The Dark Side of 'The Secret'

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Adam said:
Don't you think i see the reality , don't you think I see whats happening around? all the wars, bush, conflict with religions,global warning, lies here and lies there etc.

actually , my point was to inspire you a bit towards spirituality , and sadly i failed.
Looking at truth, reality and most of all being objective about it, is a form of 'work' and therefore quite spiritual.

Avoiding it may just turn into the opposite.

Why do you think that the PTB are tying to "push" this thing called "The Secret" when infact avoiding reality is actually quite disempowering and dangerous? Maybe you need to take another look at this 'other' perspective?
 
I find this debunking of "The Secret" on this message board rather excessive and paranoid. The Law of Attraction is a real principle alive in the universe and you can use that to help yourself get out of hell. This is a fact. Hell is not "reality," it is a condition in your mind. Do people on this message board just talk about spirituality and not actually meditate?

Now, I am sensitive too, I hate the advertisement feel you get from The Secret - but that does not mean some sound principles were not just presented in the manner you' expect yuppies to present them. Do yuppies really scare you that much? Then you need to lighten up a bit and forgive them, don't you. This is crazy talk, that The Secret is an antichrist plot. The Law of Attraction is a pointer in the direction of freedom.

Buddha, Jesus and all the other prophets said ... ask and it will given ... seek and ye shall find ... the life you've lived thus far is all in your mind. Do you deny your karma is connected to George Bush and the war machine ... how are you going to detach? You have to work on it, not just write essays, you know. Looking at reality "objectively" and writing essays or even starting organizations, what does that mean, until you sever your connection of thought and energy to the situation. So the Law of Attraction teaches a step toward doing that.

Weren't people calling Oprah Winfrey the "antichrist" on here ... this is so funny. She has consciousness raising guests on quite often, doesn't she? I tell you, if Oprah Winfrey is aligned with "the antichrist," then we don't have too much to fear from that entity.
 
Dylan, did you actually read carefully this thread and all linked materials or have you just skimmed over it?
 
More and more in day to day life I'm coming across Secreters. Members of my family too. It's interesting how the results of it's success are measured in the lowest phase of development: the childish stage of 'gimmie what I want' rather than in terms of higher development: empathy. An effective part of the illusion seems to be in thinking that this lowest phase can correspond to a higher level just because 'I want it to' ...it's just more of the same and it's just digging deeper into primitive drives. It's apparent it doesn't produce consideration of others; Dylan's post is case and point. If it was effective in real development then the producers of The Secret wouldn't be promoting the most base of urges.

side note:
Ruth, I think it would be considerate if you read the thread and Adam's replies.
 
Tigersoap said:
DylanSkroff said:
Hell is not "reality," it is a condition in your mind.
Well, then the Irakis and the Palestinians should definitely read "the Secret".
Also abused and sexualy molested chldren or adults.
 
DylanSkroff said:
I find this debunking of "The Secret" on this message board rather excessive and paranoid. The Law of Attraction is a real principle alive in the universe and you can use that to help yourself get out of hell. This is a fact. Hell is not "reality," it is a condition in your mind.
You are asleep and dreaming. This forum is not for sleep and it is not for dreaming. Is the twelve year old Iraqi girl getting raped right now by soldiers in Iraq, soon to be shot for fighting back or alerting her family, experiencing this only 'in her mind'?

sleepingdylan said:
Do people on this message board just talk about spirituality and not actually meditate?
What does 'actually meditating' really have to do with spirituality? You are asleep and dreaming - in your dreams you create a safe cocoon of a world in which only your thoughts, desires, and subjective imaginings matter. Yet, you are still nothing more than food. That is fine for you, it is your choice to be sleeping food, but this forum is not for such things.


d said:
Now, I am sensitive too, I hate the advertisement feel you get from The Secret - but that does not mean some sound principles were not just presented in the manner you' expect yuppies to present them. Do yuppies really scare you that much? Then you need to lighten up a bit and forgive them, don't you. This is crazy talk, that The Secret is an antichrist plot.
Ahh, you see, some little sliver of sleeping Dylan is alarmed by the information presented here - it cannot be true! How dare you say these things about my sleeping tonic! How strongly sleeping Dylan fights to protect his sleep.


