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Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress (a side effect is unlearning all forms of conditioning including that of the faith itself).

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert (who later took up Yoga and became Ram Dass) was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 1200 mcg of pure LSD (4x the typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. "LSD didn’t affect Maharajji, Ram Dass implied, because the guru already had such a profoundly mystical outlook."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/ https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/baba-ram-dass-and-the-tale-of-the-acid-gobbling-guru/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. The quietness actually allows the satisfaction emanating from within to pervade the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing start practicing. Here's an source that presents authentic information rather than the New Age nonsense on Amazon.com:

https://swamij.com/

2 years ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress (a side effect is unlearning all forms of conditioning including that of the faith itself).

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert (who later took up Yoga and became Ram Dass) was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 1200 mcg of pure LSD (4x the typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. "LSD didn’t affect Maharajji, Ram Dass implied, because the guru already had such a profoundly mystical outlook."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/ https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/baba-ram-dass-and-the-tale-of-the-acid-gobbling-guru/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. The quietness actually allows the satisfaction emanating from within to pervade the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing start practicing. Here's an source that presents authentic information rather than the New Age nonsense on Amazon.com:

https://swamij.com/

2 years ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress (a side effect is unlearning all forms of conditioning).

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert (who later took up Yoga and became Ram Dass) was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 1200 mcg of pure LSD (4x the typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. "LSD didn’t affect Maharajji, Ram Dass implied, because the guru already had such a profoundly mystical outlook."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/ https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/baba-ram-dass-and-the-tale-of-the-acid-gobbling-guru/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. The quietness actually allows the satisfaction emanating from within to pervade the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing start practicing. Here's an source that presents authentic information rather than the New Age nonsense on Amazon.com:

https://swamij.com/

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress (a side effect is unlearning all forms of conditioning).

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert (who later took up Yoga and became Ram Dass) was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 1200 mcg of pure LSD (4x the typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. "LSD didn’t affect Maharajji, Ram Dass implied, because the guru already had such a profoundly mystical outlook."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/ https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/baba-ram-dass-and-the-tale-of-the-acid-gobbling-guru/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. The quietness actually allows the satisfaction emanating from within to pervade the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing start practicing. Here's an source that presents authentic information rather than the New Age nonsense on Amazon.com:

https://swamij.com/

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress (a side effect is unlearning all forms of conditioning).

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert (who later took up Yoga and became Ram Dass) was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 1200 mcg of pure LSD (4x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. "LSD didn’t affect Maharajji, Ram Dass implied, because the guru already had such a profoundly mystical outlook."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/ https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/baba-ram-dass-and-the-tale-of-the-acid-gobbling-guru/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. The quietness actually allows the satisfaction emanating from within to pervade the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing start practicing. Here's an source that presents authentic information rather than the New Age nonsense on Amazon.com:

https://swamij.com/

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress (a side effect is unlearning all forms of conditioning).

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert (who later took up Yoga and became Ram Dass) was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 1200 mcg of pure LSD (4x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. "LSD didn’t affect Maharajji, Ram Dass implied, because the guru already had such a profoundly mystical outlook."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/ https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/baba-ram-dass-and-the-tale-of-the-acid-gobbling-guru/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. The quietness actually allows the satisfaction emanating from within to pervade the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing start practicing. Here's an source that presents authentic information rather than the New Age nonsense on Amazon.com:

https://swamij.com/

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress (a side effect is unlearning all forms of conditioning).

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert (who later took up Yoga and became Ram Dass) was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. "LSD didn’t affect Maharajji, Ram Dass implied, because the guru already had such a profoundly mystical outlook."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/ https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/baba-ram-dass-and-the-tale-of-the-acid-gobbling-guru/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. The quietness actually allows the satisfaction emanating from within to pervade the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing start practicing. Here's an source that presents authentic information rather than the New Age nonsense on Amazon.com:

https://swamij.com/

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress (a side effect is unlearning all forms of conditioning).

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert (who later took up Yoga and became Ram Dass) was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. "LSD didn’t affect Maharajji, Ram Dass implied, because the guru already had such a profoundly mystical outlook."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/ https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/baba-ram-dass-and-the-tale-of-the-acid-gobbling-guru/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. The quietness actually allows the satisfaction emanating from within to pervade the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing start practicing. Here's an source that presents authentic information rather than the New Age nonsense on Amazon.com:

https://swamij.com/

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress (a side effect is unlearning all forms of conditioning).

