Brian Doherty | February 6, 2008
He inspired a zany American political party and a decent Beatles song, managed to keep the Beach Boys' mercurial Mike Love in some sort of spiritual calm, and was all-around an interesting character in one of the late 20th century's more interesting stories: the increasing number of religious and spiritual options and technologies available in the cornucopian West. Transcendental Meditation guru Maharishi Mahesh Yogi finally transcended the physical world.
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Maharishi what have you done
You made a fool of everyone
You made a fool of everyone
Maharishi ooh what have you done.
Maharishi you broke the rules
You layed it down for all to see
You layed it down for all to see
Maharishi oooh you broke the rules.
One sunny day the world was waiting for a lover
She came along to turn on everyone
Sexy Sadie the greatest of them all.
Maharishi how did you know
The world was waiting just for you
The world was waiting just for you
Maharishi oooh how did you know.
Maharishi you'll get yours yet
However big you think you are
However big you think you are
Maharishi oooh you'll get yours yet.
We gave her everything we owned just to sit at her table
Just a smile would lighten everything
Maharishi he's the latest and the greatest of them all.
She made a fool of everyone
Maharishi
However big you think you are
Maharishi.
Well, now that he's dead, I guess it will be OK if I reveal my
secret mantra:
"I-ing"
You may use it if you want to, it cost me $35 back in 1972. Don't
know what they cost these days. Perhaps I should have sold it on
e-bay?
Perhaps I should have sold it on e-bay?
Probably. I think you could sell maggot infested dog feces on
e-bay. It is a strange world we live in.
It is my understanding Maharishi raised the TM introductory fee
to upwards of $2500 as a sort of protest to the Western world's
post-Sept-11 reaction.
Despite all the crap celebrity scene that surrounded him, he laid
down some grand philosophical groundwork, and provided a context
for reinterpreting great minds all the way back to Plato. This is
truly a great loss.
"It is my understanding Maharishi raised the TM introductory fee
to upwards of $2500 as a sort of protest to the Western world's
post-Sept-11 reaction"
What was the point of that?
During my time with the Maharishi I learned something truly
enlightening. I have never forgotten these words, I think about
them daily.
The Maharishi said, "Never..." wait, it was "Always,
always carry a litter bag in your car. They don't take up too much
room, and it starts to smell, just throw it out the window"
KingHarvest,
Are the bogus claims of TM allowing meditators to fly included in
what you call "grand philosophical groundwork"?
Or do I need to be "reinterpreting" my understanding of flying to
include hopping off one's butt being captured by stop motion
photography?
The Beatles get lots of attention for their following of the Maharishi, but it was only a fad for them. Mike Love really took it seriously.
What was the point of that?
Convenient PR cover for increased revenues?
Oh, and is the reference to religious technologies in the post a
shout-out to the late lamented Robert Anton Wilson?
Are the bogus claims of TM allowing meditators to fly included in what you call "grand philosophical groundwork"?
No, yogic flying is a very minor tenet of meditation in general.
Maharishi was able to show that great thinkers throughout history
had bouts of intense personal insight, experiences that went deep
into their own minds, that preceded works of great creativity. This
applies to Einstein, Mozart, Hume, Kant, Descartes, St. Thomas of
Aquinas, Plato, and others.
He showed all the meditative traditions from Zen to Hinduism to
Judaism's "arguing with God" to Christianity's contemplation were
really getting at the same mechanism, just from different points of
view. Previously puzzling (and thus ignored) portions of great
thinkers' memoirs were clarified in the context of profound
meditative capacity, often without even desiring such.
He helped refute the simplistically linear understanding of
creativity and productivity, and alluded to the potential for
paradigm shifts from a simple mental regimen. His technique offers
a bit of productive spirituality in the absence of religion. Not
bad.
So, the Maharishi goes to a dentist for a root canal. The
dentist tries to give him a shot of novacaine, but the Maharishi
stops him.
The dentist insists that without the pain killer, the procedure
will be excruciating.
The Maharishi replies, "With my training, I am confident that I may
transcend dental medication."
No really. It's much funnier if you could hear my Indian accent. I
learned it from this guy:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mFM4hvpyWNE
cut and paste or click on my name
I was a TM'er for a while myself. Still meditate from time to
time.
While I didn't agree with the increasing prices and therefore
decreasing availablity of the movement's classes and retreats, I
believe what Maharishi brought to the world was, as the previous
writer mentioned, a greater clarity and understanding of the
commonality of many diverse philosophies and religions. Especially
important was the commonality between them was a desire for a kind
of clarity itself. As Maharishi once put it, "don't fight darkness.
Bring the light, and darkness will disappear."
While I became detached from the movement a long time ago, I
definitely feel I was given clarity and light into my life from the
teachings of this great person. I think the same is true for the
world, but there is still a lot of darkness out there.
-still bringing the light, e
He and his group ruined the Blackstone Hotel. Dumb, dumb, dumb.
And the stock market crash of 1929 ruined the Drake hotel company.
And John Drake ruined Timothy Blackstone's mansion to build the
damn thing. What's your point?
