Regarding the seating - at ZMar, there would be perhaps 8 or 10 lines of people that would start to form 30-45 minutes before the hall would open.
Then some Mooji crew people would draw short/long straws to pick the order that the lines went into the hall.
So there wasn't really that much incentive to start queueing really early. Because if you arrived late and were at the back of a line, but it was the first one picked, you would have a better seat than someone who was at the front of a line which happened to be picked last.
It seemed a fair method of crowd control. However I'm sure people felt that the closer they were to the front, the more they were in Mooji's energy field, so the bigger buzz and the more "enlightened" they would get!
I suppose SOMETIMES you will arrive early, get at the front of the line, and then your line will be picked first. So you get to sit right at the front, at your master's feet! So sometimes arriving early pays off, sometimes it doesn't. I don't know if it's intentionally set up that way by the Moo team, but it sounds rather like this:
[www.psychologytoday.com]
Then some Mooji crew people would draw short/long straws to pick the order that the lines went into the hall.
So there wasn't really that much incentive to start queueing really early. Because if you arrived late and were at the back of a line, but it was the first one picked, you would have a better seat than someone who was at the front of a line which happened to be picked last.
It seemed a fair method of crowd control. However I'm sure people felt that the closer they were to the front, the more they were in Mooji's energy field, so the bigger buzz and the more "enlightened" they would get!
I suppose SOMETIMES you will arrive early, get at the front of the line, and then your line will be picked first. So you get to sit right at the front, at your master's feet! So sometimes arriving early pays off, sometimes it doesn't. I don't know if it's intentionally set up that way by the Moo team, but it sounds rather like this:
[www.psychologytoday.com]