But, the dilemma is this, is it narcisstic and somehow wrong to be on this quest for self improvement?
Narcissistic? perhaps. Wrong to be on a quest for self-improvement? How on earth can anyone say that self improvement could ever be wrong?? Your ideals confuse and sadden me :/
If you see most yoga books and videos, it is advertised as a means not for spirituality, but for things like "flexibility, physical fitness, and relaxation." The interest in things like this could be good if it leads to an authentic understanding of the borrowed cultural and spiritual practices, but has just turned into a "me generation" distortion of a great and ancient thing? Are we missing some serious points when we practice things like yoga and meditation for personal well-being while skipping over the importance of philosophical and spiritual transcendence?
You're seeing it the wrong way - we're adopting the good and discarding the bad/useless. I do 'yoga'. I've never been to a class, I don't know how to "transition" in/out of positions nor between them. I do not hold positions for more than a minute or so (the point at which muscle elasticity ceases to make any further substantial increases). I learn my poses by typing in "yoga", "intermediate yoga" etc into google images and going from there. I do this alone, in quiet or with relaxing music, often after a bath or shower. I find it incredibly rejuvenating both mentally and physically, and do it solely for those reasons.
Please explain, as specifically as possible, how my "western" approach to yoga is worse? What are these serious points that I'm missing? That wasn't a hypothetical, I truly do 'yoga' in that manner and have for a very long time. I'm interested to hear why my approach is inferior, but am guessing i'll just hear a lot of vague mumbo jumbo about "enlightenment" and other stuff you're unable to actually clarify beyond broad, generic terms as those.
It's interesting to consider the amount of energy wasted at gyms just so we can look better (or feel better) when we could use that work to do something productive that can be shared with others...something that really helps others...
If you are going to burn calories and alot time to things, why not do it for something else other than selfish gain?
what is this i don't even
8)
Oh and Lasch is a tool, though it does make sense that
you'd find him worthwhile, since - naturally - the same premises that shape your political/economic views are clearly shaping your views on the self.
Well, I strongly disagree. Infact it sounds like a bit of a cop out for someone who hasnt been into spirirtuality... Narcissistic personality disorder is a mental illness, there are people who claim disability on narcissism as they cannot 'deal' with people ei. cannot work due to a serious illness. On the other hand, spirituality is a means to connect with yourself/the universe and develop an ego less state. It's essentially about controlling your mind/emotions and not being controlled by them. While with narcissism you have a condition that limits your perception/understanding some what.
oh jesus christ everything's a mental illness nowadays lol. it's to the point where "psychological illnesses" are not so much illnesses in any real sense, but rather the terms are just descriptors of various psychological states that are not inherently 'ill' in any way/shape/form.
Anyways - how on earth could you advocate any practice wherein "an ego-less state" is a result, or even a possibility? Do you have massive issues with self worth/esteem and thus enjoy the prospect of negating self/ego? Or are you trying to assert some "for a higher purpose" bs, wherein people are better able to live, interact, and experience what life offers by aiming to destroy their own individuality?
People talking negatively about ego in general are usually bad people in my experiences and are to be avoided, but i'll leave irl observations and analyses outta this for right now.
(I should clarify that there's two general types of such people - people who feel that way due to ignorance, and people who feel that way knowing full well what their theories' true nature is. The former crowd can learn they're wrong, the latter crowd are truly bad/evil)
Some schools of Yoga like
Advaita Vedanta are trying to actually seperate the consciousness from the body. It seems like the me generation was at first attracted to the spiritual benefits, but all that stuck was an enhanced consciousness of the body, and not a healthy one at that.
Am I reading that right - are you implying that aiming to separate the consciousness from the body is a positive aim?
And please explain how the "me generation"'s attraction to yoga creates an unhealthy consciousness of the body. I ask because i find it to be an incredibly healthy thing.
Rather than improvement, it mostly translates into "more worries" about the self.
bullshit. in fact, hypochondria tends to be worse in ppl w/o a clue about how bodies work and how their own stacks up.
I hear a lot of talk about the self, a little about others. Self-help gurus always say this, "improve yourself and relationships with others will improve," but maybe you can't improve yourself without first improving your relationships with others. Lots of "cart before the horse" type thinking out there.
There is - but it's YOUR line of thinking that's cart before horse, bra. You want people to focus on others before fixing themselves. You want production without capitalists. Your theories are, impracticality aside, immoral and unethical.
It was also disheartening at the time to see people dropping out and breaking off from civic culture and and mainstream society instead of improving it. It's like it was the ultimate in giving up in Western ideals and instead choosing to hide within oneself and do one's "own thing."
Are you suggesting that doing one's own thing is not a western ideal? Not only IS it a western ideal, but it is a positive thing in general.
lol