Who would have thought the godmen industry as renewable resource!https://twitter.com/plinz/status/990284045073506304 …
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Replying to @muralipiyer
Enlightenment experiences that are integrated into the story of a suffering self via hypnosis by a charismatic teacher don't last but are easily renewable.
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Replying to @Plinz
Those are fakes. The very concept of suffering self is a marketing ploy. To paraphrase J Krishnamurti, enlightenment is a system optimisation. Once you are enlightened, you can’t revert back to old self. No motivation to downgrade.
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Replying to @muralipiyer
We need a label to tell the real gurus from the fake ones.
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Replying to @Plinz
I have met a real guru when I was a young boy. Chinmayananda. His very presence was enough to tell the difference. I don’t have words to explain. It’s not logical.
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Replying to @muralipiyer
It simply means that he effortlessly hypnotized a young boy. If you understand how the minds of other people work and how they can be influenced, you can run circles around them and change how they construct their subjective universe.
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Replying to @Plinz
You added lots of ifs and buts. Sorry to disappoint you, but there was no hypnotism there. Coming back to the question of how to know the fake: it’s pretty easy. If the person is fake, his/her guard will drop at some point of time and he/she will make obvious bloopers.
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Most people are fake. But they rarely slip, because they identify so much with their act that there is not much of substance left that could hold its voice. Sometimes it seems like almost everyone you see is ridden by a demon, forming the demonic hive of society.
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