: It

is

> actually staring you in the face right now, all you have to do is

see

> it. But almost no one in history ever has. So getting it is really

> hard, but once you get it (often times after decades of trying) you

> will see how easy it was to have gotten it. The struggle and the

fight

> to get it is necessary, but you only get it when you stop struggling

> and fighting.

>

> 6. Getting Advaita Enlightenment is sometimes (not always) described

> as requiring great discipline and resolve. Which sounds a lot like

> religious faith, or faith in the teachings of a cult leader.

>

> Andrew Cohen - Embracing Heaven & Earth, Page 23:

> To succeed, we must be convinced beyond any doubt from our own

> experience that Liberation is a living possibility, that it is real.

> But from that moment on, whether that which was directly experienced

> in the spiritual revelation is apparent or not, we must choose to be

> free in every moment no matter what. That's when we become true

> spiritual warriors. That's when we have finally become serious about

> attaining victory over ignorance in this life.

>

> 7. Like any self help program or group you can join that promised to

> help you solve your problems, Advaita offers to solve ALL your

> problems. And everyone who gets Advaita Enlightenment describes it

in

> incredibly colorful language, often in flowery poetry, and almost

> always as an amazingly awesome, reality-changing experience for the

> better. Now imagine you have some pain in your life, and someone

comes

> by and offers you all of this peace, love, happiness, eternal bliss.

> Why wouldn't you spend the rest of your life trying to find Heaven

on

> Earth? I know damn well from personal experience that if you try to

> sell this to people who are HAPPY with their lives, they will think

> you are nuts. So therefore in my experience, the ONLY people who

seek

> out Advaita are those who are in pain, weak, gullible, open to their

> teachings, etc. If you need to believe there is something more to

this

> life, Advaita offers all the answers, the Real Truth.

>

> 8. Advaita teaches that anyone can get Enlightenment right here,

right

> now, nothing special is required, you don't have to buy anything,

> follow some teacher, or even do anything like meditate. And Advaita

> teaches the ultimate Egalitarianism -- you aren't really you, you

are

> just part of all the universe, so the thought that any person is

more

> or less than any other is nonsensical.

>

> Well, sometimes they say it really helps to learn from someone who

is

> already Enlightened, and is a master at teaching, known as a Guru or

> Sage or something. Uh oh! In fact there is overwhelming praise for

> their master teachers, they are revered as important historical

> figures and spiritual leaders, and they have followers and some

> Advaita students stridently argue their Guru is better than other

> Gurus. And ANYONE who got Enlightenment *spontaneously* is

> extra-revered! But people who get Enlightened by studying under one

> of the special, well-known Gurus can and often do go on to become

> teachers themselves. Then they set up a cool thing called

a " Lineage "

> which presumably shows how good/special they are because they are a

> teacher descended from one of these revered masters.

> http://www.gangaji.org/satsang/library/lineage.asp

> http://nisargadatta.net/Navnath_Sampradaya.html

> http://www.ex-premie.org/video/pages/lineage.html

> http://www.realization.org/page/doc0/doc0097c.htm

> http://www.advaita.org.uk/teachers/lineages.htm

>

> Also there is a really strong feeling that these revered, wise,

> mystical ancient old Indian dudes must know something the rest of us

> don't know. They really figured out the mystery of life. Wouldn't it

> be cool if you could know what they knew? How could those mystical

old

> guys be just some sort of cult? No way. They must know something

> really special. Magical. Spiritual. Mystical. God-like.

>

>

> 9. There are many stories about how people tried to get

Enlightenment

> on their own for a really long time, but when they finally met with

> their Guru they " felt " a special " presence " and shortly thereafter

> their lifelong quest for Enlightenment was over!

>

> 10. Advaita is an ancient Hindu teaching. So modern Western

> practitioners can -- and do -- use really cool kick-ass Sanskrit

words

> like Atman, Brahman, Prasthanatrayi, Upanishads, Bhagavad Gita, and

> Brahma Sutras. And there are cool words like Non-Dualism, Delusion,

> Extraordinary Ordinariness, and the word Advaita itself. Now you get

> to make up cool sentences like this one I found on the net:

>

> " a. Brahman alone is real b. The world is unreal c. The world is

> Brahman. This is an ancient quote from the Upanishads which was

> echoed by Shankara. Appearances are only Brahman, short and sweet. "

>

> How do you like me now!!

