Tag: God

  • Breath to breath – (chapter 9 “Women Food God” Geneen Roth)

    "Mr. Duffy lived a short distance from his body."  I wish that was my line (but alas, it belongs to James Joyce), since it perfectly expresses the mass twenty-first-century evacuation from our bodies.  We think of ourselves as walking heads with bothersome unattractive appendages attached.  It's as if we'd rather pretend we don't have bodies. As if they are the source of our troubles, and if only we could get rid of or otherwise dismiss them, we'd be fine.  We crash around in our arms and legs, let them lift for us, hold our children, walk for us without ever taking the time to actually life in them.  Until we are about to lose them.
     
    An article in The New Yorker about people who romanticize committing suicide (the ultimate body-removal technique) by jumping of the Golden Gate Bridge quoted a man, saying, "I instantly realized that everything in my life that I'd thought was unfixable was totally fixable – except for just having just jumped."


    Sigh.
     
    The problem isn't that we have bodies; the problem is that we're not living in them.
     
    When I first talk to retreat students about inhabiting their bodies, their eyes glaze over; the air suddenly feels as if it's made of lead.  The body is so- well- unglamorous. This is not what they came for.  They want to learn how to have different bodies, not occupy the ones they have now.
     
    One of my students was convinced that her ample forty-year-old, mother-of-three children thighs were the source of her suffering. After spending years obsessing about each new wrinkle of cellulite – how she looked in jeans, how her life could be different with different thighs – she woke up in excruciating pain after liposuction operation. She remembers the recovery more painful than she ever imagined. Remembers looking down on her thighs a thousand times over the next few months to assess their newfound smoothness.  A year later, upon coming to her first retreat, she said, "It is devasting to realize that I paid all that money and no one, not my husband or my sister or me – can tell the difference between my thighs now and my thighs then.  They don't seem to care, no less notice, that my thighs have less cellulite.  I didn't want to go through life hating my thighs and now we've spent half our savings on the operation and I still can't stand my thighs."
     
    I tell her that I have never met anyone for whom years of rejection and hatred suddenly and miraculously turned to love, even after a face-life, Lap Band surgery, liposuction.  When you love something you wish it goodness; when you hate something you wish to annihilate it.  Changes happen not by hatred but by love.  Change happens when you understand what you want to change so deeply that there is no reason to do anything but act in your own best interest.  When you begin to inhabit your body from the inside, when you stop looking at it through, as my friend Mary Jane Ryan says, "bank camera eyes," any other option except taking care of it is unthinkable.
     
    No matter how much you loathe yourself or believe life would be better if your thighs were thinner or your hips narrower or your eyes were wider apart, your essence- that which makes you you- needs the body to articulate its vision, its needs, its love.  Inhaling your child's baby powder neck perfume requires flesh, nose, and senses.  Presence, enlightenment, insights are only possible because there is a body in which they unfold.  In The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold, when the murdered narrator, Susie, wants to kiss her boyfriend, she slips into her friend’s body to feel the warmth of lips on lips – as if having a body was heaven itself.
     
    Despite your argument with your physicality, the fact is that you are here and the 151,000 people who have died today are not.  I heard in a meditation years ago in which a teacher suggested that we think about what people who had recently died would give to be sitting where we were.  To be sitting in any body, in any room.  He said, "Think of what they would give to have just one more moment inside this physical form, these arms, these legs, this beating heart and no other."  I gathered that the dead to whom he referred didn't really care about the size of anyone's thighs.
     
    Your body is a piece of the Universe you've been given; as long as you have a pulse, it presents you with an ongoing shower of immediate sensate experiences.  Red, salt, loneliness, heat.  When a friend says something painful to you, your chest aches.  When you fall in love, that same chest feels like fireworks and waterfalls and explosions of ecstasy. When you are lonely, your body feels empty.  When you are sad, it feels as if there is a Mack truck sitting on your lungs. Grief feels like tidal waves knocking you down, joy like champagne bubbles welling up your arms, your legs and belly.  Our minds are like politicians; they make stuff up, they twist the truth.  Our minds are the masters to blame, but our bodies….our bodies don't lie. Which is, of course, why so many of us learned to zip out of them at the first sign of trouble.
     