I believe what Maharishi brought to the world was, as the
previous writer mentioned, a greater clarity and understanding of
the commonality of many diverse philosophies and
religions.
I think there's probably something to that.
I was sadder when Anton LaVey passed this mortal coil. Now THAT is a philosophy for living!
My homestate of Iowa is home to Maharishi University in Fairfield, IA. The reason, allegedly, for the location in Iowa is because "Fairfield is in a fair field."
They bought the Blackstone when it was a decent, affordable
downtown hotel and they mucked it up. Among the dumb things they
did:
- Close the beautiful main entrance on Balbo because it faced south
and there was bad mojo or something from entering a building from
the south. They made the crappy side door on Michigan into the only
public entrance. Instead of walking directly into a gorgeous lobby,
one walked down a long, low-ceilinged hallway, then upstairs into
the lobby.
- Not renew the lease for the Jazz Showcase.
- Close the really neat hotel bar with the fishtanks.
They ran a neat historic hotel into the ground. Now it's gone
condo.
I snooped around and found a site where all sixteen TM mantras
are listed with the age and sex of the initiates they are assigned
to.
Now, I understand why everyone I shared my mantra with had the same
as me.
As a historical note, the evolution and proliferation of TM mantras
since the beginning are listed.
(my name is linked to it)
They ran a neat historic hotel into the ground. Now it's
gone condo.
Actually I think the condo plans fell throught. It's gonna be a
Marriott.
I've been on the Natural Law Party's website, what exactly was
so "zany" about it? Their platform sounds pretty sane to me. Am i
missing something? maybe the candidates are kooks?
"THE SOLUTION TO ALL OUR NATIONAL PROBLEMS lies in proper
education" - i've been thinking that for years.
andrew,
On first contact, Scientologists, can appear sane too. Some of the
political and personal philosophy mirrors the personal
responsibility of libertarianism. But, when you scratch the
surface, the bat-shit craziness oozes out.
Transcendental Meditation's Natural Law folks are much like that. I
appreciate their stand on marijuana and hemp, but they are a brick
shy of a full load.
Thank you for posting about this great yogi. As a libertarian
activist and teacher of kundalini yoga, I appreciate the union of
liberty and consciousness. It's a great theme, one that's part of
FLOW, the movement for peace and prosperity started by Whole Foods
CEO John Mackey and education entrepreneur/philosopher Michael
Strong. And liberty can be found in one of the earliest
philosophical documents of mankind - the Vedas. Chanted and then
written thousands of years B.C., the Vedas gave us not only yoga,
but also classical liberal phrases like "live and let live," and
"any interference with liberty is slavery".
Namaste
www.3ho.org
the yogic flying thing was mislabeled, for whatever reasons, but
the technique itself was a major kunalini shaktipat initiation,
opening up awareness of the subtle body, and hugely valuable in the
context of human development
and mediation, what can be said, if you have ever taken it up in a
serious way, you know the value ... everything else will come and
go in your life, but that door will never close
Credit is due to Ringo (always my favorite Beatle) who was the first of the four to decide the Maharoonie was full of it and take a hike...
What did the Maharishi say to the hot dog vendor?
"Make me one with everything..."
Thank you; be here all week...
Lecture - Seattle, October 9, 1968
Young man: Well, I don't know that much about Ramakrishna.
Prabhupada: All right. Yes?
Young man: If we can believe the Beatles, you are not the only wise
man to come out of the Indian hills to New York. What do you know
of this Maharishi Yogi that has become so world famous, and what
could you tell us of his teachings by way of comparison?
Prabhupada: He's famous amongst the fools. He's not famous for
me.
(laughter)
Young man: Is he famous in India?
Prabhupada: No. He cheated some fools because they wanted to be
cheated. That's all. And he finished his business. After befooling,
then he retired. That's all. Because you want to be cheated, some
cheap method of become God immediately.
Temple Press Conference - August 5, 1971, London
Woman Interviewer: Thank you. So presumably you would encourage
this movement of more people to find a spiritual life. You...
Prabhupada: Yes, unless you take to this movement, you cannot be
happy. That's a fact. Therefore we invite everyone to study, to
understand this great movement.
Woman Interviewer: What worries me slightly is that since the
arrival in Britain some while ago of the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, a
lot of... He was the first guru that most people ever heard of, and
since then there have been a lot of people and a lot of gurus that
have suddenly appeared out of nowhere. And one gets the feeling
that sometimes they're not all as genuine as they ought to be, and
I wondered whether you feel that it's right that you could perhaps
issue a warning to people who are seeking some new spiritual life
that they should take care to make sure they have a genuine guru to
teach them.
Morning Walks - October 1-3, 1972, Los Angeles
Jayatértha: They have a place in Hollywood. I've never seen it, but
I know people who have gone there. They become like a fad, like
Maharishi. Two years ago he was very big, thousands of people were
coming.
Prabhupada: Who?
Jayatértha: This Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. He was very big. He was in
the newspapers and thousands of people came and paid thirty-five
dollars, took initiation. But now you don't hear anything about
him. So this man will come, make a big show, make some money, but
in two years he'll just be a memory.
Prabhupada: (indistinct) Why does he not come again? He has gone
forever.
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