d said:
The Law of Attraction is a pointer in the direction of freedom.
The 'law of attraction' as discussed in this thread, is self-serving sleep tonic and nothing more.


d said:
Buddha, Jesus and all the other prophets said ... ask and it will given ... seek and ye shall find ... the life you've lived thus far is all in your mind. Do you deny your karma is connected to George Bush and the war machine ... how are you going to detach? You have to work on it, not just write essays, you know. Looking at reality "objectively" and writing essays or even starting organizations, what does that mean, until you sever your connection of thought and energy to the situation. So the Law of Attraction teaches a step toward doing that.
'Detaching' is NOT working on it - detaching is sleep - anyone can twist the words of any 'prophet' to suit their cause as you have here, that does not mean that you understood the original meaning of the words. You have simply used them as part of your sleeping tonic. You are asleep and dreaming - it is your choice to do so and to enjoy it as you feed entropy through your subjective imaginings, but this is not the forum for such things.

d said:
Weren't people calling Oprah Winfrey the "antichrist" on here ... this is so funny. She has consciousness raising guests on quite often, doesn't she? I tell you, if Oprah Winfrey is aligned with "the antichrist," then we don't have too much to fear from that entity.
:lol: And now you bring comedy into your dream; at least it's entertaining. 'Consciousness raising guests'?? On Oprah Winfrey's TELEVISION show? :lol: :lol:

It is your choice to sleep and to dream, Dylan, but this forum is for waking up in order to Do - and therefore, it is clearly not for you.
 
DylanSkroff said:
I find this debunking of "The Secret" on this message board rather excessive and paranoid. The Law of Attraction is a real principle alive in the universe and you can use that to help yourself get out of hell. This is a fact. Hell is not "reality," it is a condition in your mind. Do people on this message board just talk about spirituality and not actually meditate?
What about the "Law" of marketing, manipulation, lying and making money?

Unless you understand the REALITY of the place you live in, how will you know what sort of things you are going to attract and/or be attracted to?

What if this "Law of Attraction" can be interfered with? What then?

A person should not believe everything they are told. They should start to ask WHY and HOW a thing is done.

I 'prefer' the ideas behind the "Laws" of STO and STS. They are pretty much fundemental to everything and explain our reality a great deal.
 
Wow this thread is really disturbing in it's factor. Holy crap.

Really?

People are really buying into Oprah and this foul myth that people are actually trying to become 'happier' by way of what is called 'positive thought?'

How old is this crap? And how does it have anything to do with anything? This entire 'create your own reality by pushing away the darkness' is about the most vile thing I've seen in some time. Reality ring a bell much?

Sorry you can call me the crap detector if you like. If Oprah is supporting a presidential contender, then they are supporting everything I despise.

B.S. must be called.
 
Nawd said:
Wow this thread is really disturbing in it's factor. Holy crap.

Really?

People are really buying into Oprah and this foul myth that people are actually trying to become 'happier' by way of what is called 'positive thought?'

How old is this crap? And how does it have anything to do with anything? This entire 'create your own reality by pushing away the darkness' is about the most vile thing I've seen in some time. Reality ring a bell much?

Sorry you can call me the crap detector if you like. If Oprah is supporting a presidential contender, then they are supporting everything I despise.

B.S. must be called.
Can't have the sheeple.....errr......people giving the 'darkness' that the man behind the curtain is stirring up it's due. Anger is fuel (potentially). Happiness (in the conventional sense) is opium. Same 'crap', different package. One of the observations I've made since 9/11, maybe slightly before, is that most people will swallow bovine excrement without even chewing to taste. As long as a 'talking head' says it, it must be true.

Kris
 
[Moderator's note: the above link is to the movie "the secret" a new age multi-tiered marketing scam based on the idea that "your create your own reality", now being endorsed by Oprah Winfrey. Read the whole thread here for more details]
So I did this morning… Love & light… YCOR…
I’m always apologizing for my emotional outbursts, so I’ll keep this short.

