Time theft
Posted: Wed Mar 12, 2014 6:15 pm
I think I could make a successful argument that RSE steals time from its customers. Time is one of the few things that once spent, we never reclaim while we exist here on Earth. I see RSE's treatment as abuse because I am convinced that Judy Knight and many of the RSE instructors are well aware that the so-called disciplines they promote are just stuff they made up and don't have any real value or benefit ... at lest no benefit to the customers in the way use of disciplines is taught at RSE. As far as I can tell, RSE does not teach the disciplines as tools to develop other skills or as developmental metaphor - say to improve concentration on a difficult task. RSE seems to teach the time wasting disciplines as the end goal, rather than a means to the end. Virtually any other religion or self help seminar would teach similar or the same disciplines as exercises for a means to an end: better job, obtaining Nirvana, or whatever.
It disappoints me when I look for a normal interpersonal relatioknship with my old friends that have become hooked on RSE, and they choose instead to stay cloistered up doing hours of C+E, candle focus, card reading, mock gambling or whatever the RSE discipline du jour happens to be. Almost anything in life, one can recover: lost money, even lost mind with enough effort. The lost time is the one thing the RSE customers aren't going to get back.
It disappoints me when I look for a normal interpersonal relatioknship with my old friends that have become hooked on RSE, and they choose instead to stay cloistered up doing hours of C+E, candle focus, card reading, mock gambling or whatever the RSE discipline du jour happens to be. Almost anything in life, one can recover: lost money, even lost mind with enough effort. The lost time is the one thing the RSE customers aren't going to get back.