    The ability to live a short distance from our bodies was, at one time, our best chance for survival. Since children experience emotional pain in and through their bodies, and since there were no resources for releasing that pain, we became skilled at getting out of Dodge – bolting- in a hurry.  In developing skills to leave our bodies, we avoided being destroyed by the onslaught of potentially fragmenting pain.  It was a lifesaving exit.
     

    But the fast track up and out of the physicality has become maladaptive for two main reasons; it truncates our ability to feel and therefore move through the situations that arise in our lives.  When we are bowled over by grief and our response is to eat a pizza, we halt our ability to move through grief as well as our confidence that it won't destroy us.  If you don't allow a feeling to begin, you also don't let it end.
     
    The second reason that living a short distance from the body is maladaptive is that since the body is the only place in which to experience hunger and fullness, any attempts at ending our compulsive eating are doomed to fail.  When you start eating without first being aware of whether or not yoru body is hungry, the only signal telling you to put down your fork is nauseating discomfort.
     
    I realize that coming home to your body after a life-time of being at war with it might not seem appealing, especially if it is uncomfortable to sit or walk within its confines.  But just because homecomings are rocky does not mean you should spend the rest of your life avoiding them.
     
    Reminding yourself that you have a body during any given day looks like this:  You are lurching along and suddenly you catch yourself walking without realizing you are walking.  Then you remember to be aware of your breath – your abdomen moving, your lungs filling with air.  You sense some kind of flow or density or warmth or tingling in your legs.  You notice that you have arms, that you have hands and that one of them is now lifting a pen, or a child.  You arrive in your body fro a moment and you are gone again, floating from place to place with no clear rememberance o this transition.  Then you suddenly land here again – first one breath then another – and it's as if everything is new.  You feel your child's breath on your face.  You hear the scratch of pen on paper.  You fall into the sound as if it is the first not of a symphony.  The next moment you are catapulted into seeing without seeing, hearing without hearing.
     
    You bring yourself back to the body about a thousand times a day.  Even if you live in an urban environment with wailing sirens and blaring car horns, you can still focus on physical sensations. The contact your legs are making with the chair, the sound of the computer keys hitting the board, the slight chill in the air.  In this way, it becomes possible to live as writer John Tarrant says, "in our true range, and not go around missing things, as if we knew countries only from their airports and hotels."
     
    Thich Nhat Hanh, the Vietnamese Buddhist teacher, says, "There is no way to happiness – happiness is the way."  Just so, there is no way back to the body; the body is the way.  You leave and then you return. Leave and return.  You forget and then you remember. One breath and then another.  One step and then another.  It's that simple.  And it doesn't matter how long you've been gone; what matters is that you've returned.  With each return, each sound, each felt sensation, there is relaxation, recognition, and gratitude. Gratitude begets itself, ripens into flowers, snow falls, mountains of more gratitude. Soon you begin wondering where you've been all this time.  How you wandered so far.  And you realize that torture isn't having these arms and legs; its being so convinced that God is our there, in another place, another realm that you miss the lavender slip of moon, your own awakened presence.
     
     

  • Book

    I am reading a book called, “Woman Food and God” by Geneen Roth, and in Chapter Two she opens with this.

     

    “On the first morning of my retreats, I tell my students that the greatest blessing in their lives is their relationship with food.  They look at me rather quizzically, but the sentiment sounds so lovely that they are willing to hear me out. Then I say that we are not going to fix their relationship with food; we are actually going to walk through the door of their eating problem and see what’s behind it.  Instead of using food to avoid discomfort, they are going to learn how to tolerate what they believe is intolerable.

     

    They stare. They scowl. They whisper to one another.

    Why would any sane person believe that tolerating the intolerable is a worthy endeavor?

    Mayhem is five minutes away.

    Then, because it seems like the thing to do, I tell them the struggling, suffering, hellish part of my story.  Over the last few decades I’ve discovered that stories of personal hell, sprinkled with intense and hostile moments, go a long way in diffusing bitterness.  I describe the years of gaining and losing a thousand pounds, loathing myself, being suicidal.  Then I talk about the switch to not diet and eating what I want to eat.