Young Adam hit the target right on by stating…

Adam said:
I just want to learn and have my eyes opened , and i know that this is the perfect place for that ... i did read a lot about the C's which laura posted and it's really amazing all the things they tell, and there is so much , that it will take me some months to read almost everything.:)
YesSirEee. Takes time to really learn, to a point where the learning becomes a part of you. I am not the same person I was a few years ago, and boy-o-boy, I still have a long way to go. The Work is no easy process, not for the wishful thinkers, and definitely not for the lazy. From what I've seen on this forum, I get mad at myself when I ‘feel’ bad for those who choose lazy ignorance and YCOR. Should I even care about them? After all, I am here for my lessons and they can have theirs. Sometimes I just wanna say, “Y’all made your bed, and your gonna fall out of it”. If people are exposed to objective reasoning and turn their backs, I’m just starting not to give a damned. Now I ask, am I being selfish or what.?.?.? Yep, STS.

edited for the really bad spelling...
 
Hi DylanSkroff. it's not that there aren't "sound principles" in The Secret or the The Law of Attraction or The Power of Ritual Prayer. You can see the objection, though, if you read the thread carefully. Sure, folks can shut out objective reality and hypnotize themselves into bliss all they want, if that makes them happy and they think that represents growth. Others differ about that. Perhaps ask if they are using these principles to serve self or to serve others.

BTW, Laura, your quip about a "new agent" (the author of The Power of Ritual Prayer) may be right on the money, judging from the newbie qualities he displayed as a guest on one talk show -- I finally listened to that link I posted. He was possibly the worst talk-show guest I've ever heard, ever. Seemed thick as a post, almost nothing to say, unprepared, every question was over his head, etc. He couldn't even be led effectively by the host. They had to bring in some other guy to start a broad, general discussion with the host about the PTB just to kill time, and the author was kind of sidelined -- just sort of in the background agreeing nervously with everything, pretending to know something about the topic of conversation. I didn't bother listening to Hour 2. Horrendous.
 
DylanSkroff said:
I find this debunking of "The Secret" on this message board rather excessive and paranoid. The Law of Attraction is a real principle alive in the universe and you can use that to help yourself get out of hell. This is a fact. Hell is not "reality," it is a condition in your mind. Do people on this message board just talk about spirituality and not actually meditate?
:lol: :lol: :lol:
Boy oh boy, did you walk into the wrong bar.
 
Since the article "Oprah's ugly Secret" from the original site http://www salon com/mwt/feature/2007/03/05/the_secret (Bernhard's post) has turned into an espresso machine advertisment, here is a complete repost (without clippings) from wearenotidiots com/culture.html just in case it ever goes missing from the web:

Oprah's ugly Secret

Originally Published on Salon.com
Written by By Peter Birkenhead


Mar. 05, 2007 | Steve Martin used to do a routine that went like this: "You too can be a millionaire! It's easy: First, get a million dollars. Now..."

If you put that routine between hard covers, you'd have "The Secret," the self-help manifesto and bottle of minty-fresh snake oil currently topping the bestseller lists. "The Secret" espouses a "philosophy" patched together by an Australian talk-show producer named Rhonda Byrne. Though "The Secret" unabashedly appropriates and mishmashes familiar self-help clichés, it was still the subject of two recent episodes of "The Oprah Winfrey Show" featuring a dream team of self-help gurus, all of whom contributed to the project.

The main idea of "The Secret" is that people need only visualize what they want in order to get it -- and the book certainly has created instant wealth, at least for Rhonda Byrne and her partners-in-con. And the marketing idea behind it -- the enlisting of that dream team, in what is essentially a massive, cross-promotional pyramid scheme -- is brilliant. But what really makes "The Secret" more than a variation on an old theme is the involvement of Oprah Winfrey, who lends the whole enterprise more prestige, and, because of that prestige, more venality, than any previous self-help scam.Oprah hasn't just endorsed "The Secret"; she's championed it, put herself at the apex of its pyramid, and helped create a symbiotic economy of New Age quacks that almost puts OPEC to shame.

Why "venality"? Because, with survivors of Auschwitz still alive, Oprah writes this about "The Secret" on her Web site, "the energy you put into the world -- both good and bad -- is exactly what comes back to you. This means you create the circumstances of your life with the choices you make every day." "Venality," because Oprah, in the age of AIDS, is advertising a book that says, "You cannot 'catch' anything unless you think you can, and thinking you can is inviting it to you with your thought." "Venality," because Oprah, from a studio within walking distance of Chicago's notorious Cabrini Green Projects, pitches a book that says, "The only reason any person does not have enough money is because they are blocking money from coming to them with their thoughts."

