Showing posts with label Andrew Cohen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Andrew Cohen. Show all posts

Apr 5, 2025

Cult leader whose name is engraved on Little Rock public art dies

Milo Strain
Arkansas Times
April 4, 2025

Every few months we at the Arkansas Times like to check in on our favorite piece of local art: a statue in Little Rock’s Riverfront Park that prominently features a quote attributed to a former cult leader, whose name the city promised would be removed eight months ago. 

(Last time we posted about the statue, it was to report that the city official who said the statue would be changed was no longer working for the city of Little Rock.)

While rounding up the latest news on the gaudy Inspiration Plaza we learned a fact that brings us no pleasure to report: Andrew Cohen, the disgraced cult leader and spiritual grifter whose name appears on Inspiration Plaza, died of a massive heart attack on March 25 at the age of 69.

But perhaps his name will live on forever in Little Rock’s statue park?
This has been another semi-regular cult-statue update. As far as we know, the plan is still to replace Cohen’s name with anonymous, though we’ve received a different answer from the city every time we ask.

https://arktimes.com/arkansas-blog/2025/04/04/cult-leader-whose-name-is-engraved-on-little-rock-public-art-dies

Feb 23, 2025

CultNEWS101 Articles: 2/21/2025 (Andrew Cohen, Shunning, Maharishi U., Book, Legal, CVLT)


Andrew Cohen, Shunning, Maharishi U., Book, Legal, CVLT

Brittany Nichols, former marketing manager for the Little Rock Parks and Recreation Department, has accepted a job with Metroplan.

This tidbit of news flew under our radar when the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette first published it last week, but we bring it up now as Nichols' role at the department informs our ongoing, if sporadic, coverage of a strange quote attributed to a cult leader on a piece of public art in Little Rock.

The quote is attributed to a man named Andrew Cohen, and it is engraved on a basalt column that stands in Inspiration Plaza, the newest piece of public art installed in Riverfront Park in downtown Little Rock. 

Learn more here about Cohen's sinister activities leading a cult called EnlightenNext, and read a statement from Nichols assuring us that Cohen's name would be replaced with "Anonymous."

A lot has changed since we pressed the department for comment on the bizarre quote in July. Donald Trump began his second presidential term. David Lynch is gone. Nichols works at Metroplan.

Andrew Cohen's name, though, has been a rock-solid constant through a period of intense and rapid change.

Will it outlast the parks department's next marketing manager? Time will tell.

When we last checked in with the parks department in December, staff were still looking for a contractor that could work on basalt and did not have a timeline for replacing Cohen's name.

Little Rock Communications Director Aaron Sadler confirmed yesterday that the city's plan is still to remove Cohen's name and added that it had been covered "until such time as it can be removed."

Because Inspiration Plaza is a short walk from the Arkansas Times' office, we've periodically checked in on the status of the quote since our first story ran last summer. In December, after we asked the city when it planned to address the matter, we discovered Cohen's name had been covered with a piece of tape. The tape disappeared shortly afterwards. Following our recent conversation with Sadler, the name was re-covered with tape.


"A sicko from New Jersey allegedly took part in a neo-Nazi child-porn ring whose members groomed children online and exhorted them to send self-produced, sexually-explicit videos, federal authorities said.

Colin John Thomas Walker, 23, of Bridgeton, about 50 miles west of Atlantic City, was a member of CVLT, an online cabal of like-minded creeps who worked as a team "to entice and coerce children to self-produce child pornography on servers associated with and run by" the group, investigators said.

Walker, who has been charged with engaging in a child exploitation enterprise, could face life in prison if convicted.

Walker — who used handles including "CVLLEN," "ghoblins," and "WRATH" — coerced his victims into engaging in increasingly demeaning acts online, "including cutting and eating their own hair, drinking their urine, punching themselves, calling themselves racial slurs, and using razor blades to carve CVLT members' names into their skin," according to court documents.

The self-made kiddie porn "sometimes included use of pets or other children, or insertion of foreign objects like knives or cacti into their genitals."

They also sent their victims violent video footage of animals being tortured to death and women being raped, the indictment alleged.

During the grooming, the men used "Nazi symbols and language" and shared bondage, S&M and "gore child pornography" with their young victims.

'The large golden domes of the Maharishi University are an incongruous landmark for a sleepy Midwestern town close to the Mississippi river.

Even more unlikely are the scenes that take place beneath them as students from across the globe gather twice a day to meditate and send out cosmic vibes of spiritual energy that they believe can heal a stress-stricken world.

But now a murder and allegations of a cover-up have shattered the tranquillity of the college and of the town of Fairfield, Iowa.

The killing of one student by another has threatened the future of not only what Maharishi disciples call 'a safe, harmonious campus', but also undermines the credibility of the one-time guru of the Beatles and spiritual leader to Hollywood celebrities including film-maker David Lynch and actress Heather Graham.

Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, the bearded purveyor of world peace, heads a movement of tens of thousands of people who believe their brew of transcendental meditation and yogic flying - a kind of bouncing which devotees claim is akin to levitation - sends out powerful vibes of harmony that can end conflict across the planet.

In the east-facing buildings of the 272-acre Maharishi University, some 800 students mix a traditional undergraduate education with a heavy dose of meditation and yogic flying.

But in the early evening of Monday 1 March an incident occurred which critics allege makes nonsense of the notion that meditation can bring world peace.

At 7pm Shuvender Sem, a 24-year-old from Pennsylvania, sat down in the university dining hall with fellow students to eat his organic vegetarian dinner. Suddenly Sem stood up, took a knife from his pocket and plunged it into the heart of 19-year-old Levi Butler.

In the ensuing melee, Sem stabbed Butler at least three more times before he was restrained. The police were called and Sem, said to be extremely calm, gave himself up. Butler was taken to Jefferson County Hospital, where the first-year student from California was pronounced dead.

The death left many in the college in a state of shock - if yogic flying brings harmony how could one of their own kill in their midst? And as further details of that day emerge, more serious questions are being raised about the Maharishi's theories.

The knife Sem used belonged to the dean, Joel Wysong. Earlier that day, in a class called Teaching for Enlightenment, Sem attacked another student, John Killian, stabbing him in the face with a pen. Killian needed seven stitches. Sem was taken to the dean's apartment where he was supposed to be under supervision. But it was there that he stole the knife before going to the dining hall.