    I’ve told this story for many more years than I have lived it, but it only recently became clear to me that the radical part of the tale is not that I stopped dieting; it’s that I stopped trying to fix myself.  I stopped fighting with myself, stopped blaming myself, my mother, my latest boyfriend for my weight. And since diets were my most flagrant attempts at fixing myself, I stopped them as well.  I didn’t care anymore that I was fat that I could only fit into summer dresses in November; I had reached the threshold of struggling and figured I had two choices:  Stop dieting or kill myself.

     

    Most of my students can’t imagine a world in which they would stop dieting or trying to fix the size of their thighs.  It is easier to imagine people coming back from the dead or Brad Pitt asking them to get married than to imagine themselves dropping the war with their bodies.  They have whole relationships built on commiserating about the twenty pounds they have to lose and the jeans that are too tight and the latest greatest diets.  They fit in by hating themselves.  By trying hard and then harder to lose that last twenty, fifty, eighty pounds- and never being able to do it.  The never being able to do it is necessary if they want to fit in.  The constant war on food and body size is important if they want to be loved.  They are like Sisyphus pushing the boulder up the mountain and almost getting there but never actually arriving.

     

    The great thing about being Sisyphus is that you have your work cut out for you.  You always have something to do.  As long as you are striving and pushing and trying hard to do something that can never be done, you know who you are; someone with a weight problem who is working hard to be thin.  You don’t have to feel lost or helpless because you have a goal and that goal can never be reached.

     

    In an April 2007 UCLA Study of the effectiveness of dieting, researchers found that one of the best predictions of weight gain was having lost weight on a diet at some point during the years before the study started.  Among those who were followed for fewer than two years, 83 percent gained back more weight than they had lost. Another study found that people who went on diets were worse off than people who didn’t.

     

    Failing is built into the weight game.  There is no way to play and win.”  Geneen Roth.

     

     

  • You Be You

    “I don't know what is best for me, or you, or the world. I don't try to impose my will on you or anyone else.  I don't want to change you or improve you or convert you or help you or heal you. I just welcome things as they come and go. That's true love. The best way of leading people is to let them find their own way."

               Byron Katie

    An old friend surfaced and I felt myself not being seen or validated, and what instead was happening, is that I wasn’t validating her. 

    The stress inside of me was that I wanted her to be where she wasn’t, to speak and think in a way that was impossible for her to do so.

    I wanted her to have my relationship with God, my experiences of life, and my views and to feel what it is like to be in my shoes.  Insane?  How unkind of me to not understand that she simply can’t, for she is in her own life doing her own thing. 

    How awesome we each get our own life, our own business and our own pathway to God.

    There is an article “Seana Corn’s First Lesson in Yoga, (on Oprah.com click on Spirit) which again expresses that all people are on their own path, which is what I needed to read today, it cemented in me, that her and I are both right in our own way.

    I no longer feel the need for her approval or validation, I allow her to be on her own pathway, but without resentment towards her.

    So quickly I get lost in the community approval thing, where I seek another’s validation, like that will make my life better, easier or more than it already is.

    I truly honor her path, wherever IT leads her, and I am sooo grateful that I am not a ‘leader’ for her, for I have no clue what is best for her, like not even a little.

    It is amazing the way the resentment dies as soon as I accepted her as herself.

    You be you…

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  • God or Non-Reality.

    In an email I received, there was talk about faith in God and also a group who gather who “truly love the Lord and are very interested in learning and growing in their faith in God and only want to learn about the truth.”

     

    I found this interesting.

     

    How do you put a gauge on your ‘faith’ in God?  How do you grow that faith or learn more about the faith in God?  What truth are they seeking of God?

     

    What is being challenged, God or you?

     

    The words faith and truth seem to be such honorable things to have towards God.

     

    How does that work?  How can you tell if someone has a bigger faith than you, or know more truths than you do?  Is there a better religion to find this?

     

    Of course I had to look up the meaning of Faith;

    belief or trust: belief in, devotion to, or trust in somebody or something, especially without logical proof

    – religion or religious group: a system of religious belief, or the group of people who adhere to it

     

    – trust in God: belief in and devotion to God

     

    “Especially without logical proof” stands out to me.

