Hi JGeropoulas. I almost didn't post this because I'm never satisfied with the wording of my thoughts in print. I keep wanting to go back and make changes. I hope you can find some value in this and that it doesn't come across as too long-winded or abrasive in any way.
You've been around here long enough to have seen some of my understanding conflicts with various posters. I'm not a communications expert by no means but I have learned something I could share with you and I seem to see this lesson quite clearly in your post.
This part of your experience:
JGeropoulas said:
Due to years I spent oppressed by Christian fundamentalist authorities (who disdained critical thinking and who implied that their little narcissistic world was sufficient to meet all needs),...
...has apparently taught you something and you no longer believe that the little narcissistic world of 'Christian fundamentalist authorities' is 'sufficient to meet all needs'. That's understandable and I agree with it. It would seem to follow naturally that if a forum member made a statement that reminded you of this experience and seemed to promote that 'Christian fundamentalist authorities attitude', you would have a strong reaction, although you say it was just two little words that you reacted to.
Anyway, in general terms so far this describes the dynamics of a conflict in understanding the way I have also experienced it, so I may have something to offer.
When you came across this:
The Strawman said:
...(if points) “don't slot neatly, like a square peg in a square hole, into the teachings of Laura and the Cs I think they need to be clarified...Even if Almaas is the real deal, what would be the point in turning to him when everything is already here."
This is obviously not something you expected to read and it seems to represent an idea contrary to a belief you now hold due to your own personal experiences which you wrote about just before what you quoted.
So, it was unwanted and definitely unexpected. There is a difference here, and in a communication context, new and sometimes very important information for you (or anyone) can be found in this or any difference. But what do most of us do? In the terminology of Crucial Conversations, we generally we go to silence or violence.
What is the information? To realize it yourself might depend on your background understanding of basic psychology, other knowledge and an ability to view the interrelated knowledge you have from various perspectives. For instance, from a perspective of people as self-referential systems, narcicissm would be overstated self-reference and its inverse, self-denial, would be understated self reference. The mainstream or common view of 'normal', or a 'balanced' psychology, would be a relationship to others and the outside world in a reasonable balance between two abnormal states: self-reference and outside world reference.
If this were anywhere else, the text you reacted to might seem like it was written by someone promoting self-denial in the sense of being unwilling or helpless to find and use outside information for self-development purposes or to bring it here for discussion and instead, preferring a state of "subjective loyalty" (your words) to a 'single' source.
However, context is important and meaning can be found in that. That's where the information that explains this difference can be found.
This is a forum for specific purposes and some esoteric development is possible with the use of recommended reading materials and interactions with other members. Since the poster who wrote that reply has only been around a couple of months or so and wants to learn, and since Gurdjieff has advised that one must be of a mind to place trust in a chosen teacher (whether 'teacher' is an individual or network), I personally chose to interpret that reply with that meaning.
For me, a useful alternative would simply be something Laura advised me some time back, and that is to simply ask for the missing information - i.e., ask a poster what they mean or what they are suggesting by something they wrote before reacting or responding to it. For me, it's just a way of comparing the information they provide with an implicit bias I might have in order to bridge the gap - to let "meaning" be a neutralizing or reconciling force, OSIT. And BTW, I'm still working on that.
My 2 cents, FWIW.
--------------------
Concerning your opening post on this thread:
JGeropoulas said:
I've recently begun reading my first book by this intriguing Kuwaiti-born author, who, according to Amazon, "seeks to integrate modern psychology with the insights of Sufism, Buddhism, Gurdjieff, and other wisdom traditions".
The following compilation of quotes from several of his numerous books was inspiring to me so I wanted to share them with everyone else:
{snippage}
Thanks for sharing. I immediately noticed a certain contrast. The way he describes the benefits or features that come from the journeying process itself sounds nice, but the wording associated with the 'destination' is quite ambiguous by comparison.
It seems evident that he has read some of the material he draws from, but is he saying anything that anyone else who has read that material couldn't say as well? I'm curious.