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert (who later took up Yoga and became Ram Dass) was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. "LSD didn’t affect Maharajji, Ram Dass implied, because the guru already had such a profoundly mystical outlook."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/ https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/baba-ram-dass-and-the-tale-of-the-acid-gobbling-guru/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. The quietness actually allows the satisfaction emanating from within to pervade the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing start practicing. Here's an source that presents authentic information rather than the New Age nonsense on Amazon:

https://swamij.com/

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress (a side effect is unlearning all forms of conditioning).

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert (who later took up Yoga and became Ram Dass) was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. "LSD didn’t affect Maharajji, Ram Dass implied, because the guru already had such a profoundly mystical outlook."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/ https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/baba-ram-dass-and-the-tale-of-the-acid-gobbling-guru/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. The quietness actually allows the satisfaction emanating from within to pervade the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing start practicing. Here's an source that presents authentic information rather than the New Age nonsense:

https://swamij.com/

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress (a side effect is unlearning all forms of conditioning).

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert (who later took up Yoga and became Ram Dass) was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. "LSD didn’t affect Maharajji, Ram Dass implied, because the guru already had such a profoundly mystical outlook."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/ https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/baba-ram-dass-and-the-tale-of-the-acid-gobbling-guru/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. The quietness actually allows the satisfaction emanating from within to pervade the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing start practicing:

https://swamij.com/

Once you attain basic knowledge of Yogic philosophy, you're ready for:

https://archive.org/details/PatanjalisYogaSutraswithTheCommentaryOfVyasaAndTheGlossOfVachaspatiMisraRamaPrasadTranslation

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress (a side effect is unlearning all forms of conditioning).

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert (who later took up Yoga and became Ram Dass) was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. "LSD didn’t affect Maharajji, Ram Dass implied, because the guru already had such a profoundly mystical outlook."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/ https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/baba-ram-dass-and-the-tale-of-the-acid-gobbling-guru/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. The quietness actually allows the satisfaction emanating from within to pervade the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing:

https://swamij.com/

Once you attain basic knowledge of Yogic philosophy, you're ready for:

https://archive.org/details/PatanjalisYogaSutraswithTheCommentaryOfVyasaAndTheGlossOfVachaspatiMisraRamaPrasadTranslation

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress (a side effect is unlearning all forms of conditioning).

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert (who later took up Yoga and became Ram Dass) was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. "LSD didn’t affect Maharajji, Ram Dass implied, because the guru already had such a profoundly mystical outlook."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/ https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/baba-ram-dass-and-the-tale-of-the-acid-gobbling-guru/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. The quietness actually allows the satisfaction emanating from within to pervade the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing: I recommend studying and putting it into practice:

https://swamij.com/

Once you attain basic knowledge of Yogic philosophy, you're ready for:

https://archive.org/details/PatanjalisYogaSutraswithTheCommentaryOfVyasaAndTheGlossOfVachaspatiMisraRamaPrasadTranslation

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress (a side effect is unlearning all forms of conditioning).

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert (who later took up Yoga and became Ram Dass) was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. "LSD didn’t affect Maharajji, Ram Dass implied, because the guru already had such a profoundly mystical outlook."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/ https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/baba-ram-dass-and-the-tale-of-the-acid-gobbling-guru/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing: I recommend studying and putting it into practice:

https://swamij.com/

Once you attain basic knowledge of Yogic philosophy, you're ready for:

https://archive.org/details/PatanjalisYogaSutraswithTheCommentaryOfVyasaAndTheGlossOfVachaspatiMisraRamaPrasadTranslation

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress (a side effect is unlearning all forms of conditioning).

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert (who later took up Yoga and became Ram Dass) was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. "LSD didn’t affect Maharajji, Ram Dass implied, because the guru already had such a profoundly mystical outlook."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/ https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/baba-ram-dass-and-the-tale-of-the-acid-gobbling-guru/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing: I recommend studying and putting it into practice:

https://swamij.com/

Once you attain basic knowledge of Yogic philosophy, you're ready for:

https://archive.org/details/PatanjalisYogaSutraswithTheCommentaryOfVyasaAndTheGlossOfVachaspatiMisraRamaPrasadTranslation

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress (a side effect is unlearning all forms of conditioning).

