Friday, February 27, 2009

How the Chinese doctor sees it


"It" being the sort of chaos I'm experiencing - especially the frustrated anger that had me wide awake at 3 a.m.

It is absolutely not hard to find things to be frustrated about in my life. Kidney function significantly worse, despite a lot of efforts and expense - and suddenly, the imminent threat of dialysis. Still limping with pain in the left foot, yet still suffering moodswings caused by the corticosteroid shots that were supposed to fix that flareup. (Still getting used to having significant arthritis.) Still anemic, and without what I need to monitor my own hemaglobin and give myself EPO shots. Can't see kidney doctor for over two more weeks. Forgot to do my PT exercises last night until I was in bed.

And all this chronic illness, and Tom's, is mostly invisible, not dramatic; when I go to church, someone usually tells me "You're looking good." I don't argue with them. So the recycle piles up in the garage while I rest the foot, and my car hasn't been cleaned in a year. I used to be able to do these trivial things myself, but with a low red blood count and a uremic burden, running the Roomba is too much effort. I know people who are dying, and courageously, so I usually try not to whine.

It was the stubborn pain in the foot, coupled with my decision to refuse more corticosteroids, that got me to make an emergency appointment with my acupuncturist yesterday. Dr. Wang fit me in at 8:30 this morning, and I had it all aced, dressed, checkbook in purse, out to car at 8:00 a.m. - and my car wouldn't even turn over. The battery is only a month old, but the lights had been left on. My little Civic chimes to remind me to turn them off but, I told myself, it isn't idiot-proof. By then, I was focused on my goal, and didn't even bother to get mad, just got in the van and backed it out, chewing up the lawn the way I do. The driveway is narrow, the van is large, I do my best.

I had started my morning writing in my journal about how I don't like to be told to look on the bright side. I can stand it if people want to falsify their own feelings, but I hate it when they try to get me to do it. So I didn't try to generate any positive thoughts about running my car battery down, just focused on the task and drove to the doctor's office, not getting in a wreck.

He listened to my recital, asked a few questions, gently palpated the foot. Then he said, "Which problem is bothering you most?"

I surprised myself by saying, "The anger." It had trumped the foot as I lay awake in the night contemplating the meanness of the dialysis nurse in charge of my care last time. I should have called her up before the licensing board, but I didn't have the energy.

He nodded. "Then we will concentrate on that."

As he applied the alcohol and then the needles, I said, "But it's all one, isn't it?" The idea of a holistic self is foundational in Chinese medicine, which makes it so different from the Western medicine with its specialists in pieces and parts and chemicals that haven't been adequately studied.

"Yes," he said, speaking clearly, because I had, of course, forgotten my hearing aids. He went on. "Spring is the time of wood, and wood opens the Liver, where anger is stored. So it is very easy to get angry right now."

This clicked in place for me as an interested student of medical systems. I knew that Wood is the creative energy. And I had already written two poems that morning, literally woke up with one going in my head.

"Too much wood," I said. "Is the antidote metal?" Yes.

Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) is based on an elaborate theory of energies, and includes a theory of constitutions: we are made of combinations of five elements. Years ago I determined that I was a person who benefitted from the element metal when I felt scattered - which translates in daily life as structure, schedule, calm activities.

So here I am, much improved by the treatment and determined to make lists, meditate, and read unexciting things. It is working. I do not feel in nearly so much danger of sending out furious e-mails and initiating lawsuits. Though I like to think I might when I get organized.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

A contortion of views, a writhing of views


Tooling around the internet this morning, I fell into reading about the Buddhist concept of being fettered. I love this string of metaphors, from a translation by Thanissara Bhikku of the Sabbasava Sutta, understood to be the words of the Buddha:
a thicket of views,
a wilderness of views,
a contortion of views,
a writhing of views,
a fetter of views.
Bound by a fetter of views, the uninstructed ... is not freed, I tell you, from suffering & stress.
From here, I was led to a speech by Dr. Andrew Weil on addiction. I copied this passage into my journal:
What about addiction to thought? That's something hardly ever discussed in the Western world. It is discussed in Buddhism. In Buddhist psychology, addiction to thought is seen as a serious impediment to enlightenment. That's one of the reasons you meditate - to try and get some freedom from thought. So you could look at universities as monuments to thought addiction where you are rewarded for the beauty or complexity or novelty of the thoughts that you produce.
I am always pleased when some famous person says what I would have thought if I thought it through.

I am not alone in noticing that addiction to one's views is flourishing in these days of rampant internet publishing. A friend of mine writes a financial blog that sometimes gets hundreds of comments from people who don't really seem to have read what he wrote, but are grasping an opportunity to tell the rest of the world how stupid it is. I'm sure it's the capping stupidity that nobody really reads anyone else's comments.

