Thursday, August 8, 2013

A Shrieking Gibbering Madhouse On Wheels

11"x14" mixed media on panel Your Heart From Space

On Sunday I had the great pleasure of doing a one day retreat with Buddhist teacher Howie Cohn from San Francisco (which he jokingly called Bagdhdad North, as he described doing walking meditation on Market St.).  We spent the day exploring "awareness". We sat. We walked.  And we noticed how we went about this. We noticed the stories we tell ourselves about what we do. "I'm bored. I'm tired. I can't do this.  My neck hurts.  Am I doing this right? Yada yada yada. We all have our own little 100 act plays that we never tire of running.

Sometimes if you look hard enough you get the feeling that you're entirely made up of stories, with some rather convincing footnotes. Mostly we don't notice our stories because they are so insidious but if we open to them we can notice how they colour our day and our lives.  Is that grey or hints of blue I see on your horizon?  Our stories can energize and encourage us or suck the life out of us before we even get out of bed.  They can make us sick, they can trap us in inertia. So it's interesting to just become aware of that hidden ticker tape that runs through our heads.

After lunch I was tired and so my concentration waned. Instead of just noticing what it was like (ah, this is what it's like to be tired, that would be awareness) I threw down a little story. "I didn't sleep very well last night. I'm so tired. I'm not getting anything out of this now. It's hot in here. My meditation was so clear and bright this morning. This afternoon is a waste." And when I went out to walk I went for a rehash  until I realized, "you know you have a choice.  You can carry on down the rabbit hole, Alice or you could stop right here and rouse some energy,"which I did.  I also realized this was not a foreign  movie in my world.  I often travel with my own personal rabbit hole, regardless of the situation.  In practicing awareness, not only do we get to breath and walk and notice how blue the sky is, but we get to see our habitual cloud patterns and land forms. Pema Chodron calls them propensities. And Howie reminded us, that this is the first step in the direction of freedom; seeing what we get up to.  Mostly we just get up to it, period, the end.  And mostly we don't like to look, because, well, because it's not all that pretty.

 Howie tossed out this quote to remind us about what goes on in the story mill of our minds: “Somewhere in this process you will come face-to-face with the sudden and shocking realization that you are completely crazy. Your mind is a shrieking gibbering madhouse on wheels barreling pell-mell down the hill utterly out of control and hopeless. No problem. You are not crazier than you were yesterday. It has always been this way and you just never noticed. You are also no crazier than everybody else around you. The only real difference is that you have confronted the situation they have not."― Bhante Henepola Gunaratana


8"x10" oil & cold wax "Quarry Beach"

He reminded us that  how we see things is not necessarily how they are.  So little of what we experience is sensed directly.  Our perception is filtered through the tea strainer of memory and ideas. "Your mother is not the same as your ideas about your mother."  Does that seem obvious?  Maybe, but we don't often act as if this is true. It reminds me of how I bumble about in my communications with others, how I take my point of view for granted and how this can make me impatient and insensitive.

And at the end of the day when we all agreed on the value of awareness like it was some giant and tasty apple pie, someone asked "why is it so hard to practice then?" Howie offered suggestions that might be helpful including the importance of a like minded community of practitioners which he emphasized with this little tidbit:  "When you see geese flying along in “V” formation, you might consider what science has discovered as to why they fly that way. As each bird flaps its wings, it creates an uplift for the bird immediately following. By flying in “V” formation, the whole flock adds at least 71 percent greater flying range than if each bird flew on its own. 

When a goose falls out of formation, it suddenly feels the drag and resistance of trying to go it alone — and quickly gets back into formation to take advantage of the lifting power of the bird in front. .

When the head goose gets tired, it rotates back in the wing and another goose flies point. Geese honk from behind to encourage those up front to keep up their speed.

When a goose gets sick or is wounded by gunshot, and falls out of formation, two other geese fall out with that goose and follow it down to lend help and protection. They stay with the fallen goose until it is able to fly or until it dies, and only then do they launch out on their own, or with another formation to catch up with their group.



Can you hear me honking at you?  Whatever you answered, you're right.

23 comments:

  1. ah carole, that quote is priceless.... thank you.

    i hear ya....

    : )

    xoxo

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  2. I know! One of the draws of Howie Cohn is he never fails to pull some great quotes out of his Dharma hat!

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  3. Honk honk . Thanks. just what i needed today for the up lift.

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    1. ah, don't we all need a little uplift in our day? thanks for the honk!

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  4. Thank you for this post - that quote is great! It makes me wonder if you have read or heard of Rebecca Solnit's new book titled "The Faraway Nearby". I suspect you might like it! And if you don't already know of her, I suspect you would really enjoy all her writing.

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    1. I don't know Rebecca Solnit, but I love her already for that title. Will have to check it out. Thanks for that. I think we can all get a chuckle and a nod from that quote. Howie likes to talk about our "mental illness" (in the kindest sort of way)

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  5. Carole, the quote is epic - I so relate to it!!! thank you for another fabulous post!! xo
    honk!!

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  6. you are welcome! it's a quote that's way too good not to share. honking back.

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  7. Replies
    1. thanks Connie, with a little help from Howie and the gaggle of geese!

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  8. wonderful post and love the quote too and title to your post. honk

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  9. thanks Suki, Bhante G sure had it right and described in a way we can all identify with and laugh.

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  10. Lol.... I love the quote. Thinking back to a 4 day Buddhist retreat I attended I'm laughing at all the ways I tried to escape the 2 hour meditations. My teacher pointed out to others in the class that I was playing hooky again. When it got back to me I was mortified.... because I was playing hooky and I certainly hadn't confronted the situation. This quote would have been a great help at the time. Beautiful story about the geese too.

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    1. well I feel for that mind that was playing hooky! mortification is never a good teacher. what I have been hearing people like Pema Chodron and Howie say lately is how we need to hold ourselves in complete kindness. it is the natural inclination of the mind to wander as Bhante G reminds us in such a great way.

      I love when things are taught through stories, it is my favourite way, the old showing rather than telling!

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  11. I also like your words: you can carry on down the rabbit hole, alice.

    you are so good a writer!

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  12. thanks Suki, that means a lot to me from one juggles and polishes words with such lightness and deftness!

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  13. I see the geese overhead. I look down at my rabbit hole. Some days I stand motionless realizing there is a choice. Will I continue to rearrange the adjectives of my story or will I learn to fly? While I ponder I stretch my arms out and do little jumps perhaps like a little bird ready to leave the nest.

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  14. ah, well said, Jan. i love your description of the process. you have much company in those little jumps. waving over from my little nest.

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  15. Thank you for this quote...I especially like the word pell-mell. I have not read or heard that word in so many years, I was struck by reading it! I find myself aware of careening off with my stories but at the same time I am aware of bringing myself back to these warm sunny places where I can be okay. The turn around time is shorter... It feels as if I have installed a clear thinking app.

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  16. I thought the same thing about the word pell-mell! My mother and aunt used to use it. It is one of those words that have fallen out of fashion, that smacks of dear old aunts, needle point and china tea cups!

    I like your app!

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  17. Just returned from a Soto Zen retreat and found you via a convulted route. So pleased to discover another artist/spiritual blogger!

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  18. hey, nice to meet you! happy post retreat days. there is always so much to digest!

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