Sem has been charged with aggravated assault for the first attack and first-degree murder for the second. But because the university authorities did not report the earlier crime, this has led to the allegation that they intended to cover up the violence.

Critics of the Maharishi - including former students and staff and Fairfield residents - have been inundating the local newspaper with calls and emails. They allege that the movement strives to prevent negative publicity that might halt donations from its wealthy alumni. Some claim incidents have been hushed up in the past, although no hard evidence has emerged.

The university defended itself by saying it was not its role to bring criminal charges and that this is the first such tragedy to happen on a campus claiming to be the most crime-free in America.

Some members of Butler's family are now considering suing the university, which could have devastating repercussions for its international reputation.

Butler's uncle, Benjamin Howard, posted an email which said: 'I am terribly angry that this organisation places its public appearance above the safety of its students. The earlier link "Safe Harmonious Campus" from the [university] web page reveals one major selling point for the university. Of course an administrator wouldn't wish to call police when something violent happens on campus. It would ruin that unblemished record of 30 years with no crime. If a lawsuit is necessary to teach this campus a lesson, then so be it.'

The Maharishi himself is reported to have blamed the violence on US foreign policy. Dr Craig Pearson, executive vice-president of Maharishi University, said: 'Maharishi Mahesh Yogi has made one comment regarding this event. He said that this is an aspect of the violence we see throughout society, including the violence that our country is perpetrating in other countries.'

But the most serious criticism levelled against the movement is that transcendental meditation may exacerbate existing psychological problems in students.

Dr Kai Druhl taught physics at the university for 13 years. He has since left to teach at a college 20 miles away after becoming disenchanted with the movement."

"A settlement was expected Thursday in the federal lawsuit over the stabbing death of a student at the hands of a former Landisville man at a meditation-based school in Iowa.

Shuvender Sem, a 1997 Lancaster Country Day School graduate, stabbed to death Levi Butler in the dining hall of Maharishi University of Management in Fairfield, Iowa, on March 1, 2004.

Sem, who had stabbed another student earlier the same day, was later found not guilty by reason of insanity.

The federal lawsuit filed in February 2006 on behalf of Butler's estate accused the school, founded by Indian guru Maharishi Mahesh Yogi and requiring twice-daily transcendental meditation, of gross negligence for not preventing the student's death.

Steve Eckley, an attorney representing the estate, said Butler's family is satisfied with the terms of the confidential settlement, which were reached late Wednesday night. The terms still needed to be approved by one official with the university's insurance company.

Trial in the case had been scheduled to begin Monday in U.S. District Court in Des Moines.

In the lawsuit, Butler's estate said the 24-year-old Sem was a paranoid schizophrenic with a long history of violent assault. It noted that the same day Butler was killed, Sem attacked another student, John Killian, by stabbing him in the face with a ball-point pen.

"Had defendants followed their own stated policy of reporting all serious crime to local authorities, Shuvender Sem would have been arrested after the attack on John Killian, and Levi Butler would be alive today," the lawsuit said.

After the attack on Killian, the lawsuit said Sem was placed in the custody of Joel Wysong, the school's dean of men.

The suit claimed, though, that Wysong left Sem alone for a time and reported hearing Sem rummaging through kitchen drawers. That's where Sem was believed to have found the knife used to kill Butler, of Riverside County, Calif.

In 2004, Sem's father, Surinder Kumar Sem, also of Landisville, said his son is a diagnosed schizophrenic in denial about his illness and not regularly taking his medication."

New Autobiography Gives Insight into Maharishi Murder
 It is a story that could only be written by one person. A compelling autobiography that not only pushes the boundaries of sanity, it takes readers on a frightening voyage to meet it face-to-face. "Murder and Misunderstanding; One Man's Escape from Insanity" (ISBN-13: 978-1479256969) is the story of Shuvender Sem, who on March 1, 2004 became known as "The Maharishi Murderer."

The murder took place in Fairfield, Iowa, on the campus of a university that prided itself on non-violence. The Maharishi University of Management used a variety of techniques towards its non-violent goals including twice-daily use of Transcendental Meditation. It was to no small degree that this setting put the murder in the national spotlight.

In one moment Sem was a college student. In the next he was "The Maharishi Murderer." Shuvender killed freshman Levi Butler without provocation on the campus by stabbing him four times in the chest with a paring knife. The murder took place following an incident earlier in the day when Sem stabbed a student with a pen. That previous incident led to the student getting seven stitches to his face.

Deemed competent to stand trial, the judge ruled he was "not guilty by reason of insanity" at the request of both the defense and the prosecution. Against popular belief, NGRI is an extremely rare plea, used in less than one percent of criminal cases. A not guilty result is even more uncommon, occurring just one-quarter of one percent of the time.

Now, after years of psychotropic medications and intense therapy, Shuvender is telling his story of schizophrenia in his autobiography, "Murder and Misunderstanding; One Man's Escape from Insanity." It is not only an extremely rare look into the mind of a killer from his own perspective, but it is also a deeply personal story that explores the darkest, most grim places of the mind.

"Our mental health system is broken. We need to fix this before more crimes are committed," says Sem.

In his book, Shuvender tells of his relationship with his father, and the events that led to that day on campus. He describes his struggle with, and eventual escape from this misunderstood illness. It is a story of recognition and realization. A story of redemption desired, and hope delivered. It is a book written to serve as a beacon for those with schizophrenia and their families, by a man who was held in its strongest grips, and managed to escape.

Shuvender Sem, or Shubi as he is known, now speaks publicly about his experience with schizophrenia in the hopes of helping others. He is available for presentations and Q&A sessions for law enforcement, mental health groups, attorney associations, academic institutions and others who may feel they can benefit from his story.

The self-told story of Shuvender Sem, "Murder and Misunderstanding; One Man's Escape from Insanity" is available at http://www.ShuvenderSem.com/ . The book is available in paperback; as well as Kindle, iPad and Nook digital editions.


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Patrick Ryan (pryan19147@gmail.com)


Feb 17, 2025

CultNEWS101 Articles: 2/17/2025 (Andrew Cohen, Research, Shunning, Support Group)


Andrew Cohen, Research, Shunning, Support Group

Arkansas Times: Cult leader's name on Little Rock public art outlasts tenure of city official who said it would be replaced
"Cult leader's name on Little Rock public art outlasts tenure of city official who said it would be replaced
Brittany Nichols, former marketing manager for the Little Rock Parks and Recreation Department, has accepted a job with Metroplan.