As a grandmother, I noticed that certain young children dear to me (naming no names) just loved to perform, to be the center of attention. I know not all kids are like that, but it is accepted as inevitable in my family, which has plenty of Irish in it. Anyway, I've been pleased to see that now that these children are older, the desire to occupy center stage has toned down a little.

Of course, we are all stars these days. We can and do post videos of ourselves, and the photo albums we used to only inflict on our daughters. In fact, you feel more and more inadequate if you don't post albums. Even our phone machines are little podcasts,if you think about it, and then there's the Facebook page. We shall draw a veil over the subject of blogs.

But I digress, an activity to which I seem to be addicted - maybe fettered.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

1001 Ways to Get in Touch with Reality

[photo: monkey fists]

A Poet doesn't have to walk very far to trip over a metaphor. This morning, as I was thinking about the hard, tangled mass of delusions that has a friend in a lot of trouble, the knot called "monkey fist" came to mind. Tom made one of these for use as a doorstop after reading The Shipping News. (In the photo, the monkey fists are the knots on both sides. The dime in the picture shows scale.)

Actually, Buddhist teachers consider feeling hopelessly knotted up to be a "promising"condition. It means your trip isn't working. As long as we can tolerate what we're doing, we won't change. Even though a constructed life isn't really satisfying, it's what we know. It takes a major quake to shake us up. You can go through what Christianity calls despair and Zen calls Great Doubt with or without a religious tradition; and you can go through it and stubbornly continue acting the way you do. But sometimes when everything stops working, we are able to change.

Where was I going with this? I got to thinking this morning that I am significantly more at ease with my "problems" than I would have been thirty or forty years ago, and today's problems are much bigger than the ones that preoccupied me back then. I know that taking my spiritual path seriously had a great deal to do with it. But healing doesn't just start when we adopt a practice. It takes earlier growth to even get to that point. It takes persistence, and the suspicion that life can be better to get us to try new things. It seems to me I tried 1001 things, actually, and benefited a little from all of them. One was the list of Things that Make me Feel Better.

I don't know what inspired me to make that list. It was at a time in my life before cancer or kidney failure, before Tom's post-polio syndrome appeared, a time of economic stability in which I was pursuing my career dreams; yet my life was joyless. I called it "depression." I recall that my list of comforts included vanilla and a hot bath. Obviously, such a list was not a route to awareness, though a little self-cherishing certainly couldn't hurt me.

It interests me now that I didn't make a list of things that made me feel worse. It was like eating chocolates in hopes of forgetting that a rhinoceros is standing on your foot. Looking back, I know why I didn't want to touch on some deep and complicated received ideas, like "My family loves me and if I think they make me feel wretched there's something wrong with me and I'll be happy when I get with the program." Penetrating to these intimate monkey fists of delusion was still down the road. When I did, I would be forced to change. So maybe my little exercise in cause and effect - What makes me feel better? - was an essential paving stone.

What do you need in your life? It's not found on a "bucket list" of experiences you want to acquire. I'd like to go to Paris, myself, but I'm sure It is not only to be found at the Eiffel Tower. It is also in the snowdrops in the back yard.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

My personal demon

I tend to think of demons as looking like those little troll dolls that are having a really awful hair day. But this morning I saw this lying in one of Tom's boxes of stuff-that-might-come-in-handy-someday, and I knew right away that it would make an excellent demon.

I bought the little cat thing years ago as a Christmas ornament, delighted with features that my cell-cam can't capture: four tiny teeth, a red tongue, a nose, white-tipped paws. Those round black circles glued on it are supposed to represent a leopard's spots.

I have been annoyed by my demons lately, so I told Tom, "I should carry this thing with me everywhere I go for a week, the way they used to make high-school kids carry a sack of flour as if it were a baby." In the case of the programs for high-school kids, the point was to give them an idea of how burdensome a baby is, though the flour sacks didn't cry pointlessly, endlessly all night or throw up on you. I don't know whether the programs worked, but I thought this demon might remind me to have a sense of humor. Demons are really not so large.

This one is recumbent on the first collage I ever made, and the most enthusiastic. As you can see, the workshop gave me access to glitter glue, rubber stamps and gold (!) ink, and all manner of scrapbook findings. There is much more to the collage, which struck the other workshop participants dumb during show-and-tell. Compared to theirs, mine lacked theme, sentiment, and organization. It evidenced just how busy and eclectic my mind can be. As I tried to explain it, I felt a little bit like a kindergardener who doesn't know how you're supposed to draw houses. I don't know how I know how kindergardeners feel, because I didn't get to go to kindergarden and learn everything you're supposed to learn there. So I put the collage away. I only happened to pull it out today because I was looking for black paper to pose my little demon on.

