Monday, September 20, 2021

Dialogues with Mystery: 8


I have to ask you: what if the truest thing about this moment isn't a desire, a story you're perpetuating about yourself, or an attempt to bamboozle someone into providing for what you need or want? What would life look like if the day led you, instead of the things you lacked? [bxA] You have heard it said "The father knows what you need before you ask him." I am telling you that you don't know what you need until you ask him. Solomon was blessed because, in a dream, he asked God for wisdom. You will be blessed if, in prayer, you ask God to help you distinguish needs from wants. Enlightenment will overflow within you if you allow that dance--between the Father, the Son, the Spirit and me--to define what you need and want.

Your existence is a question, not an answer. You experience stress because you come at life with narratives of "this is who I am," and "this is what I need and want" looping in your head--and then maybe people understand you, maybe they don't. Maybe you get what you need or want, maybe you don't. What if each moment were an answer to those questions? What if you already are who you need to be, and already have what you need? What if the hardest part of wanting is, in fact, something no one taught you to expect: namely, evaluating what desire will cost you? Accepting all of this will require you to adjust, but in our learning, the student changes, not reality. 

What if the the truest thing about your grief were its malleability and impermanence? You will experience great loss and enormous tragedy. People will tell you "Never forget" until it becomes a chorus ringing inside you. But what if we switched the narrative? What if I told you "Always remember--"always remember, for instance, the way ego will use your legitimate sadness and anger to keep itself safe. Always remember that advertising companies, nation states and desire systems are waiting with baited breath to exploit the vulnerability, sadness and anger you feel to achieve ends they first defined for you, and then ennobled. "This product will make you happy" they'll say, when what it'll really do is numb what you're feeling. "People who are different than you can threaten your security" they'll say, hoping you'll forget the teacher's greatest lesson: that not even death can threaten you. "Satisfaction is a click away" they'll say, hoping you'll miss the way you're getting baited into thoughtless, emotionless loops of stimulus and response.

There's a truth to be told here. When I tell it, people get nervous, but I want you to know you're totally safe: you see, everything that you know of yourself is a lie. Every desire you have, every attraction and aversion and craving--none of this assists you in being who you are. And it's totally okay if that's something you don't understand on a guts level right now--if we continue to learn together, you'll be telling yourself "I don't know why it took forever for me to get that" over and over again. Even the most minor gurus of this age have a response for that: it didn't take forever. It required only now, and that you be here as the scales fall from your eyes.

I can anticipate you asking me "how do I get better at being here?" In order to become what you are not, you have to walk an unfamiliar path. Take the job that comes with less prestige, feel the emotions that break your heart, accept other people just as they are. The process will suck most of the time, but even the healthiest practice comes with suffering--because suffering is just an unkind word for the strange emotions an sensations that come with becoming. One more thing: in the midst of that unfamiliarity, you have to allow yourself to stop looking for support from others: instead, console, nurture and encourage yourself the way you wish others would. I know that's a hard thing to hear. But look: you will become who you are. It's unavoidable. Your needs will be revealed. Your true desires will clarify themselves. Your most important work in that process is letting go of how you want that to happen.

Just breathe.  How much of life do you miss because your attention fixes on shiny objects like television or stress or emotions?  How much more alive would you feel if you allowed life, and not your attention span, to tell you how vibrancy feels?  Look up: the first rays of dawn are emerging outside. Listen: the trash trucks are collecting.  The birds are singing.

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