Worse than "The Secret's" blame-the-victim idiocy is its baldfaced bullshitting. The titular "secret" of the book is something the authors call the Law of Attraction. They maintain that the universe is governed by the principle that "like attracts like" and that our thoughts are like magnets: Positive thoughts attract positive events and negative thoughts attract negative events. Of course, magnets do exactly the opposite -- positively charged magnets attract negatively charged particles -- and the rest of "The Secret" has a similar relationship to the truth. Here it is on biblical history: "Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Moses, and Jesus were not only prosperity teachers, but also millionaires themselves, with more affluent lifestyles than many present-day millionaires could conceive of." And worse than the idiocy and the bullshitting is its anti-intellectualism, because that's at the root of the other two. Here's "The Secret" on reading and, um, electricity: "When I discovered 'The Secret' I made a decision that I would not watch the news or read newspapers anymore, because it did not make me feel good," and, "How does it work? Nobody knows. Just like nobody knows how electricity works. I don't, do you?" And worst of all is the craven consumerist worldview at the heart of "The Secret," because it's why the book exists: "[The Secret] is like having the Universe as your catalogue. You flip through it and say, 'I'd like to have this experience and I'd like to have that product and I'd like to have a person like that.' It is you placing your order with the Universe. It's really that easy." That's from Dr. Joe Vitale, former Amway executive and contributor to "The Secret," on Oprah.com.

Oprah Winfrey is one of the richest women in the world, and one of the most influential. Her imprimatur has helped the authors of "The Secret" sell 2 million books (and 1 million DVDs), putting it ahead of the new Harry Potter Book on the Amazon bestseller list. In the time Oprah spent advertising the lies in "The Secret," she could have been exposing them to an audience that otherwise might have believed them. So why didn't she? If James Frey deserved to be raked over the coals for lying about how drunk he was, doesn't Oprah deserve some scrutiny for pitching the meretricious nonsense in "The Secret"?

Oprah has a reputation for doing good -- she probably has more perceived moral authority than anyone in this country -- and she has done a lot of good. But in light of her zealous support of a book that says, in this time of entrenched, systemic, institutionalized poverty, this time of no-bid contracts for war profiteers and heckuva-job governance, that "you can have, be, or do anything," isn't it reasonable to ask about why she does what she does, and the way she does it?

Oprah recently opened, with much fanfare, the Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy in South Africa, and as I watched the network news stories about it, I couldn't get "The Secret" out of my mind. I kept wondering what would happen if professor Sam Mhlongo, South Africa's chief family practitioner who famously said that HIV doesn't cause AIDS, read about Oprah's connection to "The Secret" and found support there for his claim. I wondered if the students of the academy would read "The Secret" and start to believe that their parents deserved to be poor, or that the people of Darfur summoned the Janjaweed with "bad thoughts." Will the heavier girls be told, as readers of "The Secret" are, that food doesn't cause weight gain -- thinking about weight gain does? Will they be told to not even look at fat people, as "The Secret" advises? Oprah is already promoting these ideas to her television audience. Why wouldn't she espouse them to her students?

In many ways the Leadership Academy is a wonderful project, a school that will provide impoverished girls an education they otherwise might not have gotten. But it also seems to be the product, unavoidably, of the faux-spiritual, anti-intellectual, hyper-materialistic worldview expressed in "The Secret," the book that the school's founder has called "life changing."

The academy is a controversial enough project in South Africa that the government withdrew its support, because of the amount of money that's been spent on its well-reported, lavish design -- money that could have gone instead to creating perfectly fine schools that served many, many more students than the 350 who will be making use of spa facilities at the academy. But, when I watched Oprah's prime-time special about interviewing candidates for the school, it seemed to me that she wasn't nearly as excited about providing an education to the girls as she was about providing a "Secret"-like "transformative experience." (And not just for the girls, for herself; the first thing she said to the family members at the opening ceremony wasn't, "Welcome to a great moment in your daughters' lives," it was, "Welcome to the proudest moment of my life.")