I don't know. Maybe comparison is the demon. You can't compare your collage to anyone else's. Mine, for instance, has a feature I had forgotten about: the center is a sort of door the curious can lift to reveal a beautiful bouquet. It seems to me that this kind of raw creativity might qualify me as an outsider artist, at least.
The real tragedy is not missing out on the life you wanted. The real tragedy is missing out on the life you've got.

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Winning every game


[photo: Fantastic Worlds]
My poor grandson Otto. We are all trying to help him grow up and not kill himself in some idiot teenage thing. He is nine now, and he takes it pretty well. Yes, he knew what's happened to Michael Phelps. One foolish moment, suspended three months. When you're famous, you can't relax and be stupid like other people.

I haven't talked to him about A-Rod, the new worst case. If I did, I'd ask him, "There was A- Rod, on top of his game, more money than he could ever need, why did he take those drugs?"

Otto would answer with his usual simplicity, "He wanted to win." That would be totally self-explanatory to him. You want to win. Recently I talked to him after his team lost a game. I said, "It wouldn't be any fun if you won all the time." I could feel the scepticism over the phone line.

I'd like him to talk to my friend James. He belongs to a board-game club that draws over a hundred people to its meetings (yes, in this day and age). He told me that when he plays with three other people, he shouldn't win more than one-quarter of the time. "If I did, it would mean I'm not being challenged. It would be boring."

I mentally contrasted this refreshing point of view with another friend's conviction that there's a lot wrong with this world, that being, sickness, old age, and death; loss, suffering. He doesn't want to be in pain, or get old, or die; or have anyone else die.

"You want there not to be aging?" I asked, trying to understand.

"Yes!"

"You want to live forever?"

"Yes, why not? I could have designed a better world."

Well, if he does, I don't want to go there. I mean, all those people trying to find some new hobby to get them through eternity. Knitting would get old. Exploring the Amazon river would get old if nothing could kill you. Imagine the family reunions, everyone still alive, including Uncle Jack. And if your ancestors are hanging around, people have to stop having babies, unless you're going to routinely ship the overflow into space. You'd have to have a lot of viable planets, but I guess a designer god could arrange that.

If I were working this into a science fiction plot, I'd open with the moment when some convenient plague bestows eternal youth on this planet, and watch the economy rearrange itself. What we are going through now is nothing in comparison. Medical care as we know it would collapse. Serial marriage would become standard; in a couple hundred years you've pretty much exhausted another person's intimate possibilities. Yet, getting married to someone new, that would get old too after a couple dozen times, for most of us at least. In fact, boredom would be the overriding problem, just as it was when we had all that affluenza. And when would you get to stop working on yourself, to decide you'll never be perfect?

This plot is refining itself as I write. I think I'd make it a short story. Two scientists talking late at night - they have just discovered this magical virus or unlocked the DNA, whatever. There it is, it's all possible. They're thinking about what it will mean. Are they going to unleash it on the world?

I don't know. But I know what to get my friend for Christmas (see photo).

Saturday, February 21, 2009

Creature comforts


I am grateful to an (even) older friend who laughed off the idea of camping with "I like my creature comforts." It gave me permission to contemplate how very much I like them too, and anyone will tell you, I am not a good camper.

A little lazy googling tells me this term has been around since about 1650, when even the wealthy didn't even have the most comforting comforts, central heating and flush toilets. Yet even then, anyone could appreciate how a good bed or a nice hot bath eased and comforted the body.

I must say, I have never been attracted to pain the way some people seem to be. I do have to admit to a sense of triumph in surviving long days of sitting crosslegged on the floor at Zen retreats, back when I could do that. (Even then I observed that the teacher wasn't sitting there with us all day long.) And I gained from the experience, as you are meant to, becoming familiar with pain, losing my fear of it, able to watch it rise and subside and stop calling it "pain."

But I started out to write about my new cushion. Not a zafu this time (the round cushion you sit on in proper Zen). No, it is a rectangular foam-and-gel orthotic cushion, commonly used these days in wheelchairs to prevent pressure sores. It is part of my response to the arthritis in my left hip, which seemed to be made worse by sitting in my favorite chair. It is a good chair, but old, and the seat has been compressed with age.

The cushion came UPS two days ago, so I have spent two evenings using it. This morning as I got up I noted that I did not have pain in the hip. So I carried the cushion over to the straight-backed chair I use now for meditation and tried it there. Well. I soon realized I was enjoying my meditation.

That's something I've been thinking about for a while, since I came across Suzuki's statement, "If you're not enjoying your meditation, you're doing something wrong." Well then, I was doing something wrong all those years. It was not hard to guess what it was. I was enduring something I thought was good for me. Which it was. I secretly believed it was supposed to be uncomfortable, the way church pews are, to get your attention.