>

>

> 11. SEPARATENESS -- Here we get into the culmination of a lot of

> things that Cults do, and that Advaita does: separates people from

the

> mainstream. And yet another paradox: Advaita claims that when you

get

> their brand of Enlightenment, you will become one with all, but at

the

> same time you know damn well that very few other people actually are

> Enlightened. So even though you now know we are all totally the same

> thing, you are somehow different. Special. And get this: you now

have

> a cool new language to use -- JUST LIKE ALL CULTS DO, so when you

talk

> to people about what Advaita is and what happened to you, it will be

> all cool sounding yet incomprehensible to them -- setting you APART

> from the mainstream, just like ALL cults do. AND you have really

cool

> sounding concepts, but you really can't explain them to people, just

> like ALL cults do. AND you know some sort of Ultimate Truth about

The

> Way Things Really Are -- just like ALL cult members ALWAYS say. The

> only way for people to understand you is to join in, to get

> Enlightened themselves, just like ALL cults. Otherwise, all those

> people from your old life are now not as good as you because you

know

> what is real and they don't. You are now separate from the

mainstream.

>

> But that is totally OK, you know skeptics just say these things, and

> that is fine. You *KNOW* what the truth *REALLY* is, and those OTHER

> people are fine just the way they are. You aren't out to convert

> anybody. You KNOW what the truth is, you are perfectly content at

all

> times, including when people tell you that you are bonkers. You

know.

> They don't. You are special. You are different. Just like ALL other

> cult members.

>

>

> 12. There are ancient Advaita teachings, written in Sanskrit. They

are

> extremely sacred, opaque, and revered. Isn't it cool to be studying

> some ancient mysterious wisdom that only a few people ever actually

> " get " making them super-happy all the time? Dude, cool.

>

>

> 13. Enlightened people see almost everyone else as not-Enlightened

> (or at best all other people are Enlightened they just don't know it

> yet.) Therefore Enlightened people form groups of other

> similarly-Enlightened people to interact with. How hard it must be

to

> talk to all those other people who " don't get it " and are living a

> " delusion " and are " still dreaming " . We Advaita believers know what

is

> true, and we have our separate concepts and language. It is just

> easier to hang out with other believers in The Truth. Just like

*ALL*

> cults that provide groups that allow you to indulge your

separateness

> from the mainstream.

>

>

> 14. What exactly is the Enlightenment offered by Advaita? As best I

> can tell, Advaita is NOT just another self-help program that offers

> infinite incremental changes to yourself to make you a little bit

more

> happy all the time. It is a full on 100% transformation of the way

you

> see the universe and your role in it.

>

> But it is completely " ineffable " and the way to get it is also

> ineffable. Here is an illustration of ineffable:

> Say a young woman tells a little boy that she is " in love. " The

boy

> asks her what that means, and how did she get it. She will explain

in

> colorful language the process of falling in love (or she might even

> say, " it just happened " ), and in very colorful language what it

feels

> like to be in love and how great it is. The boy, never having been

in

> love, will probably say he sort of gets it, and it sure seems great.

> But he certainly does not now actually feel what she feels. Then a

> friend of the girls comes in and says she is in love too. So she

> explains it to the boy, and this next girl uses totally different

> colorful language, and again it all seems great, but yet again the

boy

> doesn't actually feel what she feels. Then the two girls turn to

each

> other and wonder -- are we feeling the same thing? The fact is they

> can never know!

>

> And that is what Enlightenment is like -- since no one can ever

> explain it, no one ever knows if they really got it or not, or if

> anyone else ever got it.

>

> And there are some things that seem to offer Enlightenment, but it

> just isn't clear. For example, lots of people say that " dissolving

the

> ego " is the definition of Enlightenment.

> http://www.google.com/search?

num=100 & hl=en & safe=off & pwst=1 & sa=X & oi=spell & resnum=0 & ct=result & cd=1 & q=

ego+death+enlightenment & spell=1

>

> But believers in Advaita say you are " perfect " just as you are now,

so

> there is no need to dissolve your ego:

>

> This is not about " giving up the search " or " transcending thought "

or

> " dropping the ego " . No, this message is simpler than any of that:

it's

> about life as it already is.