On the special, Oprah talked far more about what the school would do for the girls' self-esteem and material lives than what it would do for their intellects -- sometimes sounding as if she was reading directly from "The Secret." And in discussing what she was looking for in prospective students, she didn't talk about finding the next Eleanor Roosevelt or Sally Ride or Jane Smiley. Instead she used "Entertainment Tonight" language like "It Girl" to describe her ideal candidate. She praised the girls for their spirit, for how much they "shined" and "glowed," but never for their ideas or insights. Oprah puts a lot of energy and money into aesthetics -- on her show, in her magazine, at her school. The publishers of "The Secret" have learned well from their sponsor and are just as visually savvy. They have created a look for their books, DVDs, CDs and marketing materials that conjures a "Da Vinci Code" aesthetic, full of pretty faux parchment, quill-and-ink fonts and wax seals.

Oprah's TV special about the Leadership Academy, essentially an hourlong infomercial, was just as well-coiffed and "visuals"-heavy. In fact, when Oprah was choosing her students, her important criteria must have included their television interview skills. On-camera interviews with the girls were the centerpiece of the special, but as one spunky, telegenic candidate after another beamed her smile at the camera, I couldn't help wondering how Joyce Carol Oates or Gertrude Stein or Madame Curie would have fared -- would they have "shined" and "glowed," or more likely talked in non-sound-bite-friendly paragraphs and maybe even, God forbid, the sometimes "dark" tones of authentic people, and been rejected. Sadly, the girls themselves (and who can blame them, desperate 12-year-olds trying to flatter their potential benefactor) parroted banal Oprah-isms, like "I want to be the best me I can be," and "Be a leader not a follower" and "Don't blend in, blend out," with smiley gusto.

When the special was over, I found myself equally impressed and queasy, one part hopeful, one part worried. I was happy the school was there, but disturbed by the way it created an instant upper class out of the students, in a country that doesn't exactly need any more segregation into haves and have-nots. I was hopeful for the students but nervous about what, exactly, they will be taught in a place called the Oprah Winfrey Leadership Academy. Will it be more "best me I can be" bromides? Will "The Secret" be on the syllabus? Oprah herself is going to teach "leadership classes" at the school, after all.

Has Oprah ever done anything that didn't leave people with mixed feelings?

And at what point do we stop feeling like we have to take the good with the craven when it comes to Oprah, and the culture she's helped to create? I get nauseated when I think of people in South Africa being taught they don't have enough money because they're "blocking it with their thoughts." I'm already sickened by an American culture that teaches people, as "The Secret" does, that they "create the circumstances of their lives with the choices they make every day," a culture that elected a president who cried tears of self-congratulation at his inauguration, rejects intellectualism, and believes he can intuit the trustworthiness of world leaders by looking into their eyes. I'm sickened by a culture in which the tenets of the Oprah philosophy have become conventional wisdom, in which genuine self-actualization has been confused with self-aggrandizement, reality is whatever you want it to be, and mammon is queen.

One of Oprah's signature gimmicks has been giving stuff away to her audience ("giving" here means announcing the passing of stuff from corporate sponsors to audience members), most notably in a popular segment called "My Favorite Things." These bits have revealed an Oprah who truly revels in consumer culture, and who can seem astonishingly oblivious to the way most people live and what they can afford. She seems to celebrate every event and milestone with extravagant stuff, indeed to not know how to celebrate without it. Oprah has explained the expensive appointments of her Leadership Academy by saying, "Beauty inspires." True enough. But hasn't the lack of beauty inspired some pretty great work? And aren't there are all kinds of beauty?

You might expect a powerful person who thinks of herself as "deeply spiritual" to have a less worldly conception of it, and you might hope that she would encourage her followers to do the same, instead of urging them to buy books that call Jesus a "prosperity teacher."

