Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Beyond the meat suit

While waiting in a Kinkos yesterday, I skim-read a popular New Age tome called The Secret, which I had found nestled among the how-to-be-a-better-businessman paperbacks. (Boy, is that a depressing literary genre!) The Secret, written by Rhonda Byrnes and publicized by Oprah Winfrey, promises to teach an ancient spiritual method which allows the true seeker to gain unlimited money, power, sex, weight-loss, enlightenment and sales. It's Gandalf as Gordon Gecko.

I shall give away Byrnes' secret: She calls it "The Law of Attraction." Translation: Think Happy Thoughts Because Wishing Makes It So. You are awesome and godlike, and you can accomplish anything you want with a mere blink, just like Samantha on Bewitched.

The whole business comes down to little more than that.

Byrnes tells us that this is a closely-guarded covert science, passed down through the ages by the leaders of various secret societies. The book reeks of ersatz archaism, from its fake-leather cover with fake red wax seal to the interior pages printed to look like aged vellum. The current guardians of the Secret, who are quoted liberally throughout this work, turn out to be a group of New Age "writers" and "teachers" from no discernible tradition. Their sparse list of accomplishments may lead some unenlightened cynics to mistake them for hucksters.

One of these "Secret" teachers is a fellow named James Arthur Ray, who, in his appearance on Oprah's show, called the method "very scientific."
“If you think you’re this meat suit running around, you know, you have to think again,” he said. “You’re a field of energy in a larger field of energy."
Those words now seem grimly amusing, for Ray's foolishness has led two of his followers to transcend their meat suits prematurely. Red Dragon, a long-time friend to this blog, offers a special insight into this tragedy.

In Sedona, Arizona, Ray ran what he was pleased to call a Native American sweat lodge, for which his followers paid $9000. A real sweat lodge never includes more than ten people, but Ray apparently considered $90,000 an insufficient haul. So he packed roughly 60 seekers of the Secret into a tiny, poorly-designed sauna. Two people died, and a number of others ended up in the hospital.
Traditional lodges are usually made of willow branches and covered in canvas or animal skins, and are not meant to be air-tight. The authorities said that the lodge at Angel Valley was covered in plastic and blankets.
(I can't avoid noting that James Arthur Ray has three first names, as is traditional for American assassins.)

Ray, like other "Secret" teachers, believes that we create our own circumstances. That's a Secret catch-phrase. I'd like to see him tell a Holocaust survivor that those who perished in the camps made their own circumstances. I'd like to see him use that catch-phrase while talking to the children who suffered in Gaza or Lebanon or Rwanda or Darfur. And I'd really like to see him offer that explanation to the families of the two who died in Sedona.

How would he explain himself to them? Perhaps like this: "They brought it on themselves. Negative thinking can be very dangerous, you know."

Yeah. That'd go over real well.

Red Dragon is Native American, and he knows a thing or two about genuine sweat lodges:
This ceremony can be very dangerous if not preformed properly. The heat inside one of these "lodges" can be reach levels many are never prepared to withstand.
There may be some "Non-Native Americans" that have learned this ceremony from elders, but those are rare. Make sure the person conducting this "lodge" is someone who you can verify has the training and the authority to run one of these. (There are many "con-men/women out to make a buck off of your suffering. We tend to call these charlatans..."Plastic Men.")

If you are asked to "Pay" for the privilege of attending one of these.....Run away as fast as you can!
Is Jimmy Ray repentant? Well, he gave a tearful interview which contained no apology. But he has offered to conduct an investigation, just like Nixon did when the Watergate scandal broke. Mistakes were made.

His website offers no admission of guilt, no sense of personal responsibility. Ah, but the con goes on! Herrrrrre's Jimmy:
Regardless of where our economy is headed right now, you have the power and ability to create your own economy and your own results. And I'm not just talking financially...
Then there are those who claim to be really "spiritual," and they're always financially broke. That's not wealth either!
He offers no doubt as to what sort of su...er, seeker he hopes to attract:
You simply (and deeply) want to make more money and become more successful...

You want to double, triple, even multiply by ten the size of your business...

You've already achieved at least a modest level of success and want to use that as a springboard to greater things...
Listen closely. Can you hear it? It's Joel Grey and Liza Minelli singing money money money money money....

This evangelical site has a few wise things to say about the Secret fad. Alas, the writer segues into spiritual calumny when he classifies people like Byrnes and Ray as "gnostic." Wrong. The primary teaching of gnosticism was not "the law of attraction" but "the material world sucks." The gnostics abandoned all of their possessions and devoted themselves to the ideal of pure wisdom.

The Secret
, by contrast, is all about acquisition, all about the Great Gimme: Gimme money, gimme good looks, gimme the ultimate fuck, gimme the admiration and envy of others, gimme gimme gimme. The gnostics taught that those obsessed with acquisition have already lost the game. If you're still saying gimme, you ain't never gonna get it.

Disdain for materiality is the never-popular teaching offered by most mystical traditions with a genuinely archaic pedigree. Such is the real secret. It was never a secret.

12 comments:

glennmcgahee said...

Oprah will show us all how we can become milionaires so that we too, can all afford "her favorite things". Blech! That woman has become a parody of herself as she devotes her life to the worship of celebrity and wealth. How can people still watch her show is beyond me.

MrMike said...

Another charlatan Oprah backed.
One can only hope the people buying into this claptrap haven't had a chance to breed and pass their stupid gene to the next generation.

Anonymous said...

The main secret of The Secret is that it has been published and re-published in many forms, many times, well before this particular book came out.

Napoleon Hill's "Think and Grow Rich," "The Power of Positive Thinking," "Psychocybernetics," to name just a few, not only were substantially on this same life strategy, but were and remain best sellers of the genre. And they were simply modernized updates on quite an ancient process that amounts to a kind of Hermetic sympathetic magic (as below, so above, etc.).