> http://www.lifewithoutacentre.com/index.html

>

> Finally, there are MANY different possible meanings of

Enlightenment,

> so the Advaita version must be something specific, yet ultimately

> indescribable.

>

> In religious use, enlightenment is most closely associated with

South

> and East Asian religious experience, being used to translate words

> such as (in Buddhism) Bodhi or satori, or (in Hinduism) moksha. The

> concept does also have parallels in the Abrahamic religions (in the

> Kabbalah tradition in Judaism, in Christian mysticism, and in the

Sufi

> tradition of Islam).

> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enlightenment_%28concept%29

>

>

> 15. Once you have tasted the promise of Advaita Enlightenment, how

can

> you stop trying to get it? Even though you didn't get it yet, you

now

> " know " that there is a whole magical world out there, and your

current

> life is just so small and meaningless. It isn't even " real " ,

> everything you do isn't even real, your memories, beliefs and even

> your thoughts are not real at all, you just need to " get it " and

then

> you will be free! How can you go back to your mundane life and just

> forget about Advaita? This feeling that there must be more, just at

> the verge of your knowing, will eat away at you forever. Think about

> it all the time. Read books. Meet gurus. Join a group. JOIN US.

>

>

>

>

> *** Cult Definitions ***

> Here are some definitions of Cults off the internet, there are

plenty

> more. All that is really important is to notice that ALL cults have

> similarities, and Advaita shares MANY of these traits:

>

> 1. Cult roughly refers to a cohesive social group devoted to beliefs

> or practices that the surrounding culture considers outside the

> mainstream, with a notably positive or negative popular perception.

In

> common or populist usage, " cult " has a positive connotation for

groups

> of art, music, writing, fiction, and fashion devotees, but a

negative

> connotation for new religious, extreme political, questionable

> therapeutic, and pyramidal business groups. For this reason, most,

if

> not all, non-fan groups that are called cults reject this label. A

> group's populist cult status begins as rumors of its novel belief

> system, its great devotions, its idiosyncratic practices, its

> perceived harmful or beneficial effects on members, or its perceived

> opposition to the interests of mainstream cultures and governments.

> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cult

> CHECK: Advaita = out of mainstream, great devotions, idiosyncratic

> practices, perceived benefits.

>

> 2. CULT - Any group which has a pyramid type authoritarian

leadership

> structure with all teaching and guidance coming from the

> person/persons at the top. The group will claim to be the only way

to

> God; Nirvana; Paradise; Ultimate Reality; Full Potential, Way to

> Happiness etc, and will use thought reform or mind control

techniques

> to gain control and keep their members.

> http://www.culthelp.info/index.php?

option=com_content & task=view & id=17 & Itemid=5

> CHECK: Advaita = does have revered leaders, offers ALL those great

> rewards and a much more!

>

> 3. A group or doctrine with religious, philosophical or cultural

> identity sometimes viewed as a sect, often existent on the margins

of

> society.

> http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/cult

> CHECK: Advaita = totally transcending society.

>

> BONUS Definition:

> New Age - New Age is a recent and developing belief system in North

> America encompassing thousands of autonomous (and sometime

> contradictory) beliefs, organizations, and events. Generally the New

> Age borrows its theology from pantheistic Eastern religions and its

> practices from 19th century Western occultism. The term " New Age " is

> used herein as an umbrella term to describe organizations which seem

> to exhibit one or more of the following beliefs: (1) All is one, all

> reality is part of the whole; (2) Everything is God and God is

> everything; (3) Man is God or a part of God; (4) Man never dies, but

> continues to live through reincarnation; (5) Man can create his own

> reality and/or values through transformed consciousness or altered

> states of consciousness.

> http://www.watchman.org/cat95.htm

> CHECK: Advaita = 1. Yes, 2. Yes, 3. Yes, 4. Yes, 5. Yes.