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert (who later took up Yoga and became Ram Dass) was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. "LSD didn’t affect Maharajji, Ram Dass implied, because the guru already had such a profoundly mystical outlook."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/ https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/baba-ram-dass-and-the-tale-of-the-acid-gobbling-guru/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing: I recommend studying and putting it into practice:

https://archive.org/details/PatanjalisYogaSutraswithTheCommentaryOfVyasaAndTheGlossOfVachaspatiMisraRamaPrasadTranslation

But this might be too high level for you if you have no prior knowledge of Yogic philosophy.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress (a side effect is unlearning all forms of conditioning).

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert (who later took up Yoga and became Ram Dass) was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. "LSD didn’t affect Maharajji, Ram Dass implied, because the guru already had such a profoundly mystical outlook."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/ https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/baba-ram-dass-and-the-tale-of-the-acid-gobbling-guru/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing: I recommend studying:

https://archive.org/details/PatanjalisYogaSutraswithTheCommentaryOfVyasaAndTheGlossOfVachaspatiMisraRamaPrasadTranslation

But this might be too high level for you if you have no prior knowledge of Yogic philosophy.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress (a side effect is unlearning all forms of conditioning).

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert (who later took up Yoga and became Ram Dass) was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. "LSD didn’t affect Maharajji, Ram Dass implied, because the guru already had such a profoundly mystical outlook."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/ https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/baba-ram-dass-and-the-tale-of-the-acid-gobbling-guru/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing: I recommend studying:

https://archive.org/details/PatanjalisYogaSutraswithTheCommentaryOfVyasaAndTheGlossOfVachaspatiMisraRamaPrasadTranslation

But this might be too high level for you if you have no prior knowledge of Yogic philosophy.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress (a side effect is unlearning all forms of conditioning).

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert (who later took up Yoga and became Ram Dass) was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. "LSD didn’t affect Maharajji, Ram Dass implied, because the guru already had such a profoundly mystical outlook."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/ https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/baba-ram-dass-and-the-tale-of-the-acid-gobbling-guru/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing: I recommend studying:

https://archive.org/details/PatanjalisYogaSutraswithTheCommentaryOfVyasaAndTheGlossOfVachaspatiMisraRamaPrasadTranslation

But this might be too high level for you if you have no prior knowledge of the Yogic worldview.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress (a side effect is unlearning all forms of conditioning).

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert (who later took up Yoga and became Ram Dass) was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. "LSD didn’t affect Maharajji, Ram Dass implied, because the guru already had such a profoundly mystical outlook."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/ https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/baba-ram-dass-and-the-tale-of-the-acid-gobbling-guru/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing: I recommend studying (but this might be too high level for you if you have no prior knowledge of the Yogic worldview):

https://archive.org/details/PatanjalisYogaSutraswithTheCommentaryOfVyasaAndTheGlossOfVachaspatiMisraRamaPrasadTranslation

This message corroborated the overarching theme of Be Here Now, that spiritual practices such as meditation and yoga can induce

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress (a side effect is unlearning all forms of conditioning).

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert (who later took up Yoga and became Ram Dass) was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. "LSD didn’t affect Maharajji, Ram Dass implied, because the guru already had such a profoundly mystical outlook."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/ https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/baba-ram-dass-and-the-tale-of-the-acid-gobbling-guru/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing: I recommend studying (but this might be too high level for you if you have no prior knowledge of the Yogic worldview):

https://archive.org/details/PatanjalisYogaSutraswithTheCommentaryOfVyasaAndTheGlossOfVachaspatiMisraRamaPrasadTranslation

This message corroborated the overarching theme of Be Here Now, that spiritual practices such as meditation and yoga can induce

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress (a side effect is unlearning all forms of conditioning).

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. Alpert implied the man was already naturally in that state, so the pills added nothing more. The man himself merely said, "To take them with no effect, your mind must be firmly fixed on God."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing: I recommend studying (but this might be too high level for you if you have no prior knowledge of the Yogic worldview):

https://archive.org/details/PatanjalisYogaSutraswithTheCommentaryOfVyasaAndTheGlossOfVachaspatiMisraRamaPrasadTranslation

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress.