However, by multiple testimonials (yes, anecdotal evidence, but still), this process appears to work. Many people who have reached considerable material success credit these kinds of materials (the more classic publications of the genre I cite examples of above) as key to obtaining their eventual riches.

My father steeped himself in these books in the '50s and '60s, started making relatively big money back then, and over time has achieved a mid-8-figure fortune. Several colleagues of his from back in that day who studied these same materials achieved more, into the 9-figures ($100 million plus).

So I don't doubt that the method has merits. It evidently isn't a lock, however, since I know others who've also used the method who struggled in middle-class economic circumstances all their lives.

Which leaves open the question from the Gospels, 'for what does it profit a man, if he gain the world, but loses his soul?'

Materialism is a horrible value system with regard to morality and spiritual growth.

XI

the quiet psychic said...

I really, really hate "The Secret." I've had to distance myself from people blathering about its so-called "method" because they have been so painfully brainwashed it's scary.

Anonymous said...

Stuart Smalley (Al Franken) said it simpler and better: "I'm good enough; I'm smart enough, and doggone it, people like me! ..."

Perry Logan said...

Barbara Ehrenreich has a new book out called “Bright-Sided: How the Relentless Promotion of Positive Thinking Has Undermined America.”

A breast cancer survivor, Ehrenreich was appalled at the inane positive-thinking meme that she found herself exposed to while she weas undergoing treatment.

She came to the conclusion that the positive thinking cult permeates our culture and is messing things up royally. She thinks this goofy attitude lay behind Wall Street's recent collapse.

A very intriguing premise. One thinks of the neocons "projecting their own reality," which has savaged the world and which may have destroyed the Republic.

gingerp said...

XI, it isn't the methods in these books that gets people results. It is themselves. When you work hard, are smart, and interact well with other people then you have a chance to capitalize on the few opportunities we are actually given. In my opinion, it is all about doing the most with the opportunities that you get. For every person who is successful after reading one of these books I bet there are thousands who aren't. Joseph is completely right on this topic as he is on most topics.

Joseph Cannon said...

Perry, I'm going to have to read that book. I've long considered the "positive thinking" fad to be pernicious.

There was a time in the '80s when the only people ever allowed to make self-deprecatory jokes were presidential candidates. Everyone else was constantly told to say only positive things at all times. Think happy thoughts, happy happy joy joy all the time and everything will go perfectly...

It got to the point where I once or twice threatened violence against those who handed me that crap. I was kidding, of course. Kidding on the sly.

Did the "wishing makes it so" philosophy contribute to Wall Street's horrors? I don't know, but I would not be surprised if it had.

Zee said...

80's? How about the 70's?? Remember those smiley faces? Thanks for the background on this shark that Oprah saw fit to promote. I look at that sweat death lodge and think, how does it differ from that backyard compound where the jesus freak held that girl he raped for years? Why isn't the 3-first-names (good catch!) in jail?

I read that book, The Secret. I was appalled from the beginning, but I kept thinking, can this wench fill an entire book with nothing??

Now, I do think we can positively influence our reality via attitude, but it's not by some kind of "magical thinking." An example I've experienced...a train broke down on the Eastern seaboard and we were all "stuck" in Delaware on a gorgeous day. Everyone was infuriated and screaming at the ticket agents who had to fit us onto later trains. When it was my turn to re-ticket I smiled and said, "I'm in no rush, and it's nice out, so I don't need to be squeezed onto the next train." The agent looked up in amazement and said, I'm bumping you up to first class. :)

I think this is good practice. I'm more naturally grumpy so I "forget" sometimes, but let me tell you, a toxic attitude does land one in trouble. It's not magic, but I probably could come up with a tagline, like "Detoxifying Your AurA-tude" and fill a book and get a cult following, too! I won't overstuff the sweat lodge, tho, promise!

syborg said...

As Samuel Goldwyn (and many others after) said, "The harder I work, the luckier I get." It stands to reason that a rosier outlook on life might make you more aware of opportunities. So undoubtedly, some percentage of these folks fell into something worthwhile.
It's akin to the old saw about beginner's luck, especially when gambling. If you try gambling, and you are "unlucky", you're quite unlikely to continue. However, if you are "lucky", then you will keep trying your hand. Until you lose.

Zach said...

Ok to Syborg's point -- I personally know a lot of people who, by dint of upbringing, genetic character, accident of experience and all of the above.. just dont have a ton of native self awareness.

It seems the more intensely negative some of these (otherwise delightful / good faithful friends /generous and educated hard working) people are, the less they are able to understand that about themselves. So they go through life shooting themselves in each foot socially and never seeing it.

Its completely bizarre but apparently very common, in type A personalities especially.

Sounds like thats where the success stories come from.. folks already set to make a lot of money, just having to have a couple self defeating habits pointed out and mitigated.

Then of course their later success is held up as proof positive to the poor average schlubs in the peanut gallery as What They Can Achieve.. never letting those folks see the rest of the story, the stuff that actually COULD get them where they wanted to go.

RedDragon said...

Hey Joe!

Sorry I've not "Commented" lately but you know how "life" can get in the way.

Anyway.....

Thank you for the story.

it is a sad indictment on our society that so many people are easily conned by these "Plastic men/women." I've seen it happen many many times.
What irked me was how this "lodge" was used!

I wont get into specifics but at first glance....I saw MANY warning signs, just from the picture os the structure.

Second.....No One in their right mind would have stuffed 50/60 people into one of these.

There are more "bastardizations" I've since gleened from this man but the short of it is....

NEVER PAY FOR THIS CEREMONY!

If you are approached for payment.......GTF out odf there QUICK!