But, far more than "spiritual growth" or "empowerment," Oprah and the authors of "The Secret" focus on imparting the message of getting rich. Even the biographies of the authors of "The Secret" on Oprah's Web site are revealingly fixated on their rags-to-riches stories. James Arthur Ray is described as someone who was "almost going bankrupt, [which] forced him to focus on the life he truly wanted. Now he runs a multimillion-dollar corporation dedicated to teaching people how to create wealth in all areas of their lives." The bio for Lisa Nichols says, "After hitting rock bottom at age 19, Lisa prayed for a better life. Now, she has made her fortune by motivating more than 60,000 teenagers to make better choices in their own lives." And the one for "Chicken Soup for the Soul" creator Jack Canfield reads, he "was deep in debt before he made it big. Now his best-selling books have sold more than 100 million copies worldwide, and Jack travels the country teaching 'The Secret' of his success."

There's no doubt that Oprah's doing a lot of good with her South African project, and with many other charitable works. And yeah, I know, her book club "gets people to read," and yadda yadda yadda. But there's also no doubt that a lot of us have been making forgiving disclaimers like that about Oprah for years. And that maybe they amount to trains-running-on-time arguments. Maybe it's time to stop. After reading "The Secret," it seemed to me that there were basically three possibilities: 1) Oprah really believes this stuff, and we should be very worried about her opening a school for anyone. 2) Oprah doesn't believe this stuff and we should be very, very worried about her opening a school for anyone. 3) Oprah doesn't know that any of this stuff is in the book or on her Web site and in a perfect world she wouldn't be allowed to open a school for anyone.

The things that Oprah does, like promoting "The Secret," can seem deceptively trivial, but it's precisely because they're silly that we should be concerned about their promotion by someone who is deadly earnest and deeply trusted by millions of people. It's important to start taking a look at Oprah because her philosophy has in many ways become the dominant one in our culture, even for people who would never consider themselves disciples. Somebody is buying enough copies of "The Secret" to make it No. 1 on the Amazon bestseller list. Those somebodies may be religious zealots or atheists, Republicans or Democrats, but they are all believers, to one degree or another, and, perhaps unwittingly, in aspects of the Oprah/"Secret" culture. And yes, sure, a lot of the believing they do is harmless fun -- everybody's got some kind of rabbit's foot in his pocket -- but we're not talking about rabbits' feet here, we're talking about whole, live rabbits pulled out of hats, and an audience that doesn't think it's being tricked.

"Secret"-style belief is a perfect product. Like Coca-Cola, it goes down easy and makes the consumer thirsty for more. It's unthreateningly simple, and a lot more facile, sentimental and, perhaps paradoxically, intractable than the old-fashioned kind of belief. Like Amway, it enlists its consumers as unofficial salespeople, and the people who constitute its market feel like they're part of a fold. It's indistinguishable from, and inextricably bound up in, the Oprah idea of self-esteem, the kind of confidence you get not from testing yourself, but from "believing" in yourself. This modern idea of faith isn't arrived at the old-fashioned way, by asking questions, but by getting answers. Instead of inquiry we have born-again epiphanies and cheesy self-help books -- we have excuses for not engaging in inquiry at all. Let other people schlep down the road to Damascus; we'll have Amazon send Damascus to us.

That "Secret"-style faith, whether it's in God, or in one's own preordained destiny to be an "American Idol," which takes all of a moment to achieve, is perhaps its most important selling point. Here's "The Secret" on arriving at faith: "Ask once, believe you have received, and all you have to do to receive is feel good." The kind of faith that couldn't be reached by shortcut, the confidence of the great doubters and worriers, of Moses and Abraham Lincoln and Jesus Christ, has been replaced by the insta-certainty and inflated "self-esteem" of "The Secret's" believers.

Books like "The Secret" have created, and are feeding, an enormously diverse market of disciples, and they're thriving in every corner of the culture, in megachurches and movies, politics and pop music, in sports arenas and state boards of education. Oprah has far more in common with George Bush than either would like to admit, and so do the psychics of Marin County, Calif., and the creationists of Kansas. The believers come from all walks of life, but they work the same way -- mostly by bastardizing and warping source materials, from the Bible to the Bhagavad Gita, to make them fit their worldview. On Page 23 of "The Secret" you'll find this revealing doozy: "Meditation quiets the mind, helps you control your thoughts." Of course, the goal of meditation is precisely the opposite -- it is to be conscious, to observe your thoughts honestly and clearly. But that's the last thing the believers want to encourage. The authors of "The Secret" sell "control" in the form of "empowerment" and "quiet" in the form of belief, not consciousness.