     

    To have faith without logical proof is that without a direct experience?  It seems that religions are asking you to believe in something without ‘logical proof’.

     

    What is logical?

    -sensible and based on facts: based on facts, clear rational thought, and sensible reasoning

    – able to think rationally: able to think sensibly and come to a rational conclusion based on facts rather than emotion

    – of philosophical logic: relating to philosophical logic

    Based on facts, clear rational thought isn’t needed to have faith?  Is that right?  How can they want us to leave our clear and rational thoughts behind, to not think sensibly and not come to a rational conclusion based on facts rather than emotions.

     

    It does seem to me, and this is my experience, that rational thinking or facts do get left behind, and it brings you in to a pretend world.

     

    My childhood religion was based on ‘forgiveness’ of sins.

    Of having the ‘faith’ that they indeed would be washed away.

     

    It came to me shortly after discovering who my father was, that this religion had been ‘forgiving’ him all along.  It (religion) had the power to erase or delete reality. 

     

    To believe or have faith in words erasing an action just seems impossible to believe in. 

     

    You really have to use your mind and conjure up a clean slate, even if your feelings are not so easily fooled. 

     

    And the sentiment is that if you can’t “forgive” you are worse than the original sinner!  It is our duty to forgive, our duty to erase the actions of another.  Do we really have that power?

     

    To have faith in certain religions means to step further and further from the truth of life itself.  When they have rituals and rules and words that can upright the fallen is weird to me.

     

    If you look at my father alone, it is impossible to cure or heal or right his wrongs.  They are done. The bells have been rung!  He and he alone sit with his actions.  His mind is very confused and no amount of forgiveness can unravel that mind.  It will take years of work to correct that, and a willingness to do so.

     

    Again, Martha Beck’s meaning of forgiveness rings more true, “Forgiveness is accepting the past cannot be changed.”

     

    What are religions selling?

    What is the actual application you are signing up for?

    What is their connection with God that you have to go to them to get?

    Where is God kept?

     

    I know this may sound like sour grapes or the mental ramblings of a mental woman, but I am truly and indeed seeking to know what it is they are selling?

     

    What I know is that reality wins only but 100% of the time.

    That a confused mind does confusing things.

    That when you clear your mind you clear your actions.

     

    I am much more inclined to seek to broaden my awareness, to see and question more and more in reality and sit less and less in a pretend space of ‘faith’.

     

    What I know is that reality is truth and truth is reality and both are God.  I need no faith to know this.

     

    It seems to me when I wasn’t in reality I needed faith, but once reality hit me smack in the face, religion and faith flew out the window.  It was useless and pointless in the face of reality. 

     

    There was no amount of faith that could change what was.

    No amount of forgiveness within me that would un-ring the bell that had been rung in my childhood.

     

    It seems that religion takes the place of reality.

     

    Faith to me is like a new F word. 

    It separates you from reality and logic.

     

    We need new religions that are reality based, instead of ‘faith’ based.

     

    Ironically I found God in the midst of Truth and Reality, where he was all along. 

     

    He and I were on the same page.

    I saw what God saw.

     

    The more aware I became the more I saw God everywhere, in fact there is nowhere where he isn’t.

     

    To me there is only one choice, either God or Non-reality.

     

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  • Come Dance With Me!

    “Unceasing change turns the wheel of life, and so reality is shown in all its many forms.  Dwell peacefully as change itself liberates all suffering sentient beings and brings them great joy.”

              Buddhist sutra

     

    Dwell peacefully in change.  We are certainly not taught to embrace change, to actually expect change, instead it seems that we struggle to stop change, always.

     

    The seasons are switching outside, and the leaves are changing color, leaving the living world for the world of decay.  As winter is being born, fall is dying.

     

    “If we had the patience and a high-powered microscope, we could sit and stare at our hands and watch the river of change flowing through our own bodies right now.  We could watch our cells changing and dying and being replaced, over and over and over.  From year to year, every one of our cells is replaced.  Literally, who we were yesterday is not who we are today.  Our skin is new every month, our liver every six weeks. When we inhale, we breathe in elements from other organisms to create new cells, and when we exhale, we send parts ourselves out into the atmosphere – into the living, breathing universe.  “All of us,” writes Deepak Chopra, “are much more like a river than anything frozen in time and space.” (Broken Open)

     

    Imagine, we are not frozen in time, yet how often do we feel we must capture this moment, take prisoner this age, or hold tighter this stage, instead of holding the value of change.