This tidbit of news flew under our radar when the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette first published it last week, but we bring it up now as Nichols' role at the department informs our ongoing, if sporadic, coverage of a strange quote attributed to a cult leader on a piece of public art in Little Rock.

The quote is attributed to a man named Andrew Cohen, and it is engraved on a basalt column that stands in Inspiration Plaza, the newest piece of public art installed in Riverfront Park in downtown Little Rock. "

Psychology Today: Evaluating the Effects of Mandated Shunning
New research seeks to quantify the psychological harm of high-control groups.

" ... The act of shunning is to persistently ignore, avoid, or reject something, creating social and/or emotional distance. Psychologically, it is considered social or mental rejection, but despite its impact, the practice is typically considered to be a normal part of social dynamics: Individuals avoiding other individuals they don't like. Siblings taking umbrage with each other's behavior. Friends parting ways over a major disagreement. And they are right; while uncomfortable and potentially damaging, shunning is a natural reality, albeit a typically immature one.

The problem arises when shunning becomes mandated. Mandated shunning is a practice commonly employed (and always denied) by high-control groups as a method of retaining control of their membership. The very threat of total isolation from everyone and everything you hold dear creates a barrier to exit from the group, and is significant enough to prevent many individuals from leaving. This method of enforcing social ostracism for any member of the group deemed to be 'non-conforming' or 'disobedient' is giving rise to a worrying wave of psychological harm; this is what the research project seeks to investigate."

Queens Long Island Community Services and FamilyKindThe Healing from Emotional, Anger, and Relational Trauma educational support group
March Mondays starting on March 10 at 1 PM EST on Zoom.  Focus is on coping more effectively with anger, other emotions, coercive control, traumatic narcissism and gaslighting.  Grief, forgiveness and releasing ourselves from pain are also part of the ongoing discussion offered by the Queens Long Island Community Services and FamilyKind and facilitated by Dr. Paul Engel DHL, LCSW.  
 
Gather with others to find support and learn to develop strength and strategies for coping while integrating change in your lives. This group is for former cult members and others.  Please contact 516-547-4318 or paul.engel@flushingjcc.net with any questions and to get the link to join.


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Intervention101.com to help families and friends understand and effectively respond to the complexity of a loved one's cult involvement.

CultRecovery101.com assists group members and their families make the sometimes difficult transition from coercion to renewed individual choice.

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The selection of articles for CultNEWS101 does not mean that Patrick Ryan or Joseph Kelly agree with the content. We provide information from many points of view to promote dialogue.


Please forward articles that you think we should add to cultintervention@gmail.com.


Thanks,


Ashlen Hilliard (ashlen.hilliard.wordpress@gmail.com)

Joe Kelly (joekelly411@gmail.com)

Patrick Ryan (pryan19147@gmail.com)



Feb 7, 2025

Cult leader’s name on Little Rock public art outlasts tenure of city official who said it would be replaced

Andrew Cohen
Milo Strain
Arkansas Times
February 7, 2025​

Cult leader’s name on Little Rock public art outlasts tenure of city official who said it would be replaced
Brittany Nichols, former marketing manager for the Little Rock Parks and Recreation Department, has accepted a job with Metroplan.

This tidbit of news flew under our radar when the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette first published it last week, but we bring it up now as Nichols’ role at the department informs our ongoing, if sporadic, coverage of a strange quote attributed to a cult leader on a piece of public art in Little Rock.

The quote is attributed to a man named Andrew Cohen, and it is engraved on a basalt column that stands in Inspiration Plaza, the newest piece of public art installed in Riverfront Park in downtown Little Rock. 

Learn more here about Cohen’s ... activities leading a cult called EnlightenNext, and read a statement from Nichols assuring us that Cohen’s name would be replaced with “Anonymous.”

A lot has changed since we pressed the department for comment on the bizarre quote in July. Donald Trump began his second presidential term. David Lynch is gone. Nichols works at Metroplan.

Andrew Cohen’s name, though, has been a rock-solid constant through a period of intense and rapid change.

Will it outlast the parks department’s next marketing manager? Time will tell.

When we last checked in with the parks department in December, staff were still looking for a contractor that could work on basalt and did not have a timeline for replacing Cohen’s name.

Little Rock Communications Director Aaron Sadler confirmed yesterday that the city’s plan is still to remove Cohen’s name and added that it had been covered “until such time as it can be removed.”

Because Inspiration Plaza is a short walk from the Arkansas Times’ office, we’ve periodically checked in on the status of the quote since our first story ran last summer. In December, after we asked the city when it planned to address the matter, we discovered Cohen’s name had been covered with a piece of tape. The tape disappeared shortly afterwards. Following our recent conversation with Sadler, the name was re-covered with tape.

Dec 18, 2024

CultNEWS101 Articles: 12/18/2024 (Jesuits, Sensory Stimulants, Catholics, Scientology, Andrew Cohen)


Jesuits, Sensory Stimulants, Catholics, Scientology, Andrew Cohen

JSTOR: Making Scents of Jesuit Missionary Work
The use of sensory stimulants like incense gave Jesuits a common framework with the North American nations they encountered on missionary trips.

"Missionaries operating in cultures very different than their own often find themselves trying to communicate across a wide gulf. For Jesuits who arrived in parts of North America claimed by France in the seventeenth century, writes historian Andrew Kettler, one thing that helped bridge the gap was the fact that they and the Indigenous societies they hoped to convert to Catholicism shared a deep respect for the power of scent.

Kettler writes that, from the beginning, smells played a significant role
Catholicism. Incense was a crucial part of the immersive experience of worship. Pleasing or terrible smells could also signify holiness or evil. For example, when the fifteenth-century saint Lydwine of Schiedam became gravely ill, she was said to have vomited out parts of her internal organs, which emitted holy scents.

The Reformation called for controlling the "lower" senses of smell and taste, replacing sensual aspects of Catholic worship with the reading of scripture. But the Jesuits continued to valorize the sense of smell, using multi-sensory stimuli including scents during their periods of seclusion and arguing that a sufficiently purified person could recognize good and evil on Earth by their respectively sweet and sulfurous scents.