The promises of Oprah culture can seem irresistible, and its hallmarks are becoming ubiquitous. Believers may be separated into tribes according to what they believe, but they do it in pretty much the same way, relying on a "Secret"-style conception of "intuition" --- which seems to amount to the sneaking suspicion that they're always right -- to arrive at their tenets. Instead of the world as it is, constantly changing and full of contradiction, they see a fixed and fantastical place, where good things come to those who believe, whether it's belief in a diet, a God, or a Habit of Successful People. These believers may believe in the healing power of homeopathy, or Scripture or organizational skills -- in intelligent design, astrology or privatization. They all trust that their devotion will be rewarded with money and boyfriends and job promotions, with hockey championships and apartments. And most of all they believe -- they really, really believe -- in themselves.

For these believers, self-knowledge is much less important than self-"love." But the question they never seem to ask themselves is: If you wouldn't tell another person you loved her before you got to know her, why would you do that to yourself? Skipping the getting-to-know-you part has given us what we deserve: the Oprah culture. It's a culture where superstition is "spirituality," illiteracy is "authenticity," and schoolmarm moralism is "character." It's a culture where people apologize by saying, "I'm sorry you took offense at what I said," and forgive by saying, "I'm not angry at you anymore, I'm grateful to you for teaching me not to trust shitheads like you." And that's the part that should bother us most: the diminishing, even implicit mocking, of genuine goodness, and of authentic spiritual concerns and practices. Engagement, curiosity and active awe are in short supply these days, and it's sickening to see them devalued and misrepresented.

Not that any of this is new. Aimee Semple McPherson, "The Power of Positive Thinking," Father Coughlin, est, James Van Praagh -- pick your influential snake-oil salesman or snake oil. They were all cut from the same cloth as Oprah and "The Secret." The big, big difference is, well, the bigness. The infinitely bigger reach of the Oprah empire and its emissaries. They make their predecessors look like kids with lemonade stands. It would be stupidly dangerous to dismiss Oprah and "The Secret" as silly, or ultimately meaningless. They're reaching more people than Harry Potter, for God-force's sake. That's why what Oprah does matters, and stinks. If you reach more people than Bill O'Reilly, if you have better name recognition than Nelson Mandela, if the books you endorse sell more than Stephen King's, you should take some responsibility for your effect on the culture. The most powerful woman in the world is taking advantage of people who are desperate for meaning, by passionately championing a product that mocks the very idea of a meaningful life.

That means something.
Edit: poor grammar...
 
Another critical review of The Secret, also from wearenotidiots com/culture.html:

The Secret: C'mon, Really

The Secret opens with a 40-something white woman walking alone. Read: this is our principal market. In a breathy voice-over she describes her life one year ago as filled with various difficulties. And then “out of my greatest despair was to come the greatest gift.” Suggesting that her daughter may have died, the film shows her finding a book with a yellow post-it on it; “Mama, this will help. OXOX.” And her greatest gift, when she opens the book, turns out to be “a glimpse of a great secret.” Immediately we are treated to dizzying cuts whirling us back into history at least as far as the ancient Egyptians where we see shots of the secret in scroll form, continuously in peril, hidden over and over again and then told that the secret was “buried,” “coveted,” “suppressed.” As it turns out “the greatest people in history” all knew the secret—of course the list only includes white men (don’t’ worry, there will be a-sort-of explanation for this later).

Next we are introduced to our cast of characters: a group folksy "philosophers," "metaphysicians," "feng shui consultants," financial strategists," and even a "visionary." What is the great secret these used car salespersons have to sell you? The Law of Attraction. What is this great secret law? It is the one law of the universe we are told, and you can harness all its power once you realize that things are attracted to you by virtue of the images in your head. You think it and the universe will mail it to you right away (disclaimer from the universe: expect 6-8 weeks for delivery)—after all, the best way to think of the universe, as high-minded thinker and metaphysician Dr. Vitale tells us, is as a “giant catalog.” You see it is not enough to simply personify the universe, to project upon it human-like qualities, to imagine that it actually thinks and feels like humans do, and that it also manages to tune into the pictures inside human heads way out here on this little planet. No! You must also see the universe as your mail order minion. A genie—we are told—in a bottle, who will give you” your every wish, every time,” no postage due. Unfuckinbelievable.

