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Post by acewall on Sept 19, 2011 20:41:35 GMT -5
dig? I dug my spudz in just two weeks ago and look at them now... ablaze of green their tops!
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kalki
New Member
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Post by kalki on Jan 24, 2014 15:08:43 GMT -5
Anybody read more than 5 books by Rudolf Steiner?
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Oct 15, 2021 16:19:34 GMT -5
I have read Imre Vallyon's books and practiced the many profound and poetic descriptions of his meditations. I have also experienced his chanting material first hand. All mere intellectualism and ridiculous, ego-driven comparisons aside, my experience has been nothing short of illuminating and I feel confident that his teaching his guiding me well to achieve progressively more refined states of enlightenment. I think intellectual criticism reveals an evasion of the practice and the results of it. I appreciate his synthesis approach which serves to dissolve divisions and direct the mind of the reader beyond cultural divisions and towards the essence of spiritual life. There is no absolute knowledge, but what he provides are far beyond anything else I have found, even if it is initially conceptual. This serves to awaken the mind to inner realities as much more complex than such idle notion as the 'other side' or heaven... Above all, the teaching guides the student now expanded in consciousness to consider the inner dimensions with profound insight to let go of it all and enter into the real work, which is the journey of personal experience. He mentions at one point in Vol 1 of the Heavens and Hells of the Mind that personal experience is paramount and even if someone could prove another with the most profound and truest body of knowledge conceivable, it would remain that the actual experiential path must be 'walked' or experienced. All must be earned and nothing given, except for guidance, insight, wisdom and inspiration and Imre Vallyon provides this far beyond any other teacher I have ever encountered. I am confident that other who sincerely engage with his teachings will advance immeasurably in their spiritual aspirations.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Oct 18, 2021 6:40:04 GMT -5
I have read Imre Vallyon's books and practiced the many profound and poetic descriptions of his meditations. I have also experienced his chanting material first hand. All mere intellectualism and ridiculous, ego-driven comparisons aside, my experience has been nothing short of illuminating and I feel confident that his teaching his guiding me well to achieve progressively more refined states of enlightenment. I think intellectual criticism reveals an evasion of the practice and the results of it. I appreciate his synthesis approach which serves to dissolve divisions and direct the mind of the reader beyond cultural divisions and towards the essence of spiritual life. There is no absolute knowledge, but what he provides are far beyond anything else I have found, even if it is initially conceptual. This serves to awaken the mind to inner realities as much more complex than such idle notion as the 'other side' or heaven... Above all, the teaching guides the student now expanded in consciousness to consider the inner dimensions with profound insight to let go of it all and enter into the real work, which is the journey of personal experience. He mentions at one point in Vol 1 of the Heavens and Hells of the Mind that personal experience is paramount and even if someone could prove another with the most profound and truest body of knowledge conceivable, it would remain that the actual experiential path must be 'walked' or experienced. All must be earned and nothing given, except for guidance, insight, wisdom and inspiration and Imre Vallyon provides this far beyond any other teacher I have ever encountered. I am confident that other who sincerely engage with his teachings will advance immeasurably in their spiritual aspirations. Michael, my deceased Sister was with the Teacher for years in Hamilton, NZ, she alerting me to his Court case for fiddling. There are others in NZ that also have been exposed then jailed. None of this happened before the British arrived. The Australian Aborigines had it right when they said, “Mental-illness and diseases came with the Invasion.” The aborigines have been in Oz over 50,000 years, some say longer, the Scientists all racing to get it Right.
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