But things are usually simpler than you think. It now seems obvious that inducing a flareup of arthritis is not really a good thing.

Well, it's one more example, not that I need any, of how we cling to our habits. You find that out when you decide to quit smoking. It's less obvious when it comes to the little things, the unimportant everyday things you do on your way to Somewhere Else, that lotus land that is actually right here. (Or, as the photo shows, in Milwaukee.)

Friday, February 20, 2009

Tigers above, tigers below

[photo Alfred Eistenstadt, from the Life archives]
Ah yes. If you want to be horrified, check out the website Sardonicus' sent in his comment on yesterday's post (Slipping on Bad Karma) - a story about contaminated ice in soft drinks. It turns out your Diet Coke could be dirtier than that cellphone that got dropped in a toilet.

Well, what couldn't kill you? I am that idiot who once accidentally ran a red light and slammed my pretty little Acura into a huge GMC Jimmy, brand new, operated by a woman on her way to the chiropractor. The accident hurt my back, but the tantrum she threw when I apologized, that was worse. The call from the insurance adjuster the next morning, that was even worse.

Danger lurks everywhere. It's not that we shouldn't be aware of that. We should, actually, and walk carefully on black ice. But what do you do with that reality? I'm recalling a popular Buddhist story about a man, perhaps in ancient China, who finds himself pursued by not one but several tigers, though tigers are not usually team players. He runs like the wind only to find himself at the edge of a cliff.

Looking down, he sees more tigers on the ground below, waiting for him. Tigers above, tigers below. But he spies a vine, just like a movie hero, grabs hold of it, and flings himself over the edge. There he dangles, out of the reach of the snarling tigers above. Alive for the moment.

He breathes a sign of relief. But then he feels a faint vibration in the vine. He looks up. There, out of his reach, are two little mice. Some versions say one is black, one is white, an idea you can play with. The important thing is, they are nibbling at the vine. And the way they are doing it, it won't be long before the vine breaks and he will be flung to the tigers lying patiently below. (At this point you might be reminded of the koan about a man hanging in a tree.)

What to do? He looks around, and there right in front of him in a magical little pocket of earth, is a wild strawberry plant. He plucks the strawberry and eats it. Delicious! Perfect.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Slipping on bad karma

"It could happen to anyone: you dropped your cellphone in the toilet." So begins a little discussion by Paul Boutin in today's NY Times on how to dry out your phone.

Interesting as that is, I found myself sidetracked on the various ramifications. It began with, "No, it couldn't happen to me. I never take my cellphone into the bathroom." But then I realized that it really isn't Wun who drops the phone in the toilet; it is the dog or the three-year-old or the drunk, and it is not necessarily by conscious choice that we have these beings in our house. Anyway, I probably could drop the phone in a puddle or the kitchen sink. So I had to admit, much as I don't like to, something like this could happen to me.

But suppose I actually dropped the phone in the toilet. The instructions are, take out the battery, wipe the phone off, and shove it into a jar of uncooked rice, which will act like silica gel to absorb the remaining moisture. This is all well and good - but let's not forget that the phone was in the toilet. Am I now really going to hold that same phone to my head, an inch from my nose and mouth? I don't think so.

So here I am, back at the Verizon store getting an upgrade, spending money I wanted to use for fun things like the electric bill. What am I going to do with the old phone, the one swarming with dangerous things like the things in your peanut butter cookie? It doesn't seem very nice to give it away without a warning - kind of like fooling someone into adopting the horrible cat that shreds couches.

Maybe I should have swabbed the phone with Listerine or vodka, the way the same article tells me to clean DVD's, but I wouldn't have really believed that was adequate. If it were, surgeons wouldn't spend five minutes washing up and then put on gloves and open the door with their elbow.

No, this phone is permanently contaminated, in my book. I am going to have to render it useless. The best way I can think of is to put it on a post and shoot it. That could be fun. I don't own a gun, but I know someone who does. We could videotape the phone exploding. Should take out the battery first, since it probably contains some substance you don't want to unleash on the world. I know there are places to donate useless batteries. . . .

Is there a point here? I suppose I can come up with one. Okay. It's easier to avoid trouble than it is to clean up afterward. Though I will admit it is more exciting to tell people how you dropped your cellphone in the toilet (Don't ask, you say) and then decided to shoot it and weren't used to handling a gun and dropped it and it shot you in the foot. Ha ha. Or you could just hobble around in your cast and say Don't ask in the first place. A broken foot garners a lot of sympathy, though not enough to make up for the pain and inconvenience.

Now that I think this through, Paul Boutin's solution is better. I just hope people are careful to throw out that rice.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

The cat comes back


[The Cat Came Back, Laurie Berkner]
I share a liking for this folk song with people I've never met - a fan club that probably has deeper roots than, say, the Facebook group I joined in celebration of the church-lady hat Aretha Franklin wore to sing at the inauguration. I've thought of the song as a celebration of endurance, of the vitality of life, and then, I like cats anyway.