Kettler writes that the Jesuits who arrived in "New France" in 1625 followed the networks created by French fur traders toward the interior. They set up their central mission, Saint-Marie, on Huron land. As they introduced themselves to Native nations across the region, they marveled at the Indigenous people's sensory capacities, particularly their ability to locate fires from a great distance away. The Italian Jesuit missionary Francesco Giuseppe Bressani described people he encountered as having 'a rare sense of smell.'"

Where Peter Is: What Faithful Catholics can learn from Ex-Scientologists
" ... Mike Rinder's journey from a high-ranking official in Scientology to a vocal critic offers valuable insights for faithful Catholics. His story underscores the importance of discernment and personal integrity in one's faith journey. Rinder's eventual departure from Scientology, prompted by his recognition of systemic abuses, highlights the necessity of critically evaluating our own religious leaders — as well as our groups and practices — to ensure that we aren't being coerced or manipulated into unhealthy spiritual practices and ways of thinking.

As Catholics, it is important to engage in continuous self-examination and to uphold the moral principles of our faith, even when faced with institutional challenges. Rinder's advocacy for transparency and accountability resonates with the Catholic call for transparency and accountability from our leaders within the Church and the broader community. His commitment to exposing wrongdoing, despite personal costs, exemplifies the courage required to confront issues that may arise within any religious institution. Ultimately, Rinder's experience encourages Catholics to balance faithful adherence with critical reflection.

I have argued in the past that although Catholicism as a whole is not a cult, there are many cult-like groups within Catholicism. Identifying and exposing spiritually abusive groups and leaders is absolutely necessary for the health of our Church. Rinder's work serves to remind us of this principle.
But the most important lesson we might take from Mike Rinder's life journey is that people can change. After spending most of his life working on behalf of a destructive and corrupt organization, he spent his final years working to bring the truth to light.

One of the most poignant moments for me in watching Scientology and the Aftermath was in the final episode of season one, in which cult expert and former Moonie Dr. Steven Hassan was interviewed. After describing cult mind-control tactics in groups like Scientology and the Moonies, Hassan remarked that he had seen every episode of the program to that point, and then he started to become emotional. Hassan said, "Scientology has threatened me, gone through my trash … They've had people in Nazi uniforms picketing outside my office, telling my neighbors that I'm evil person, I'm an anti-religious bigot."

He then turned and looked directly at Mike Rinder and said, "I have to say, I was scared shitless of you for so many years. I love that you are modeling for ex-members of thousands of other cults that you can be a leader. You can do horrible things and you can wake up and be a human being. … I just think that what you're doing is heroic."

He then turned and looked directly at Mike Rinder and said, "I have to say, I was scared shitless of you for so many years. I love that you are modeling for ex-members of thousands of other cults that you can be a leader. You can do horrible things and you can wake up and be a human being. … I just think that what you're doing is heroic."
I have been moved deeply by the stories of Catholics who have had the courage to speak out after leaving high-control groups in the Church, from charismatic communities to the traditionalist movement. Speaking out for the truth comes at a high cost. These are the people "who hunger and thirst for righteousness." Jesus said they will be satisfied."

Arkansas Times: Former cult leader's name still on public art in downtown Little Rock
"A disgraced former cult leader's name is still on a piece of public art in Little Rock, despite a city spokesperson's assurance in July that the name would be removed.

"Responding is spirit in action. We are the change agents that give rise to the possibilities that don't exist," the quote reads. Engraved on a basalt pillar in Inspiration Plaza, the newest piece of public art in downtown Little Rock, the quote and its origins are puzzling.

The quote is attributed to a man named Andrew Cohen — a self-proclaimed guru and spiritual teacher accused of physical and mental abuse and financial exploitation by many of his former students and followers, including his own mother — but it isn't clear if he ever actually said it.

So why is the quote etched in stone in a statue garden by the Arkansas River? Because At-Large City Director Dean Kumpuris' wife chose it. (This article from July will catch you up on the convoluted details.)
Essentially, Cohen's name made it all the way on to the statue, seemingly without anyone checking who he is, if the quote is his, or if the quote is even real. During our reporting, a spokesperson for the Little Rock Parks and Recreation Department provided a statement that said the city would replace Cohen's name with "Anonymous" but leave the quote itself intact, since staff liked its message and, in researching it, could not find where it came from."

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Sep 16, 2019

CultNEWS101 Articles: 9/16/2019



EnlightenNext Andrew Cohen, Faith Healing, Sri Lanka, Bikram Yoga, Sexual Abuse, Legal,  Baba Ramdev, Ayurveda   

"One of EnlightenNext’s members was Luna Torlo, Cohen’s mother. At first, she was enthused about her son’s mystical awakening – but their relationship soured as he grew dictatorial, and ultimately she fled the cult and broke off contact with him:

She recalls him lashing out at his disciples—supposedly in an attempt to strip away the ego. Torlo says he told her to give way to him or their relationship would end; he once ordered a regimen where she would cook one meal a day, meditate for two hours, and remain in silence except for talking to him, saying that “since I was so full of opinions and nothing but opinions, I was absolutely forbidden to express an opinion on anything.”

Her son, formerly the “sweetest, sensitive kid, had changed into an unrecognizable tyrant.” (source)

However, unlike many cults, EnlightenNext didn’t preach rejection of modernity, and its members weren’t cut off from the outside world. This proved to be their downfall.

In 2013, a group of disaffected ex-members began to expose Cohen’s abuse and brainwashing tactics on internet forums. Word spread, and within the space of a few weeks, it was as if a spell was broken. More and more people were quitting, and the movement began to disintegrate. And then, surprisingly, Cohen himself admitted that the critics were right. He announced that he was stepping down, ceasing all public teaching and going on a soul-searching pilgrimage.

He later wrote in an public apology:

I gradually lost sight of people’s humanity, including my own, and only saw all of us as the living Self Aware consciousness that, in an evolutionary context, was going somewhere. And that was all that I believed was important or really mattered… As I was losing touch with my own simple humanity and everyone else’s, I also was simultaneously not paying attention to the gradual growing of my spiritual ambition, of my spiritual ego. I believe that my intense longing for the evolution of consciousness in my students was real, but I have begun to see more and more clearly how over time my pride and my desire for fame and recognition slowly but surely began to blur and corrupt my vision."

"Two people died from heat exhaustion after attending a mass open air faith healing session in northeast Sri Lanka which left 13 others fighting for their lives, police said Sunday (Sep 8).