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. Alpert implied the man was already naturally in that state, so the pills added nothing more. The man himself merely said, "To take them with no effect, your mind must be firmly fixed on God."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing: I recommend studying (but this might be too high level for you if you have no prior knowledge of the Yogic worldview):

https://archive.org/details/PatanjalisYogaSutraswithTheCommentaryOfVyasaAndTheGlossOfVachaspatiMisraRamaPrasadTranslation

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress.

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. Alpert implied the man was already naturally in that state, so the pills added nothing more. The man himself merely said, "To take them with no effect, your mind must be firmly fixed on God."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing: I recommend studying:

https://archive.org/details/PatanjalisYogaSutraswithTheCommentaryOfVyasaAndTheGlossOfVachaspatiMisraRamaPrasadTranslation

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress.

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. Alpert implied the man was already naturally in that state, so the pills added nothing more. The man himself merely said, "To take them with no effect, your mind must be firmly fixed on God."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/

Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind. If you are interested in this kind of thing: I recommend reading: https://archive.org/details/PatanjalisYogaSutraswithTheCommentaryOfVyasaAndTheGlossOfVachaspatiMisraRamaPrasadTranslation

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress.

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. Alpert implied the man was already naturally in that state, so the pills added nothing more. The man himself merely said, "To take them with no effect, your mind must be firmly fixed on God."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/

I can confirm such practices work, from a little personal experience with them. Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. It takes a while for the mind to become quiet again. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking (among other things) during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable rapid spiritual progress.

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. Alpert implied the man was already naturally in that state, so the pills added nothing more. The man himself merely said, "To take them with no effect, your mind must be firmly fixed on God."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/

I can confirm the practices work, from a little personal experience with them. Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

You are on right path from my personal experience, if your aim is to unlearn social conditioning etc. Not everyone has this aim though, so not everyone should do this.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable ay real spiritual progress.

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. Alpert implied the man was already naturally in that state, so the pills added nothing more. The man himself merely said, "To take them with no effect, your mind must be firmly fixed on God."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/

I can confirm the practices work, from a little personal experience with them. Once your mind is quiet enough, you notice that any music of any kind will create "ripples" in this calm mind, disturbing the quietness within. But to notice that, you must first reach that level of quietness of the mind.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable ay real spiritual progress. I can confirm the practices work, from a little personal experience with them.

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. Example:

Richard Alpert was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. Alpert implied the man was already naturally in that state, so the pills added nothing more. The man himself merely said, "To take them with no effect, your mind must be firmly fixed on God."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable ay real spiritual progress. I myself have some experience with this.

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. How ecstatic can it get? Well:

Richard Alpert was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. Alpert implied the man was already naturally in that state, so the pills added nothing more. The man himself merely said, "To take them with no effect, your mind must be firmly fixed on God."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable ay real spiritual progress. I myself have some experience with this.

By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. How ecstatic can it get? Well:

Richard Alpert was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. Alpert implied the man was already naturally in that state, so the pills added nothing more. The man himself merely said, "To take them with no effect, your mind must be firmly fixed on God."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable ay real spiritual progress. By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. How ecstatic can it get? Well:

Richard Alpert was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than typical users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. Alpert implied the man was already naturally in that state, so the pills added nothing more. The man himself merely said, "To take them with no effect, your mind must be firmly fixed on God."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable ay real spiritual progress. By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. How ecstatic can it get? Well:

Richard Alpert was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (3x more than most users' upper limit). The man felt nothing. Alpert implied the man was already naturally in that state, so the pills added nothing more. The man himself merely said, "To take them with no effect, your mind must be firmly fixed on God."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: Original

This is common among dharmic faiths (Buddhism, Raja Yoga, Jainism etc.). Those who wish to follow the yogic path abandon pleasure seeking during their training, as it prevents the mind from quietening down enough to enable spiritual progress. By the time they come out of training, their natural state of being is already ecstatic enough they don't desire any further pleasure. How ecstatic? Well:

Richard Alpert was a Harvard psychology professor, who once went to India and met the Hindu Yogi by the name of Neem Karoli Baba. He gave the man 900 mcg of pure LSD (way more than what is typically used). The man felt nothing. Alpert implied the man was already naturally in that state, so the pills added nothing more. The man himself said, "To take them with no effect, your mind must be firmly fixed on God."

Source: https://www.ramdass.org/ram-dass-gives-maharaji-the-yogi-medicine/

2 years ago
1 score