Why is that? I wondered recently. It struck me that it's exactly about independence: Sherlock the Cat has none of the social-animal concerns that plague us monkeys. He is emphatically not a dog, constantly attentive to Who's In Charge. He's in charge. He knows I am in charge of a thing or two - putting out his dinner, opening a door - and he will demand those things but never grovel to get them.

He is pure, untrammeled ego, as self-centered as we were when we were born. Sherlock will sit in my lap if the room is cold and my lap is warm, and he will jump down when he wants to with no regard for my needs. Those of us who have sometimes felt trammeled by the community of monkeys enjoy the refreshment of relating to this bit of unfettered self-interest on four legs, whose cry is Me-mine-I! He represents freedom from social constraints. If you don't think so, try herding cats.

But if the cat is pure ego, his song can be read two ways: he is that annoying habit or trait in ourselves that just keeps coming back. We are never told why Old Mr. Johnson in the song wants to get rid of the cat, but if you've ever lived in a farmhouse you have experienced kittens hanging on the screen door when chicken is cooking, meowing like a chorus of the damned. (The short form of meow is me!) Sometimes the self feels that demanding. Sometimes it feels rowdy and unpredictable, leaving messes everywhere, attacking the knitting, chowing down on the company roast when you turn your back.

Ego. Self. It looks like there's no getting rid of it and, like Sherlock, it bites now and then, so it pays to be alert.

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

What do you really want from life?

[The Tao by Kazuaki Tanahashi]
I got to wondering recently just where the path that brought me out of unhappiness began. It was interesting to remember that I had begun to examine my life before everything went wrong; I must have been already feeling the tremors. What I don't recall is just where or why I bought the little paperback - How to Get Control of Your Time and Your Life, by Alan Lakein. In 1974 it had just come out in paperback.

Leafing through it now, I remember studying the entire book with the same intensity I had brought to academics. There was a lot of important encouragement in this early entry to the self-help program. But what I remember best is doing the exercises in Chapter 5, "What Do You Really Want from Life?" which combined free writing with analysis. Hours of this work eventually got me to my three top priorities at that time. The one I remember was number one, "Learn to relax." It surprised me, actually, though at the time I was on a medication for severe gastric problems.

Almost immediately after I wrote my priorities down on an index card, a friend mentioned to me that there was a yoga class in town. Why did that interest me? That path goes back farther than my recollection. But it did interest me, tapping a dormant spiritual desire even as it was an action I could take toward that priority, and I signed up.

I wish I could find that teacher and tell him how much that winter meant to me. His name was George, Winston or Wilson I think, and he traveled from Columbus to Lancaster once a week to offer this class to a fanatically devoted handful of students in a dark classroom at the branch campus. This was well before yoga and meditation became popularized and watered-down.

I am not at all athletic, and was not a natural yoga student. Since then I have had one of the dozen teachers I tried smirk at my efforts, another totally ignore those of us who couldn't approach a pose, and another push me into a pose in a way that set up a lingering tendonitis. But George, my first teacher, was in yoga heart and soul, as a spiritual practice, and brought plentiful compassion to the work. He had a sort of radiance. It took me 25 years to find another teacher with his qualities.

At the end of each class, we did slow prone stretches and twists, my favorite part. I still do them sometimes, lying on my study rug with the door shut, so Sherlock doesn't attack me. And after each stretch I hear George's mantra, "It feels good to relax."

I did try at least once to do some poses at home, and sit in meditation, as George gently encouraged us to do. And, at his private urging, I attended a weekend retreat with a famous swami, chanted, sat, watched with curiosity the holy man's disciples. Someone made pottery amulets on orange strings for all the participants, and the swami blessed them individually before he put them around our necks. It was part of the later sadness of my life that I found mine broken. It was more than a thing to me, and I wasn't willing to glue it back together. I'm pretty sure I finally threw the pieces away.

All that drifted down the stream. But it remained true that I'd taken those actions: sitting down with myself, thinking about what I needed, taking the yoga class. And before that, there must have been something that drove me to believe happiness was available, and a tendency to persist at looking for the way. Years after I had moved and lost track of George, I kept locking my office door at lunchtime and doing the guided meditations I learned under him. The way you do, I thought they weren't working.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Enter there

[Sunlight and Shadow, Mexico, by Alice Schille; Keny Galleries]

a Zen story:
Master Gensha (831-908)
Monk: "Where can I enter Zen?"
Gensha: "Can you hear the babbling brook?"
Monk: "Yes, I can hear it."
Gensha: "Then enter there."