About 10,000 people, some of whom were seriously ill, had gathered at a school to listen to a man who claimed he could use "powers of the gods and the Buddha" to cure the sick.

Police in the town of Horowupotana, 260 kilometres north-east of Colombo said 18 people were taken to hospital, with 13 in a critical condition."

"Over the past two years, the #MeToo movement has exposed countless terrible men guilty of sexual harassment and assault, but Bikram Choudhury has yet to face his comeuppance. A searing new documentary from Netflix on the “hot yoga” founder lays it all out in a blunt title: “Bikram: Yogi, Guru, Predator.” It doesn’t bring much new information to the table, but it’s an infuriating look at the way Choudhury seduced thousands of followers with his yoga franchise, while raping and assaulting innumerable women, and how he managed — so far — to get away with it. Choudry belongs in jail, and this frustrating overview provides the latest opportunity to keep that conversation in the public eye."

"India’s company court approved a bid by a group of firms controlled by yoga guru Baba Ramdev to take over cooking oil and soya-products maker Ruchi Soya Industries Ltd. for 43.5 billion rupees ($606 million).

Patanjali Consortium Adhigrahan Pvt. -- a venture by Patanjali Ayurved Ltd. and three other companies -- will merge with Ruchi Soya, according to a stock exchange filing late Saturday. Shareholders of Patanjali Consortium will get one share of Ruchi Soya for each that they hold in the former."

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Sep 12, 2019

Strange and Curious Sects: EnlightenNext

EnlightenNext
ADAM LEE
Patheos
SEPTEMBER 11, 2019

When you’re in a cult, there’s rarely an easy way out.

As they meet with rejection by the outside world, cults tend to turn in on themselves, becoming more isolated and more extreme. Some end in mass suicide, like Jonestown or Heaven’s Gate; some end in fiery destruction, like the Branch Davidians. Today’s post is about a cult like many others except for one thing, the rarest thing: it’s a cult that peacefully dissolved when its founder realized he had become a monster.

The group called EnlightenNext was founded by an American, Andrew Cohen, from a secular Jewish family. In Cohen’s telling, he had a profound mystical experience of “cosmic consciousness” at 16. In 1986, in a bid to recapture this feeling, he traveled to India where he studied under a guru named H.W.L. Poonja.

When he returned to the U.S., Cohen began preaching what he called “evolutionary enlightenment,” which he touted as a harmonious blend of Eastern philosophy and modern science. According to him, the goal of existence was to attain the next stage of human consciousness, transcending the individual ego and becoming one with God and the cosmos. He believed that his meditative practice could bring about a worldwide spiritual awakening.

This is standard New Age stuff, but by all accounts, Cohen was a charismatic and dynamic speaker who presented his ideas forcefully. Some people who later joined the cult recalled that they had their own mystical-ecstatic experiences after listening to his lectures. Even those who were skeptical, like the science writer John Horgan, felt that he made a powerful impression:

I was recording these observations in my notebook when Cohen stopped speaking. I looked up and found him, and everyone else, staring at me. “You don’t have to take notes,” he said blandly. My face flushing, I put my pen and notebook away. Afterward, Cohen seemed to keep his eye on me. When he spoke contemptuously about “men,” he looked my way. I felt as though I was on probation.

It helped that Cohen had money behind him, and was able to publish books and glossy magazines extolling his ideas. EnlightenNext magazine impressed at least one reviewer, who called it “a glossy, well-designed adventure into spirituality” and “the sign of a great innovation.” Cohen also met with a friendly reception on my old haunt, Big Think (which I note hasn’t taken any of his pages down to this day).

As Cohen traveled and preached his ideas, he began to accumulate followers. At its peak, EnlightenNext had close to a thousand devotees, with established communities in the U.S., Europe and Israel. The movement’s headquarters was a compound called Fox Hollow in western Massachusetts, which they purchased in 1996.

In practice, EnlightenNext’s quest for cosmic consciousness took the form of marathon meditation sessions where devotees would sit silently for hours on end, or prostrate themselves before a portrait of their guru. As one former member says in a documentary video made by the Atlantic, four hundred prostrations was a standard morning exercise, and some adherents made it a goal to do 100,000 over time (at 9:14 in the video).

As the community grew and its devotion became more intense, what started as an oddball New Age movement began to take on cultic trappings. Cohen was treated as an infallible guru whose word was equivalent to the word of God – and as the timeless saying goes, absolute power corrupts absolutely.

Supposedly in the name of breaking down the ego, he began subjecting his disciples to ritualized humiliation and abuse. Those who had displeased him in some way – even something as minor as recommending a movie for him which he disliked – had to engage in groveling apology rituals, like buying hundreds of dollars’ worth of flowers and gifts with their own money. According to allegations on this page, he ordered his devotees to prostrate themselves in freezing cold water to the point of hypothermia, or to break up with romantic partners and cut ties with their families, or to physically restrain and beat those who were disobedient.

One of EnlightenNext’s members was Luna Torlo, Cohen’s mother. At first, she was enthused about her son’s mystical awakening – but their relationship soured as he grew dictatorial, and ultimately she fled the cult and broke off contact with him:

She recalls him lashing out at his disciples—supposedly in an attempt to strip away the ego. Torlo says he told her to give way to him or their relationship would end; he once ordered a regimen where she would cook one meal a day, meditate for two hours, and remain in silence except for talking to him, saying that “since I was so full of opinions and nothing but opinions, I was absolutely forbidden to express an opinion on anything.”

Her son, formerly the “sweetest, sensitive kid, had changed into an unrecognizable tyrant.” (source)

However, unlike many cults, EnlightenNext didn’t preach rejection of modernity, and its members weren’t cut off from the outside world. This proved to be their downfall.

In 2013, a group of disaffected ex-members began to expose Cohen’s abuse and brainwashing tactics on internet forums. Word spread, and within the space of a few weeks, it was as if a spell was broken. More and more people were quitting, and the movement began to disintegrate. And then, surprisingly, Cohen himself admitted that the critics were right. He announced that he was stepping down, ceasing all public teaching and going on a soul-searching pilgrimage.

He later wrote in an public apology:

I gradually lost sight of people’s humanity, including my own, and only saw all of us as the living Self Aware consciousness that, in an evolutionary context, was going somewhere. And that was all that I believed was important or really mattered… As I was losing touch with my own simple humanity and everyone else’s, I also was simultaneously not paying attention to the gradual growing of my spiritual ambition, of my spiritual ego. I believe that my intense longing for the evolution of consciousness in my students was real, but I have begun to see more and more clearly how over time my pride and my desire for fame and recognition slowly but surely began to blur and corrupt my vision.

