Michelle Goldberg
Religion Dispatches
Tue, 13 Oct 2009 05:12 EDT
Last month, the front page of the New York Times style section ran an inadvertently depressing story about a group of young life coaches sometimes referred to as the "spiritual cowgirls." These hip young women, who have lots of charisma but no professional qualifications, are setting themselves up as ersatz gurus to their questing peers. They charge hundreds of dollars for sessions that combine new age atmospherics with the kind of power-of-positive thinking nostrums that made a phenomenon out of The Secret.
"[N]ow there is a new role model for New York's former Carrie Bradshaws - young women who are vegetarian, well versed in self-help and New Age spirituality, and who are finding a way to make a living preaching to eager audiences, mostly female," reported the Times. One 31-year-old member of this eager audience is quoted praising her spiritual tutor Gabrielle Bernstein, a 29-year-old former nightclub publicist who lectures on using the "laws of attraction" to "manifest" one's desires. "A lot of women look up to her," the student says. "We need this guidance and we are searching for this guidance." Bernstein's audacity in marketing herself as a sage appears to be matched by the piteousness of her customers..
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Comment: The devil is always in the details, and in the case of positive thinking, it becomes dangerous when it sidesteps critical thinking and objective reality. And this is what all New Age schools preach: blind faith and sheeple mentality, which further drives people into a delusional world full of lies and away from the truth of reality.