This story seems on the surface to be a student asking where the monastery is, or what he has to do to be accepted, to enter the Buddha Way. If so, Gensha's answer seems non-sense.

But some see the monk (in this traditional story, it is a male student) as asking in a coded way - How can I reach enlightenment (or end my suffering, or find peace of mind)? If that's the case, Gensha's answer makes more sense. He is saying, You don't have to go anywhere -- just plunge into reality, which is right here. Of course, the fact is we can't do that until we patiently cultivate a spiritual discipline, until eventually we can notice something beside our own thoughts, such as the sound of the running stream.

It's not just that our thoughts are loud, but that they are so fancy and so insistent on forming narratives which easily overpower the simplicity of reality - what we are sensing and perceiving now. There are times in the early years of meditation, on retreats, when you think you are going to scream or die of the sheer, monotonous repetition of your concerns and worries. But eventually sitting still and keeping quiet calm you down, and the simple environment and ritual become more and more interesting - how each breath is unique, unlike any other; how the sun and shadow move through the room from dawn to dark. You lift your eyes at the end of a sit, and everything has changed.

This morning I am coming back from what turned out to be three weeks in another town - an arthritis flareup, cortisone shots and side effects and having to rest, and just as I was getting back in the groove, a two-day power outage. Then we had The Grandson over the weekend, which always introduces vital chaos into our lives.

So this morning I seemed to see the house anew - dust bunnies, clothes that needed to be washed, empty root beer cans, all that - as I was getting dressed. The February sun was coming in the big east windows in the bedroom. Most of the time when I'm in that room, I'm using artificial light or sleeping. It looks different in sunlight.

My eye was caught by the Alice Schille poster on that east wall, which was produced for a show titled "Lyrical Colorist." In the general bright light, the watercolor seemed illuminated from within. It is a beach scene, and the sand gleamed pale and hot in a way I had never seen before. The white of the people's clothes bounced out, the clouds hung full. Enter there, I thought.

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Using Meditation to Deal with Pain, Illness & Death

Thanissaro Bhikkhu
Source: Transcribed from a file provided by the author.

Copyright © 1993 Thanissaro Bhikkhu
Access to Insight edition © 1993
For free distribution. This work may be republished, reformatted, reprinted, and redistributed in any medium. It is the author's wish, however, that any such republication and redistribution be made available to the public on a free and unrestricted basis and that translations and other derivative works be clearly marked as such.

My topic today is the role that meditation can play in facing issues of pain, illness & death — not a pleasant topic, but an important one. Sadly, it's only when people are face to face with a fatal illness that they start thinking about these issues, and often by that point it's too late to get fully prepared. Although today's conference centers around what medicine can do for AIDS, we shouldn't be complacent. Even if AIDS or its adventitious infections don't get you, something else will, so it's best to be prepared, to practice the skills you'll need when medicine — Chinese, Western or whatever — can no longer help you, and you're on your own. As far as I've been able to determine, the only way to develop these skills is to train the mind. At the same time, if you are caring for someone with a fatal disease, meditation offers you one of the best ways to restore your own spiritual and emotional batteries so that you can keep going even when things are tough.

A lot has appeared in the media — books, newspapers, magazines, TV — about the role of meditation in treating illness and emotional burnout. As usually happens when the media get hold of a topic, they have tended to over- or under-estimate what meditation is and what it can do for you. This is typical of the media. Listening to them is like listening to a car salesman. He doesn't have to know how to drive the car or care for it. His only responsibility is to point out its selling points, what he thinks he can get you to believe and shell out your money for. But if you're actually going to drive the car, you have to study the owner's manual. So that's what I'd like to present today: a user's manual for meditation to help you when the chips are down.

I've had a fair amount of first-hand experience in this area. The year before I left Thailand I was stricken with malaria — a very different sort of disease from AIDS, but still the number one killer in the world. At present, every year, more people die of malaria than any other disease, this in spite of the massive WHO campaign to wipe it out back in the 60's. Huge supplies of chloroquine were handed out to Third World villagers. Swamps and homes were sprayed with lethal doses of DDT to kill off the mosquitoes. But now new strains of the malaria parasite have developed for which Western medicine has no cure, the mosquitoes have become resistant to DDT, and the malaria death rate is back on the rise. Remember this when you think of pinning your hopes on NIH or the Salk Institute to come up with a cure or vaccine for AIDS.

I was fortunate. As you can see, I survived, but only after turning to traditional medicine when the best treatment that tropical disease specialists could offer me failed. At the same time, while I was sick I was able to fall back on the meditation I had been practicing for the past several years to help get me through the worst bouts of pain and disorientation. This is what convinced me of its value in cases like this.