Fox Hollow was abandoned, and remains so to this day. According to this article, he’s also reconciled with his mother.

The impression I get is that Cohen had all the qualities of a cult leader, except the most crucial one: he wasn’t a psychopath. He wasn’t immune to the seduction of absolute power, but then again, virtually no one is. While intoxicated on his own ego, he did commit and command cruel acts, but his conscience remained intact though deeply buried. When he was faced with the undeniable evidence of what he had become, that jolt of perspective reawakened it.

That’s a very rare trait. Most people in that situation would fall prey to sunk-cost thinking, double down on their authoritarianism and ramp up the persecution of dissenters. Cohen deserves credit for doing the opposite.

Then again, maybe we shouldn’t be so easy to let him off the hook. As of 2016, he’s trying to stage a comeback, declaring himself older and wiser and arguing that many of his earlier insights are still valid. If he tries to start up a new high-pressure sect, we’ll have grounds to conclude that the cult-leader traits were intrinsic to his personality and not just the aberration of a man who lost his way.

Adam Lee is an atheist writer and speaker living in New York City. His new novel, Arc of Fire, is available in paperback and e-book.

https://www.patheos.com/blogs/daylightatheism/2019/09/strange-and-curious-sects-enlightennext/

Oct 5, 2016

What Happens When a Skeptical Science Writer Meets a Cult Leader


Was the Spiritual Leader Andrew Cohen enlightened or a “Super-egomaniac”?

John Horgan
Scientific America
October 4, 2016

John Horgan interviewed the guru Andrew Cohen (shown here teaching in Paris in 2012) in 1999 while researching his book Rational Mysticism. Cohen described enlightenment as "a strange state, where the only thing that I'm sure of is that I don't know."  Vincent Drouot, Wikipedia.

I just watched a remarkable short documentary, “How Well-Meaning People End Up in a Cult.” Produced by The Atlantic, the film tells the story of the rise and fall of the guru Andrew Cohen, whose followers believed he had achieved the state of supreme mystical bliss called enlightenment. I interviewed Cohen in 1999, when his following was at its height, while researching my book Rational Mysticism. I didn’t use the Cohen material in my book, but I posted it on my website. I’m publishing an edited version here because many rational people—especially those attracted to Buddhism, Transcendental Meditation and other religions that advocate meditation--still believe in enlightenment. I once did, too, but no longer, in part because of my encounters with Cohen and other spiritual know-it-alls.-–John Horgan

In the summer of 1996, while passing a newsstand in Grand Central Station, I noticed a glossy magazine, What Is Enlightenment? The subtitle read: "Dedicated to the discovery of what enlightenment is and what it really means." By “enlightenment,” the magazine meant the state of supreme bliss, wisdom and grace that Buddha and other spiritual masters supposedly achieved.
According to its masthead, the magazine was published by Moksha, an organization founded by the spiritual teacher Andrew Cohen. This issue, headlined "Is the Guru Dead?", addressed the growing tendency of spiritual seekers to reject the notion of absolute enlightenment. After all, over the past few decades, many supposedly enlightened gurus have engaged in depraved behavior.
But Cohen vigorously defended enlightenment. Just because some gurus fail us, he wrote, we should not conclude that all are flawed—or that absolute enlightenment is an unreachable ideal. "If such a goal is unattainable," Cohen wrote, that would mean "there really is no way out of the human predicament."

Curious about Cohen, I did some research on him. Born in 1955, he was a self-described neurotic adolescent raised in New York City. His mother left the family when he was eleven, and for four years the boy lived with his father. After his father died in 1970 of a brain tumor, Cohen moved in with his mother.

When Cohen was sixteen, one night he was overcome with sensations of love, awe, and wonder. He "knew without any doubt that there was no such thing as death and that life itself had no beginning and no end," he recalled in his book Autobiography of an Awakening.

Having read The Varieties of Religious Experience and other books, Cohen concluded that he had had a mystical experience. For several years he practiced drumming and fantasized about becoming a jazz drummer, but in his early twenties he decided to pursue permanent mystical awakening: enlightenment. He studied under several spiritual teachers, but each time he ended up disillusioned.
Cohen was traveling in India in 1986 when he encountered Poonjaji, a guru. Poonjaji told Cohen, "You don’t have to make any effort to be free," and Cohen instantly was free. "I saw clearly that I never could have been other than Free and that any idea or concept of bondage had always been and could only ever be completely illusory," Cohen wrote. Poonjaji assured Cohen that he was enlightened and urged him to help others achieve that state.

