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Is Transcendental Meditation a Scam?

1 pointsby dafty4about 5 years ago

1 comment

mickduprezabout 5 years ago
&gt;&gt; and Jobs ultimately found solace in Zen Buddhism. Both succumbed to cancer. In Jobs’ case, a faith in Western medicine would have certainly served him better.&lt;&lt;<p>Just to be clear, Zen (or any other type of Buddhism) has nothing against modern or old medicine, it&#x27;s just a way of dealing with the would we live in. Maybe Jobs had his reasons for not liking modern medicine but Zen wasn&#x27;t one of them I&#x27;m pretty sure.<p>Meditations like TM are designed to self hypnotise or put yourself into a trance like state and therefore forget your worries for a bit (like drinking&#x2F;drugs et al). This is all &#x27;small mind&#x27; work. Buddhist meditation, particularly Zen is more about the &#x27;Big Mind&#x27;, that is, trying to get &#x27;out of your head&#x27; and live in the &#x27;real world&#x27;. Zen meditation is the _practice_ of being in the &#x27;now&#x27; and not living with delusive thoughts which bring on depression&#x2F;anxiety. When you get up from your meditation session you should then go on to try and live in this state of concentration&#x2F;awareness. The more you practice, the better you get. When you work, just work, when you eat, just eat etc. It&#x27;s only our small mind thoughts about future or past that make our daily tasks seem unbearable.<p>This is a big topic but basically, while TM may be beneficial to some, charging for it is a scam IMHO.