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.Lobsang Rampa was a high Tibetan Lama with many occult powers and he lived last part of his life in an
English man's body whose earlier occupant Cyril Hoskin was not happy with life and desired release.
Hoskin was contacted by Astral beings and was given an offer of release if he agreed to lend his body for
another to complete his task for benefit of humanity. Cyril Hoskin agreed so he was released and
Lobsang Rampa occupied his body and lived in it till his death in Canada in1981. This spiritual concept of
Transmigration was too much to believe by reason-and-proof-oriented Western mind so he was not
believed and thussuffered due to false Propaganda and Scandals against him and his family. Alas
humans in general were not so ignorant!

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Mhi kl 2 days ago (edited)

Greetings Jyotirvid Pawan I read T Lobsang Rampa's book, "The Third Eye", when I was a young boy of 9.
It was the most important book I read in my youth. I tried meditating in bed, just before going to sleep. I
wanted to 'astro-travel' to either Mars or Pluto. I figured when I visited them they would be kind of
obvious. After many months and no success I wondered if my body was afraid I might be fried on Mars
or frozen on Pluto so I changed to meditating to visit the Eiffel Tower; that would be easy to identify,
and an easier trip. Still no luck. • But the experience of mediation was so calming I took to that instead
of day dreaming. Besides, in meditation with the eyes open the teacher usually thought I was paying
attention and left me to my path. • Come the Seventies and the Maharajah's meditation instructions
and a sale price I could afford, I took the practice in second year universe. I made a number of return
visits just for the company, as the instructors allowed one to join in as they pleased, once the experience
was taken. • In my thirties, having lived and taught school in Sarawak three years and travelled the
region visiting Buddhist Temples, I took lessons in Buddhism to further my experiences. When I returned
home to Canada I also took more lessons and visited meditation centres as I found them in Calgary and
Nova Scotia. • 'The Third Eye' was my introduction to Buddhism, and for that I am grateful. The rest of
TLR's books were not so interesting. Had I known he had moved to Calgary, but a short trip from my
small town, I would have journey in the winter to shovel the snow from his sidewalks and to mow his
lawn in the summer. He and his book meant that much to me. I am particularly pleased that Cyril Hoskin
and I share the same birthday, April 8. Namaste and care, Michael • PS I taught in the north of BC and
Alberta on First Nations' lands and there practiced meditation with students over a fourteen period. It
was while reading the book aloud to my class, a student suggested we practice meditation and so I
introduced them to the way. It became a practice the students would reminded me of when they felt
the need for rejuvenation. • On occasion, when back in my city school, I did on occasion introduce
meditation, but I knew I had to be careful. There would be parents who would not have approved. • PPS
Here is a curious point. Boys naturally mediate, possibly in the womb when they are not kicking, and as
children, youths and adults; though the experience seems to wane over time if they lead too hurried a
life. I suspect it is the male Y chromosome that leads boys to meditate as Y is the exuberance
chromosome that leads the body and mind to need calming. This is just my theory. I found in my classes
that the girls would often have difficulty calming their minds and shutting off abstract thinking whilst the
boys took to it most easily. • I remember being caught 'meditating' or sitting still whilst blanking out. My
Aunt came into the room and called to me. She had to repeat herself and I came out of my 'stupor'. She
asked me what I was thinking about? I replied, "Nothing". She then asked me why I was just siting there
thinking of nothing, quietly growling and I replied, "because it makes me feel good". She looked
surprised and quietly stated, "That's what your Grandfather (her dad) said when I asked him the same
question." She seemed truly spooked. Strange that growling at times seems to blend well with
meditation. Maybe it's like chant. Calming.

Billy Onions 6 days ago (edited)

Isn't it strange that most people read his books in the early eighties. I suppose it does not matter
whether you agree with what he wrote as wisdom arrives from many tangents and at different times for
different people.

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