However, as Cohen attracted a following, Poonjaji complained to others that Cohen was a delusional egomaniac. When he discovered Poonjaji’s duplicity, Cohen concluded that Poonjaji and virtually all other gurus are flawed; none are really as enlightened as they claimed to be. True enlightenment, Cohen determined, requires a purity of thought and behavior that vanishingly few mortals have attained. In his teachings, Cohen made it clear that he had reached this pinnacle of perfection. Others could reach it, too, but only through complete self-abnegation.
One of Cohen’s first devotees was his mother, Luna Tarlo, a writer. After Cohen wrote her to announce his "liberation," Tarlo left New York and joined her son in India. She was initially overjoyed that she had become "the mother of God," but she and her son eventually had a falling out. Tarlo wrote a book, The Mother of God, which compared her son to cult leaders such as Jim Jones and David Koresh.
But Cohen is no ordinary narcissistic guru. What sets him apart from other self-appointed deities—and what made him intriguing to me--is his willingness to explore some of the difficult questions raised by mystical teachings, including his own. His chief vehicle for this intellectual exercise is What Is Enlightenment? The journal is clearly Cohen’s. Each issue contains articles by him and advertisements for his books, videos, and retreats. Photographs show Cohen striking the classic guru poses, laughing blithely or gazing heroically into space.
But the magazine also features articles by and about a wide range of spiritual teachers, some with views that diverge from or even directly contradict Cohen’s. Each issue wrestles with a different topic: the tension between science and mysticism, the westernization of eastern religions, the commercialization of spirituality, the relationship between sexual and spiritual liberation. The journal’s speculative, questioning tone contrasts sharply with the air of certainty projected by Cohen in his writing and in his public talks.
I first saw Cohen in the flesh on a blustery Sunday in early spring, when he gave a talk in a penthouse atop Manhattan's posh St. Moritz Hotel. The lavishly chandeliered room was packed with 150 or so people. There were a few excessively attractive young men and women—-models, I guessed. At the upper end of the age scale was a petite, white-haired lady--70 years old, at least, and still seeking a savior.
Five minutes after Cohen was scheduled to appear, he strode briskly into the penthouse and took a seat on a platform at the front of the room. He was shorter than I expected, with dark hair and moustache. He wore western clothes: dark slacks and a dark vest over a beige, short-sleeved shirt. He asked everyone to join him in meditation, and the room fell silent for several minutes; the only sounds were the howling of the wind and the scratching of my pen. Even with his eyes closed, Cohen’s face was knotted with concentration, as if he were multiplying large numbers in his head.
"Hello," Cohen said, opening his eyes. "Hello," the audience replied as one.
With an eerily deadpan expression, Cohen began talking about how attachment to our individuality prevents us from knowing our true, timeless selves. To illustrate how self-absorption blocks true vision, he held his book an inch from his face, blocking our view of him. Liberation comes when we abandon our pathetic little egos, he said, slamming the book down.
Our sexuality, Cohen emphasized, may be the biggest trap of all. Caricaturing male sexuality, Cohen clenched his fists and growled, "I’m a man." Switching to a simpering, high-pitched voice, he said, "I’m a woman," while laying one hand on his cheek, pursing his lips, and batting his eyelids. "Those are the major categories," Cohen added drily, getting a big laugh from the audience. Gays and lesbians, he emphasized, may be even more invested in their sexuality than heterosexuals.
Cohen’s demeanor was more remarkable than his message. He punctuated his mocking riffs about human vanity with an abrupt, barking laugh--"Ha!"--followed immediately by "Sorry!" His eyes often seemed glazed, or focused on an invisible object a few feet in front of him. Occasionally his eyelids fluttered and his eyes rolled back into his head, so that only the whites showed. The first time this happened, I glanced around to see how others were reacting, but no one seemed surprised. At other times, Cohen zeroed in on one member of the audience, eyes gleaming with demonic intensity.
I was recording these observations in my notebook when Cohen stopped speaking. I looked up and found him, and everyone else, staring at me. "You don’t have to take notes," he said blandly. My face flushing, I put my pen and notebook away. Afterward, Cohen seemed to keep his eye on me. When he spoke contemptuously about "men," he looked my way. I felt as though I was on probation.
Cohen took questions after his talk. A woman in the front row wearing a knitted cap said she appreciated what Cohen had said about sex roles. Her womanhood was complicating her struggle with cancer. When chemotherapy made her hair fall out, she felt so self-conscious and unfeminine. She couldn’t help but think that it wouldn’t be so bad for a man.
Cohen commanded her to take off her cap. She did. Dark peach fuzz covered her skull. You don’t look so bad, Cohen said, and actually, she didn’t. I had feared that she would be mortified, but she radiated relief.
A burly, hairless man on the opposite side of the room announced that he had thought about getting hair plugs but instead shaved all his hair off. And it was amazing! He loved the feel of the wind on his skull when he rode on his motorcycle! The older he got, the more he did what he wanted to do rather than what others wanted him to do. And he was learning to embrace uncertainty. He was a CEO, head of his own company, and everyone expected him to have all the answers. But lately, when people asked him for advice, he often answered, "I don’t know," and it was great! Exhilarating! He felt more and more energy. He was no longer a zombie, he was Zorba!
As Zorba kept telling us about the fabulousness of his life, the tension in the room grew. Everyone watched Cohen watch Zorba. Cohen remained stone-faced throughout Zorba’s monologue. When Zorba paused to let us appreciate one of his witticisms, Cohen said abruptly, "Next question," and looked around the room. Immediately he was back in charge. He was the totally enlightened guru here, not this bald blow-hard.
Two days after I heard Cohen speak in New York, he agreed to meet me at his compound in western Massachusetts. The interview took place in a spacious, high-ceilinged room containing a long wooden table on which someone had placed a pitcher of water and two glasses. The room’s only decorations were a vase stuffed with flowers and a photograph of Cohen. After we sat at the table, Cohen asked me to remind him why I wanted to speak to him.
As I responded, I was acutely aware of Cohen watching me. My heart raced, and my breathing became labored. This moment of panic passed, and I managed to tell Cohen that I was writing a book about mysticism. I wanted to explore whether mystical experience—and especially the state known as enlightenment--can give us a knowledge that we cannot get through science or any other means; Cohen’s magazine gave me the impression that he is interested in these issues.
Cohen nodded. His primary interest is the relationship "between mystical experience and human life and how to live," he said. "Because quite often spiritual seekers tend to get vague about the relationship between mystical experience and"—he paused—"what that means about life and how to live."
As he continued speaking, Cohen seemed to drift in and out of focus. His eyes never rolled completely back into his head, as they had at the St. Moritz Hotel. But they glazed over at times, as if he was distracted by some inner vision, then locked onto mine with an unsettling directness. He kept his hands busy, chopping the air, pounding the table, even touching my hand now and then.
Some of his riffs had an incantatory effect. He spoke rapidly in a low, soft voice, often reiterating a single idea with slight variations. Occasionally he labored to find the right word. I found this trait disarming; rather than serving up pre-packaged riffs, Cohen seemed to be thinking aloud, putting effort into his responses. I also caught myself wondering: Would a truly enlightened person ever be at a loss for words?
I decided to get my big question out of the way early, although it came out not as a question but as a statement: You are an enlightened person...
