Okay, first of all: synchronicity! I've been brushing up with ACIM for the last couple of days.
I will be the dissenter here. I say "Nay" to ACIM.
I haven't read the book cover-to-cover or completed all of the lessons, but did give it a fair go (seventy pages or so) and a few days' worth of lessons. I also discussed it at length with long-time fans of the book--both of whom I very much respect and still do.
My beef with ACIM is its focus upon real and unreal. The distinction must be made, but the presentation of these concepts in ACIM, in my opinion, fosters dissociation.
I believe the first of the lessons consists of standing outside for a minute or two and looking at mountains and trees and grass and saying, (paraphrase) "This is unreal. These mountains are unreal. These trees are unreal. Everything I'm seeing is unreal."
...The lesson basically encourages you to disbelieve your five senses and the sense-data from your body. And, really, that approach is none too different from every other mystical technique--most of them are centered on withdrawing from the senses and going within.
There is value in this...But it strikes me as unbalanced and I've noticed "Course" followers becoming anti-life. By believing "everything" is illusion you enter a subliminal mindset that life is a mistake that needs to be corrected. It's Original Sin all over again.
Moreover, the mindset of "Course" people--in my observation--also follows another mainstream religious pattern: the mindset that the solution is in the future and that when the illusion/spell is finally broken THEN they can breathe. They seem floaty to me and like there energy is less in the present time than more. And I think that could be a side effect of constantly telling yourself "This is unreal." By telling yourself that you're abstracting your mind away from your body, resulting in less ability to know and interact with what's happening around you.
It comes down to this: I think the only way out is "through." Is it possible to achieve freedom from the body or ego by negating it and calling it unreal? ...It just seems more intuitive to me that the opposite's true: you gain freedom from the ego by recognizing it, working with it, accepting it, purifying it, rising above it.
There are also links around the 'net inferring that Helen Schumann (the "scribe" of ACIM) was an MKULTRA mind-controlled disinfo artist. There's a link to such a webpage in another thread that's already been started on ACIM. The web info is pretty thin, but who knows...
http://forum.noblerealms.org/viewtopic.php?id=1417
http://www.urantiagate.com/conspiracy.html
And here's an article LipStickMystic wrote on it:
http://www.lipstickmystic.com/articles/ … 81404.html
Edit: I made some broad, sweeping statements in this post. I wrote it quickly. My main point is: my feeling from ACIM is that it is anti-life. And I love life. I love redrock slot canyons and sage brush and ponderosa pines. When I take all that in, I feel uplifted, present, the presence of love. When I label it all as unreal, I feel lost. I am excited for ascension, but I feel sure a person doesn't have to negate or become numb to their current level of existence in order to move to the next.
You can't change a tiger's stripes,
but you can avoid its teeth.