Tuesday, 8 October 2019

Enlightened Ego Trip

Yes, there are real masters, and they are rare and precious. But many people who present themselves as enlightened teachers—especially online—are not. Often they are people who have come to believe they are special, and that belief quietly takes over.

While in Mexico, I once encountered a particularly striking example. A man calling himself Swami Rajneesh had built a retreat center in the jungle called Ozen. Thousands of spiritual tourists passed through, searching for something. On the surface, there was music, yoga, festivals, and creative energy. Yet as I walked around the place, something felt off. White marble floors and chandeliers stood in the middle of the jungle. There were Japanese restaurants and star-shaped glass houses that felt strangely disconnected from their surroundings. The atmosphere carried a sense of excess and artificiality that was hard to ignore.

Then I met the “master.” Within minutes, he introduced himself to my husband and me as an enlightened being and made it clear he did not feel the need to explain himself. The conversation quickly became a monologue about his achievements and experiences. Around him, young devotees listened with total devotion, hanging on every word. The contrast between the claims and the palpable tension in the space was unsettling.

He spoke at length about his path, his years of silence, and his exceptional status. Yet there was no quietness around him, no ease. We later offered a meditation light we had brought, thinking it might interest the community. Before even understanding what it was, he dismissed it as dangerous. After trying it, he admitted it was impressive—but still showed no real openness or curiosity.

What stood out most was not the disagreement, but the atmosphere. Everything in the center required his approval. His presence dominated the space. It was clear that the structure revolved around him, and that unquestioned authority had taken root.

History is full of examples where strong personalities attract seekers. When someone repeatedly declares themselves enlightened, there will always be people willing to believe it. Many are genuinely longing for clarity, belonging, or relief from suffering. Over time, the most dangerous part can happen quietly: the teacher begins to believe their own story completely. That belief becomes harmful—not only to others, but to the person holding it.

There is a long and painful history of cults built around inflated spiritual identities. Some have ended in extreme tragedy. Even when they don’t, the cost can be high. People lose autonomy, discernment, and trust in their own experience. They pay dearly for becoming part of someone else’s unexamined sense of specialness.

...

I once had a close friend with whom I spent a lot of time talking online. Over the years, I witnessed her struggles, her patterns, and the ways unresolved childhood pain shaped her behavior. There was sincerity in her seeking, and also a deep confusion that had not yet been met.

Later, she began writing books and positioning herself as a spiritual authority, offering guidance on enlightenment. When we finally met in person, the contrast between the image she was trying to uphold and what was actually present became impossible to ignore. She wanted to teach, urgently, yet could not turn toward her own shadow. The tension between wanting to be someone important and feeling profoundly lost was overwhelming for her.

That meeting ended our friendship.

I stepped away not out of judgment, but because I could no longer support something that felt untrue and potentially harmful. What followed was painful — defensiveness, blame, and public justification framed as honesty and transparency. I did not engage. Leaving was the only honest response available to me.

She has followers now, people who admire her and reflect back the identity she is trying to maintain. This is not kindness. Supporting an inflated spiritual persona may feel generous, but it often deepens the very split that needs healing. When pain is bypassed through spiritual authority, it does not disappear — it waits.

Where there is a need for followers, humility quietly slips away. With that comes the pressure to maintain an image, to be consistent, to be admired. Underneath, there is often exhaustion and fear, held at a distance. Peace cannot grow there.

I no longer carry anger about this. I see how easy it is to confuse insight with embodiment, and recognition with completion. When the identity eventually collapses — as identities do — what remains may finally be free to meet what was avoided. Until then, distance is a form of care.



9 comments:

  1. Very revealing in a thoughtful way, but also a bit saddening to look at.
    For some it looks like compulsive obsession, that may take some time to discover and overcome.

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  2. One should never give their power away.

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  3. Enlightenment is certainly the biggest ego trip of them all. The spiritual ego surpasses all by its arrogance. The whole concept of an "I" as a separate entity can never be enlightened although enlightenment as a process is constantly happening. I can never be enlightened and if anyone ever makes the statement, "I am enlightened", they are deluded or delusional. Yes, you are my enlightenment, but no, I am not enlightened. This is not a paradox, for without you there is no enlightenment. Without participation in the other, there is no place for enlightenment, because it does not fit in one person, it is too great. A drop of water is not the ocean, it can only be a taste thereof, never the complete ocean. The only way to spiritually develop to the point where you see enlightenment always is to be immersed in the others and lose yourself in them, without using that in any way to accompany your own desires, because the desires and happiness of others becomes your own and the ones you at one point called your own become distant and irrelevant.

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  4. Relax, his ego is a stepping stone for our realization. Just another expedient on the Path, according to the seeker karma.

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  5. It's good to hear stories like this to be on guard, thanks

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  6. Good post. Needed to be said.

    There are far too many fake teachers out there. They have read enough books to know the 'lingo', but the huge ego behind it still shines forth.

    After all, what ego wouldn't want to sit on a lovely chair, up on a platform, with expensive flowers and a picture of Goofy in a gilt frame (displaying my spiritual lineage) on a neat antique table at the side. All their adoring followers bowing and scraping and telling their leader how wise that imaginary being is. Sounds like a great cult - must have satsangs and an ashram to add authenticity.

    I'm with Galadriel (another fake character, just as real as me) - I will diminish and pass into the West. Much Love - since that's all there is...

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  7. Oh, Ilona! Thank you for saying that! It's a relief. Yesterday I was watching an old video about you and someone else, and I got what you are talking about. After a short search about her, I felt so much discomfort and confusion (I even started questioning everything I've heard from you... but at the bottom of my heart I knew what is true). Thank you for putting light on it.

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  8. Very good example Ilona. In my life, a Hindu guru moved into my rural upstate NY county buying up an old country resort as an ashram. He then sent invitations to his grand opening to all the local people. My father, a dairy farmer and then Farm co-op manager received it- and it said- "You are invited to bring gifts of gold and silver to celebrate our opening" or something to that effect!

    Eckardt Tolle said something to the effect that people who have experienced an Awakening inevitably try to teach too soon. On one hand, this being understands wanting to share the peace and new reality with others. But pieces of the ME are almost always still cluttering the consciousness and that Ego needs to be fed. Another major non-dual guru was just outed by scandal (Mooji) though whispers for years. However there were many who found value there. We need to take what we can from the teachings without giving up our own Power. There is a saying "If you meet the Buddha on the road, KILL him!" For the West, lets change that to a more effective wake-up statement: "If you meet Jesus on the road, KILL him!" Basically- don't give away your power. This being learned that the hard way approaching supposedly Awakened people after going thru a personal epiphany. But it taught one to look within.

    My 2 cents :)

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  9. Basically- there is no you to give away power it's power.

    "She saw that all phenomena arose, abided and fell away,
    She saw that even knowing this arose, abided and fell away.
    Then she knew
    There was nothing more than this
    No ground
    Nothing to lean on stronger than the cane she held
    Nothing to lean upon at all
    And no one leaning.
    And she opened the clenched fist in her mind and let go
    And fell into the midst of everything"

    -From the story of Teijitsu Abbess of HakuJuan (Japan)

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