     

    The value in change is that we have to enjoy what we have when we have it, to treasure each morsel as it fleetingly rushes by, yet open to the new rushing in.

    Never holding to tightly or failing to appreciate what is here right now, and knowing when to release.

     

    That is a talent that babies and perhaps dogs have.

     

    I am slowly but surely learning how to do this, how to be at peace with change, to fully enjoy the moment and then let it go away.

     

    To be in the flow of change, instead of trying to be the stopper of change, if that were even possible!

     

    I think the river of life rushes by you, as you are the stopper person, that life simply goes around while you are standing still, it refuses to comply with your stopping.

     

    We can sit down and hold on to fall in our minds, but winter will come in anyway, tossing snow and frigid temperatures in our faces never asking our permission.

     

    I read a poem that describes God in four words, “Come dance with Me!”

     

    Come dance with me as winter, come dance with me as fall, come dance with me as summer, as youth, as old age, in sickness and in health, we join God in all His wonderful disguises.

     

    Come dance with Me!

     

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    Not the God of Names,

    Nor the God of don’ts,

    Nor the God who ever does

    Anything weird,

    But the God who only knows four words

    And keeps repeating them, saying:

    “Come dance with Me.”

           Sufi poet Hafiz

     

     

  • Bucket

     

    Hands.  Simple hands. They speak a language of their own.

    What makes them tell their story, what makes them do what they do, what powers these hands, makes them move, or lay silently.

    Hands.  It seems to me they mean more than a name. 

    Hands lift you up when you are small and when tasks seem too big.

    Hands can slap you down and away, when all you want is love.

    Hands can teach you to survive, or keep you hopeless.

    Hands….watch those hands…..feel those hands….listen.

    They are speaking a message, what are they telling you.

    I held a sleeping hand.  Now that sounds weird, but I did.  It was warm, it was caring, it was pure love.  It lay part curled in total peace, gentle and silent.  It lay there just for me.  I held it and was filled with peace, with gratitude.  I held the hand and tears slipped down knowing.

    Knowing what?  What did I know?  It seemed I could read the message of this hand.  I could now read the true message of another.

    I could read or could I feel?  What was I feeling?

    Feeling? Hands can bring you feeling?  Hands deliver our feelings?

    Now that seems weird. 

    I always thought we had feelings, like it is a given, like it comes with our hair color and our eyes.  Isn’t it part of the package?  Don’t we all come with a nice assortment of feelings?  Where are they stored and how do they get there?   Are we responsible for our feelings?

    Hands without feelings, what would that be like, lifeless, useless, hopeless?

    Feelings where do they come from?  Who makes feelings?

    Who teaches us feelings?  Is there a class on feelings when we are young?  Who decides our bucket of feelings?  Do we get all kinds?

    Do babies come with their bucket full and little by little do they seep out?  Do they seep out or does one kind overflow the others.  Are little children responsible for what they carry in their bucket of feelings, or is it possible that is our job as parents?  Little hands with a big bucket full of feelings. 

    Inside my bucket was overflowing with feelings, murky, dark, swirling, sad, scary, frightening, too little, heavy, to much out of control, vulnerable children, keeping safe too many, no one is watching, all alone, no one to tell, no one to listen, I am responsible for too many, not my children, can’t stop the flow, twisting and pulling, falling, I can’t keep holding this bucket, it is far to big for me….or is the bucket too small.

    One day the bucket crashed to the ground and all my feelings fell out.

    All. They lay on the ground, messy.  And I lay on the ground. Empty.

    Sad. No love was in my bucket.  Loveless, hopeless, lost. I had carried that bucket for nothing. I had dragged it around for naught.

    Me. A Bucket. Both Empty.

    Empty, I reached for a hand. 

    In it I felt something.

    I held that hand. 

    That hand carried me, accepted me, loved me, cared for me and waited.

    With patience, It knew I would find my own way.  It knew I had it in me, long before I knew. 

    I held the hand of God.

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