These generous souls, ready to share the secret with you for a mere $29.95, then go on to explain what you have to do to make the secret work for you. It’s simply, really, just three steps and you only have to do two of them as the ever helpful and attentive to every thought in your head minion-universe does one of them for you (no charge). First, simply ask for what you want by thinking it. Well, not just thinking it, but really, really feeling it. Then your handy-dandy genie universe will answer by sending it your way. Then, finally the tricky part, you’ve got to receive it by “bringing yourself in alignment with what you want.” This seems to entail having “good emotions” like joy, enthusiasm and desire. Simple enough really. And they’ve got all sorts of good stories about stuff people have got from the great warehouse in the sky: envelopes full of money arriving on a regular basis, parking spaces every time you need one, multimillion dollar houses, seven figure incomes, and the universe even healed one woman of cancer. And, lest you think otherwise, no worries about the universe running out of stuff for you for two very good reasons: 1) the universe is infinite (but completely preoccupied with every little thought in your head), and 2) hey, not everyone will want the same stuff (one guy who knows the secret explains, a lot of people wont ask for a BMW).

Once you recover from the staggering possibility of what awaits you, you might think to ask, “well, if it is this simple, then why are so many people suffering, poor, sick, displaced, dying?” No worries mate—there’s an easy answer. The great Law of Attraction has been a secret. Main-guy, Big Boy Bob Proctor explains, “Why [else] do you think 1% of the population earns 96% of the money being made.” Not because of trans-global capitalism. Not because the means of production are controlled by a very few. Not because of unfair market and labor controls and practices. Not because military and capital might create uneven playing fields. No, no, it’s because it is a secret that only 1% of the population have known. And, by the way, you shouldn’t be thinking about poor people or diseased people or displaced people, because if you think it the universe will package it up and send it your way. And to help you not think about these human beings the makers of The Secret sprinkle images of happy people from poor countries all over the world into their film. Of course none of these people get to talk, none of them get to tell you about their lives and their misery; you’re just presented with images of them smiling, and those are the only images you want in your head.

Brilliant! So, I’ve been asking the universe to send me a bunch of money so that I can send all the charlatans in this film to Darfur and they can tell the secret to all the miserable refugees there and help them ask for better things in their lives—all I ask in return for their good work is to send a film crew along. And trust me, I’m really thinking about this all the time, and I’m so excited about it, so filled with joy and good feelings and enthusiasm I’m about to bust.

To wrap up, here’s a short list of just some of what’s wrong with the secret, feel free to add to it:

- The universe is not a person, not a catalog, not a genie minion.

- Thinking good thoughts, planning, doing the hard work are all good things, but pretending that the universe corresponds to what’s in your head is a serious sign of mental illness.
- The Law of Attraction is really a Law of Distraction, requiring you to cut yourself off from the world around you, to understand yourself as an isolated individual separate and apart from others. If you followed the secret you’d become a self-obsessed, delusional, narcissistic idiot.

- The Law of Distraction puts all the focus on you and distracts you from the social, political, cultural world in which you live, distracts you from your responsibility towards others, inclines you towards insidious materialism and consumerism, feeds your narcissistic tendencies.

-The secret infantilizes you, promoting a childish wish-fulfillment fantasy.

-The consumer-oriented apolitical nature of the secret allows those in positions of privilege to blind themselves to their shared responsibility for the world; teaching them the inane mantra “I can’t do anything about the world, so I’ll just climb inside myself and focus on my desires.”

-The secret obscures the crisis of meaning in our culture. Meaning is made and sustained through language and ritual in culture and community. The consumptive nature of our society, supported as it is by the dominance of psychological and pseudo-spiritual understandings of ourselves, has left us in a state of such profound isolation and alienation, so desperate for distraction that millions of us are willing to demean ourselves, to forfeit our integrity, to abdicate our intelligence, to turn our backs on others and purchase the secret, climb into our heads, and close the door on the world.

C’mon, really, we are not idiots.
 
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