In addition to my own experience, I've been acquainted with a number of meditators both here and in Thailand who have had to live with cancer and other serious illnesses, and from them I have learned how the meditation helped them to handle both the illness and the cures — which are often more dreadful than the cancer itself. I'll be drawing on their experiences in the course of this talk.

But first I'd like us all to sit in meditation for a few minutes, so that you can have a firsthand taste of what I'm talking about, and so you can have a little practical experience to build on when you go back home.

The technique I'll be teaching is breath meditation. It's a good topic no matter what your religious background. As my teacher once said, the breath doesn't belong to Buddhism or Christianity or anyone at all. It's common property that anyone can meditate on. At the same time, of all the meditation topics there are, it's probably the most beneficial to the body, for when we're dealing with the breath, we're dealing not only with the air coming in and out of the lungs, but also with all the feelings of energy that course throughout the body with each breath. If you can learn to become sensitive to these feelings, and let them flow smoothly and unobstructed, you can help the body function more easily, and give the mind a handle for dealing with pain.

So let's all meditate for a few minutes. Sit comfortably erect, in a balanced position. You don't have to be ramrod straight like a soldier. Just try not to lean forward or back, to the left or the right. Close your eyes and say to yourself, 'May I be truly happy and free from suffering.' This may sound like a strange, even selfish, way to start meditating, but there are good reasons for it. One, if you can't wish for your own happiness, there is no way that you can honestly wish for the happiness of others. Some people need to remind themselves constantly that they deserve happiness — we all deserve it, but if we don't believe it, we will constantly find ways to punish ourselves, and we will end up punishing others in subtle or blatant ways as well.

Two, it's important to reflect on what true happiness is and where it can be found. A moment's reflection will show that you can't find it in the past or the future. The past is gone and your memory of it is undependable. The future is a blank uncertainty. So the only place we can really find happiness is in the present. But even here you have to know where to look. If you try to base your happiness on things that change — sights, sounds, sensations in general, people and things outside — you're setting yourself up for disappointment, like building your house on a cliff where there have been repeated landslides in the past. So true happiness has to be sought within. Meditation is thus like a treasure hunt: to find what has solid and unchanging worth in the mind, something that even death cannot touch.

To find this treasure we need tools. The first tool is to do what we're doing right now: to develop good will for ourselves. The second is to spread that good will to other living beings. Tell yourself: 'All living beings, no matter who they are, no matter what they have done to you in the past — may they all find true happiness too.' If you don't cultivate this thought, and instead carry grudges into your meditation, that's all you'll be able to see when you look inside.

Only when you have cleared the mind in this way, and set outside matters aside, are you ready to focus on the breath. Bring your attention to the sensation of breathing. Breathe in long and out long for a couple of times, focusing on any spot in the body where the breathing is easy to notice, and your mind feels comfortable focusing. This could be at the nose, at the chest, at the abdomen, or any spot at all. Stay with that spot, noticing how it feels as you breathe in and out. Don't force the breath, or bear down too heavily with your focus. Let the breath flow naturally, and simply keep track of how it feels. Savor it, as if it were an exquisite sensation you wanted to prolong. If your mind wanders off, simply bring it back. Don't get discouraged. If it wanders 100 times, bring it back 100 times. Show it that you mean business, and eventually it will listen to you.

If you want, you can experiment with different kinds of breathing. If long breathing feels comfortable, stick with it. If it doesn't, change it to whatever rhythm feels soothing to the body. You can try short breathing, fast breathing, slow breathing, deep breathing, shallow breathing — whatever feels most comfortable to you right now...

Once you have the breath comfortable at your chosen spot, move your attention to notice how the breathing feels in other parts of the body. Start by focusing on the area just below your navel. Breathe in and out, and notice how that area feels. If you don't feel any motion there, just be aware of the fact that there's no motion. If you do feel motion, notice the quality of the motion, to see if the breathing feels uneven there, or if there's any tension or tightness . If there's tension, think of relaxing it. If the breathing feels jagged or uneven, think of smoothing it out... Now move your attention over to the right of that spot — to the lower right-hand corner of the abdomen — and repeat the same process... Then over to the lower left-hand corner of the abdomen... Then up to the navel... right... left... to the solar plexus... right... left... the middle of the chest... right... left... to the base of the throat... right... left... to the middle of the head... [take several minutes for each spot]

If you were meditating at home, you could continue this process through your entire body — over the head, down the back, out the arms & legs to the tips of your finger & toes — but since our time is limited, I'll ask you to return your focus now to any one of the spots we've already covered. Let your attention settle comfortably there, and then let your conscious awareness spread to fill the entire body, from the head down to the toes, so that you're like a spider sitting in the middle of a web: It's sitting in one spot, but it's sensitive to the entire web. Keep your awareness expanded like this — you have to work at this, for its tendency will be to shrink to a single spot — and think of the breath coming in & out your entire body, through every pore. Let your awareness simply stay right there for a while — there's no where else you have to go, nothing else you have to think about... And then gently come out of meditation.

