I've exaggerated this over
the years just to learn how to work with it, so that when anger appears,
"Great, this is another opportunity to learn how to work with this and
make friends with it, rather than try and batter it away into repression".
Then there's no freedom, because we're always unable to work with it. If you're
very clear, especially if you have a lot of energy, when anger arises and
there's no resistance, it's very, very pure. The ability to just drop into the
body and feel it as body sensations - there might be heat, or pressure or tightness,
and you just get out of the way, it's like letting a volcano erupt if it's very
extreme.
A few years ago, I did a
retreat on the Big
Island and during the
retreat the volcano erupted and I'd never seen it before, it was like this
liquid fire just pouring up into the air. It was the first time in my life that
I actually had the sense of this energy and how to work with it, it's just like
the energy the earth has, and if you step out of the way, you can just let this
energy come and go. It's built up pressure usually, it's heat and it's fire,
and it's pressure and it's wonderful if you can get out of the way. It's
usually not that pleasant, but it can be joyous just to feel it as an energy
and let it come and go. There's nothing more joyous because you're no longer a
victim of it anymore, you no longer have to run from it anymore. This is a
quote from Ryokan.
The rain has stopped, the
clouds have drifted away,
and the weather is clear
again.
If your heart is pure,
then all things in your world
are pure.
Abandon this world, abandon
yourself,
then the moon and the flowers
will guide you along the way.
If your heart is pure, anger
isn't a problem. The word anger is just like the word Michelle, or rug or
glass, they're just words, concepts, and the experience of it is very different
from the word. What is your experience of anger? These things don't have to be
a problem if you're willing to explore them, they are just energies. This first
level of working with an emotion in this way is when we're very clear. We're
not identified with it - when the anger when it comes, we just feel it very
clearly as sensation, it goes.
The next level is when
there's more thought involved with it. Often emotions can be seen like the
recipe of a cake, so if you take flour and salt and eggs, sugar, cocoa, butter,
and you mix it up and cook it, you get a cake. If you take a past experience
and the memory of that and some thoughts about it and some body sensations,
usually you'll get sadness or anger, and in this particular case, I'm talking
about anger. Sometimes when an emotion is occurring there's a lot of thoughts
that go with it. You might not be identified with it still, this is a level
that is moving from feeling it as pure sensation to having a lot of thought
with it, and if you see it as a recipe, if you see that it's just thoughts and
feelings and sensations, coming and going, again you don't have to be
identified with it, you can just notice the thoughts and the physical
sensations. You might go back to the breath and let it come and go. Again, this
takes a lot of clarity, this is a strong mind at work that notices it coming
and going. It might not disappear very quickly, like in the first case I'm
talking about, usually they come and go and don't stick around very long, in
the second case, it's going to be a little more sticky, like bubble gum, but
still you're not so identified with it, and it comes and goes.
The third level is when we
get more identified with it, which is often the case. You know those signs that
say, Beware of the dog. I always think, beware of content. With emotions, it's
really like you need the sign, beware of content, because it's the story and
believing the thoughts about it that makes us suffer so much. I'll give you an
example of working with anger. One time I was sitting a retreat and this
treacher from Burma
came to this three month retreat I was doing. I'd done retreats for nine years
before this, and we'd never used notebooks, but this teacher introduced this
idea of writing down some of the things that had happened at the end of the
sitting, so everybody in the hall had notebooks and pens. The idea was that you
didn't write until the end. But this woman sitting next to me couldn't restrain
herself and she'd write every few minutes and she used a pencil and so I'd be
sitting there and just the anticipation of her picking up the pencil would
drive me nuts, and she'd pick it up and it would be that scratchy pencil sound
and I'd get completely swept away with anger. And I'd feel really right.
The hardest thing about anger
is when you feel right. You're totally identified with it when you feel right.
And there's always a good reason why we feel right. "She shouldn't be
using the pencil, she shouldn't be writing during the hour", and I'd get
angrier and angrier because I'd get righter and righter and she kept getting
more wrong and more wrong. And I would just be a mess, just furious by the end
of this sitting and then I'd have to go out to walk and come back and face it
again and again and again, angrier and angrier, and finally, the white flag.
I'm sure you know what I mean by the white flag. "Okay, there's nothing I
can do but learn how to work with this, besides leaving the course?"
There's many things I want to
say about this particular part of working with emotion. When you notice that
you get very involved with the content, and for me in this case it was in being
right, but it might be sadness, like "my mother died when I was
eleven" - whenever there's a content going on and we're very identified in
it, that's drowning in it, that's indulging. Usually I've discovered that that
means we're avoiding the feeling.
When a thought pattern
repeats itself a lot, and we all have our favourite top channels, channel four,
seven, eight, over the time that you sit you'll notice there's certain tapes
that repeat themselves endlessly. If you look closely, you might find there's a
feeling there that you're avoiding. And the moment you feel it, it's like
pulling this thorn out of the heart, it's usually very simple.
For most people I've noticed,
it doesn't mean that that tape can occur and that they can just drop down and
feel it and it's over, usually it takes some time and patience of not wanting
it to appear, of not wanting it to get over, it's very tricky because these are
feelings we haven't wanted to feel, and it takes a lot of compassion for
yourself, so you might get a little taste of how to work with anger in one
moment and that's great. And maybe a little while later you might get a taste
of how to work with jealousy and that's great, and then over time, that white
flag has tremendous power because we're at peace, we're not at war with what's
happening. We're not afraid, we don't have to control, we don't have to push
them away.