"Well, I, I..." Cohen, to my gratification, seemed taken aback, but he quickly composed himself. "My policy is not to answer questions like that. I'd like for other people to make up their own minds." He paused. "You saw me teach the other night. Wasn't the implication rather direct?"
Yes, it was, I replied.
Enlightenment "is possible. It is real. And if you give enough of your heart and attention to that understanding, to that experience, then you are going to be able to realize it and manifest it yourself. Wasn't that the implication?"
Yes, it was.
"I wasn't holding back, was I?"
No, you weren't.
"I'm pretty bold."
You are pretty bold, I agreed.
"I've gotten in a lot of trouble for being bold."
In certain respects, Cohen was quite modest. He did not claim to have psychic powers—or even an interest in paranormal phenomena. He found reincarnation plausible, but he had no personal recollection of past lives. Nor had enlightenment given him answers to deep metaphysical questions. Quite the contrary. "I live in a strange state," he explained, "where the only thing that I'm sure of is that I don't know." He gave me his dry smile. "But for some strange reason, that seems to give me a kind of confidence that's very unusual."
Enlightenment does not solve the mystery of existence, he said; it illuminates the mystery. Awakening consists of knowing less and less and ultimately knowing nothing at all, arriving at a place of perfect stillness and peace. But because the self still desperately wants to know itself, this state of not-knowing co-exists with "an energetic, passionate, awakened curiosity," which is "part and parcel of the movement of creation itself." Ideally, Cohen said, you remain poised between these two states of not-knowing and wanting-to-know.
The question that fascinates Cohen above all others is how nothing gave rise to something. "There was nothing. Then, for a reason that nobody really knows, out of nothing came something." He said nothing and something in a sing-song, Mr. Rogers-ish voice, as if speaking to a toddler. Cohen did not claim to know the answer to this question. "My personal opinion is there is never going to be an answer to that question."
I asked if enlightenment reveals any divine intelligence or plan according to which the universe unfolds. "What that plan really is ultimately begins to depend on you," Cohen replied with a wide-eyed grin. When you become enlightened, you "begin to play a part in who and what God is and what his plan is for this moment," he said. "There is no God that is separate from that realization, that is separate from you."
Cohen derided the notion—promulgated by New Agers and traditional believers alike--that everything that happens to us has been divinely ordained or at the very least happens for a reason. "The narcissism in that kind of thinking is so blatant, I mean, it's almost laughable."
Pain and suffering often occur in a random fashion, Cohen assured me. He and his Indian-born wife, Alka, were crossing a street in New York City a few years earlier when they were hit by a car and almost killed. "I was going, ‘Why did this happen?’ And I realized that it didn't happen for any particular reason. It just happened."
Yet Cohen’s belief in his own specialness kept coming to the fore. Those who are enlightened, he said, by definition can do no wrong. They "are no longer acting out of ignorance, in ways that are causing suffering to other people." They display "an unusual and rare consistency" in "their words, in their deeds, in their relationship to life." Over and over he emphasized how few have reached his level of spirituality. Mystical experiences alone, he said, do not lead to enlightenment; Cohen has known thousands of people who have had "very powerful spiritual experiences" without truly transcending their egos.
Cohen recalled meeting only two fully enlightened people, both Indians. None of Cohen’s students have become liberated. To be sure, he said, many have had brief awakenings; some had insights so strong that they wanted to become teachers in their own right. But Cohen helped them to see that their desire to leave Andrew and become independent teachers stemmed from pride.
I could not let this pass. I pointed out that Cohen himself has said that he became fully liberated only after dissolving his relationship with his guru, Poonjaji. Shouldn’t he help his students achieve independence from him? Cohen shook his head. He reminded me that Poonjaji was imperfect; if you find a truly enlightened, perfect teacher, there is no reason to leave him.
"Let's say the Buddha was alive today. Let's say someone that great, that enlightened, that pure, that perfect, with such a great teaching, was still alive. I mean, could someone be too attached to someone like that?"
Yes, I replied. I did not see how you could be truly liberated while remaining dependent upon another human, even one as great as the Buddha.
But one cannot be too dependent upon a truly enlightened person, Cohen said, exasperated. "The more attached you get to a person like that, the more free, literally, you become." Cohen derided the importance that people in general, and westerners in particular, give to independence. He had begun slapping the table to emphasize points. "Look," he said forcefully. "Anybody"—Slap!—"who wants to be free is going to have to bend his knee." The mind "must surrender!" Slap! "However that happens, it doesn't really matter, as long as it happens." Liberation cannot occur until the ego, the "root of all evil," is obliterated.
Enlightenment "is all about being nobody. It's going from something to nothing, someone to no one." Even some very powerful teachers still manifest egotistical pride, and a need to be revered by their followers. "You can be a powerfully realized being and be an egomaniac! You can be a super-egomaniac!"
Achieving total self-transcendence is extraordinarily difficult, Cohen said. "You have to leave the world and everyone in it behind forever and never return again. Okay? To be an independent teacher"—Slap!—"in the way that I am, means you... stand... alone."
Cohen has no friends in the usual sense, and even his relationship with his wife is to some extent impersonal. There is "no kind of personal relationship or personal affection I have for anybody that is going to interfere with my interest in the truth." If his personal desires ever interfere with his commitment to truth, "then everything would fall apart!" Cohen erupted into high-pitched, staccato laughter.
Living on the mountaintop might have made Cohen cold. For a self-professed Bodhisattva, he was contemptuous of human frailty. He bragged to me about how he had scolded a schizophrenic student for blaming his problems on his mental illness instead of taking responsibility for himself. Cohen frowns on psychotherapy, which he believes coddles the ego. Those who combine spiritual practice with psychotherapy often have "a softness about them, and a humility, a sensitivity," Cohen said. "But the fire of liberation"—Slap!—"won't be coming out of their eyes!"
As a result of all Cohen’s slapping, my glass of water had slid to the edge of the table and was about to topple onto my lap. I slid it back to the center of the table.
Cohen describes enlightenment as a form of not-knowing. And yet his guru-hood, his entire life, revolves around his belief in—his knowledge of--his own unsurpassed perfection. Cohen is, to use his term, a super-egomaniac. His casual contempt for us ordinary, egotistical humans is disturbing, as is his belief that, as an enlightened being, he can do no harm. Cohen might not be a monster, as his mother claims, but he has the capacity to become one.
After Cohen and I had spoken for several hours, we ate a vegetarian lunch with two of his male students. Both had an interest in science; they had helped put together an issue of What Is Enlightenment? devoted to science. Aware that I write about science, the two disciples asked my opinion of various fields, theories, theorists. Delighted by their deference, I pontificated about superstring theory, artificial intelligence, and other scientific topics. Meanwhile, part of me was aware of Cohen at my side, quietly watching me. I had a sudden vision of how he saw me: vain, self-absorbed, smug in my paltry knowledge. I silently gave thanks that I was not in thrall to this guru. As soon as this lunch was over I would walk away from him, free to be my flawed, foolish self.

https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/cross-check/what-happens-when-a-skeptical-science-writer-meets-a-cult-leader/