>

>

>

> *** Enlightenment Gone Wrong ***

> Almost everyone who experiences Enlightenment describes it as the

most

> wonderful experience ever. But there is a whole book by a woman who

> described it as a nightmare -- she thought she had gone out of her

> mind! It makes you wonder: how many other people think this

completely

> different way to see yourself and the universe is actually a BAD

> thing? How many are sitting in mental institutions right now,

> diagnosed with an illness, but actually are " Enlightened " ?

>

> The book is called " Collision With the Infinite: A Life Beyond the

> Personal Self " by Suzanne Segal. I haven't read the book but

> apparently she got Enlightened spontaneously, hated it, suffered for

> 10 years, then died a painful death. Now that doesn't sound so

great.

>

> Oh, and again we don't know if she got " real " enlightenment, or just

> " lost her ego " or whatever!

>

> Here are what a couple of reviewers have to say about her

experience,

> and " enlightenment " in general:

> http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/customer-

reviews/1884997279/ref=cm_cr_dp_all_helpful/002-8140000-6531229?

ie=UTF8 & n=283155#customerReviews

>

> 1.

> Most accounts of enlightenment deal with it from the perspective of

> the blissful, exalted state it represents. Segal has given us a

> roadmap of the potential suffering that can arise when such

> transformations occur outside the traditional student teacher

> relationship.

>

> 2.

> OK, although I have found that most seekers are actually VERY DENSE

> and have very ingrained ideas about what satori, or salvation, or

the

> enlightenment actually is, I am going to hope that my words above

have

> penetrated and you will not pick up and read this book lightly. It

is

> not interesting, amusing, entertaining, " a jolly good read " , funny,

> intriguing or anything else other than a book that will open your

eyes

> to the potential of the UNREMITTING HORROR, repeat HORROR that

> spiritual awakening can be. Is that how you saw it when you started

> your quest? Didn't you hope for deep inner peace and some kind of

> personal transcendence? Well you are mistaken. The culmination of

all

> your meditation and insight and all the rest is this: NOTHING.

> Limitless, eternal void.

>

> Although it has different flavours, depending on the author, all of

> the books that deal with non-dual consciousness tell you the same

> thing, and when you read them you are left with an intellectual

> choice. Are they right, and your ego is an illusion, or have they

gone

> insane? There is no middle ground.

>

> Sitting on this side of the " enlightenment " I think that they are

insane.

>

>

>

> Here is a guy who was " Enlightened " and nearly turned into a Zombie.

> Of course he is HIGHLY REVERED by believers in Advaita. Just look at

> how he " got it " so quickly... he is really special!

> http://www.kktanhp.com/.htm

>

> From the above description, one realizes that Ramana Maharshi had

> destroyed the ego and from thence onwards was constantly aware of

his

> Self, the Spirit, which is also the Spirit and Self of every man. In

> other words he was enlightened in that half-hour of experience.

While

> before the event he experienced an intense fear of death, but after

> that he had no fear of death for the rest of his life. This is

because

> he was constantly with his deathless Self even though he was

talking,

> acting or walking. This awakening would have taken many other yogis

> many lifetimes, but he accomplished it in half an hour without

> previous spiritual practice. This is unique and truly phenomenal.

>

> His character had changed. He was no more interested in those things

> that he previously valued. He felt that conventional life appeared

> unreal. This must have been a very difficult time for a boy who had

no

> training in the spiritual path, and suddenly thrown into a realm of

> constant awareness of bliss. He also had to remain in the family and

> go to school as well. His family noticed this change in him. There

was

> no more interest in his former relationship with friends and

> relatives. He went through his studies mechanically with his book

> opened, but the mind far away elsewhere. His dealings with people

were

> meek and submissive: there was now no complaint or retaliation as

> before. He preferred to be alone to meditate and to be absorbed in

the

> Self or Spirit, rather than to play with friends. Whatever food was

> given to him was consumed indifferently.

>

>

> Oh, and of course when he died " ...in many places all over India,

> there were independent reports of seeing a bright light rising into

> the sky. "

> Cool! I want to be special like that! Where do I sign up?!

> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/

 

 

 

there are indeed many many cults around " enlightenment " .....

 

means....around just the natural state of...being...

 

Marc

 

Ps: indeed....with the " natural state of being " ....one can make less

business......lol

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