The thing that's wonderful
about our minds and life, is that at any point we can wake up and see it
clearly. We might be three years into avoiding something, or five lifetimes,
whatever you believe in, and then in one moment you see it and you've learned
it.
There's one other thing I
want to mention about working with emotion and that is if you've been
practising a long time, and there are very constant repeating thought patterns,
sometimes it means looking at the content, and not necessarily during a
retreat. Because going on a retreat is trying to do a very different thing, but
if you notice that something repeats over years, it usually means that there's
some change is needed in your life and that you actually need to look at the
content. And this is very important because anything can be used negatively or
positively. Meditation can be used to avoid, you don't have to use it that way,
but often there can be a tendency to do that.
Besides patience, which is a
very interesting thing, defined as "the ability to endure the desirable
and undesirable" and it's said to manifest as tolerance, and it's a
wonderful quality because I think it helps us to develop trust, there's our
faith. I think our faith and patience are very connected, and it might be you
learn this once in a sitting and you get overwhelmed a lot, or you repress it
or indulge it, and then in another sitting you get a taste of how to work with
it again. And in the case of working with my guilt, it really did take me ten
years to learn how to work with it. Once you learn how to work with it one
area, you can apply it to anything. It's the same story, it's that little white
flag.
What's amazing about human
beings is that we have these imaginary wars going on all the time. You think of
this territory that we call our human body, and then there's a head that we all
have, with its imaginary war. If there's an imaginary war going, it's really
good to do whatever you can do to get out of it - it might mean, if you're
sitting, do whatever you can do to stop it, it's just not worth it. You can't
figure these things out. Content drives us nuts, you can spend lifetimes trying
to figure these things out. It merely means dropping down to the feeling and
feeling it and letting it go, and that's the place that's most important - learning
to let it go. You can't let something go unless you feel it, or see it, but the
whole emphasis in Buddhism is in letting go. That's the freedom.
There's one other thing I
wanted to talk about. Last year there was a friend of mine who'd been practising
about as long as me, and he came to me with a confession. He said for the first
fifteen years of his meditation practice he was using the practice to feel
adequate as a person, to get a sense of appreciation and approval from the
teacher and to find a feeling of family that he'd never had in his own family.
And I think that there's a big step missing in our culture, and it's spreading
throughout the world, this missing step. In a culture that's spiritually
healthy, when adolescence hits, there's usually some guide to help the person
move from a child's psyche, which is unprotected and soft and needs to be
guided. There's a step that women and men take in this process in their culture
to feel good about themselves as men and women, a process where the child
learns how to face the world and develop a mature psyche.
In the old days, any properly
operating mythology would help a child move into the adult world and take a
place there and feel like they belong there and have a lot of faith in that. I
think most of the people I run into in terms of teaching have missed that step
and therefore in a healthy culture what would happen is that once the
adolescent finds that feeling of adequacy then the next step is searching for
something deeper, looking deeper than life and death, that spiritual quest.
Things are a little mixed up now because many of us never had that initial
step.
I think we often expect
meditation to yield more than is meant to. I don't think that meditation will
solve all our problems, I don't think it is necessarily going to make one feel
adequate as a man or a woman or provide a home for people and when we
understand this I think that one can really go deeply into meditation and I
think that's what prevents people from going deeply in this time, in this
culture, because people are wanting it to yield more than it's meant to, so
they go into retreat expecting so much and it's working on a very deep level.
Meditation is meant to change our perspective on life completely, it's very
deep, it's not working on those other levels, which are very important because
it's how we function in the world of form and we bring back to that world of
form all that we learn on retreat. The happiness in this meditation realm is
very subtle.
I went to see the Miles Davis
concert on Sunday night. He's really a master in that world of jazz, and what I
noticed that was deeply moving to me was his use of silence. He had a muffler
on his trumpet, it wasn't that he had a really loud trumpet, but he'd walk to
the side of the stage and play the subtlest, lightest sounds that were so
moving, but you had to be so still. When he was playing his most beautiful
subtlest piece, people were leaving, they were just pouring out of the hall
because they were afraid of a traffic jam I think, and he was playing the most
amazing piece of music that you would hear in a lifetime. I don't think they
were appreciating his subtlety. He would just play a few notes and there would
be silence for fifteen seconds, it's like having your heart tickled, very
light.
Meditation is bringing forth
our inner potential or inner home, the happiness is like that, it's not based
on experience, it's based on being free of experience so that no matter what's
happening we don't get overwhelmed by it. The freedom is not getting
overwhelmed by what happens but not having to go into a coccoon and die while
you're still alive.
I'd like to end with a quote
from Alexander Solzhenitsyen: "If only it were all so simple, if only
there were evil people somewhere insidiously committing evil deeds and it were
necessary only to separate them from the rest of us and destroy them. But the
line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every human being, and
who is willing to destroy a piece of his own heart?"
oOo
Notes:
1. Author: Michelle is a
Vipassana teacher. This is an edited talk she gave at Koko An.
2. Source: BuddhaNet - Buddha
Dhamma Meditation Assoc Inc.
PO
Box K1020 Haymarket, NSW 2000. Australia.