After my talk we'll have time to answer any questions you may have, but right now I'd like to return to a point I made earlier: the ways meditation and its role in dealing with illness and death tend to be under and over-estimated, for only when you have a proper estimation of your tools can you put them to use in a precise and beneficial way. I'll divide my remarks into two areas: what meditation is, and what it can do for you.

First, what meditation is: This is an area where popular conceptions tend to under-estimate it. Books that deal with meditation in treating illness tend to focus on only two aspects of meditation as if that were all it had to offer. Those two aspects are relaxation and visualization. It's true that these two processes form the beginning stages of meditation — you probably found our session just now very relaxing, and may have done some visualization when you thought of the breath coursing through the body — but there's more to meditation than just that. The great meditators in human history did more than simply master the relaxation response.

Meditation as a complete process involves three steps. The first is mindful relaxation, making the mind comfortable in the present — for only when it feels comfortable in the present can it settle down and stay there. The important word in this description, though, is mindful. You have to be fully aware of what you're doing, of whether or not the mind is staying with its object, and of whether or not it's drifting off to sleep. If you simply relax and drift off, that's not meditation, and there's nothing you can build on it. If, however, you can remain fully aware as the mind settles comfortably into the present, that develops into the next step.

As the mind settles more and more solidly into the present, it gains strength. You feel as if all the scattered fragments of your attention — worrying about this, remembering that, anticipating, whatever — come gathering together and the mind takes on a sense of wholeness and unification. This gives the mind a sense of power. As you let this sense of wholeness develop, you find that it becomes more and more solid in all your activities, regardless of whether you're formally meditating or not, and this is what leads to the third step.

As you become more and more single-minded in protecting this sense of wholeness, you become more and more sensitive, and gain more and more insight into the things that can knock it off balance. On the first level, you notice that if you do anything hurtful to yourself or others, that destroys it. Then you start noticing how the simple occurrence in the mind of such things as greed, lust, anger, delusion and fear can also knock it off balance. You begin to discern ways to reduce the power that these things have over the mind, until you can reach a level of awareness that is untouched by these things — or by anything at all — and you can be free from them.

As I will show in a few moments, it's these higher stages in meditation that can be the most beneficial. If you practice meditation simply as a form of relaxation, that's okay for dealing with the element of your disease that comes from stress, but there's a lot more going on in AIDS, physically and mentally, than simply stress, and if you limit yourself to relaxation or visualization, you're not getting the full benefits that meditation has to offer.

Now we come to the topic of what meditation can do for you as you face serious illness and death. This is an area where the media engage both in over-estimation and under-estimation. On the one hand, there are books that tell you that all illness comes from your mind, and you simply have to straighten out your mind and you'll get well. Once a young woman, about 24, suffering from lung cancer, came to visit my monastery, and she asked me what I thought of these books. I told her that there are some cases where illness comes from purely mental causes, in which case meditation can cure it, but there are also cases where it comes from physical causes, and no amount of meditation can make it go away. If you believe in karma, there are some diseases that come from present karma — your state of mind right now — and others that come from past karma. If it's a present-karma disease, meditation might be able to make it go away. If it's a past-karma disease, the most you can hope from meditation is that it can help you live with the illness and pain without suffering from it.

At the same time, if you tell ill people that they are suffering because their minds are in bad shape, and that it's entirely up to them to straighten out their minds if they want to get well, you're laying an awfully heavy burden on them, right at the time when they're feeling weak, miserable, helpless and abandoned to begin with. When I came to this point, the woman smiled and said that she agreed with me. As soon as she had been diagnosed with cancer, her friends had given her a whole slew of books on how to will illness away, and she said that if she had believed in book-burning she would have burned them all by now. I personally know a lot of people who believe that the state of their health is an indication of their state of mind, which is fine and good when they're feeling well. As soon as they get sick, though, they feel that it's a sign that they're failures in meditation, and this sets them into a tailspin.

You should be very clear on one point: The purpose of meditation is to find happiness and well-being within the mind, independent of the body or other things going on outside. Your aim is to find something solid within that you can depend on no matter what happens to the body. If it so happens that through your meditation you are able to effect a physical cure, that's all fine and good, and there have been many cases where meditation can have a remarkable effect on the body. My teacher had a student — a woman in her fifties — who was diagnosed with cancer more than 15 years ago. The doctors at the time gave her only a few months to live, and yet through her practice of meditation she is still alive today. She focused her practice on the theme that, 'although her body may be sick, her mind doesn't have to be.' A few years ago I visited her in the hospital the day after she had had a kidney removed. She was sitting up in bed, bright and aware, as if nothing happened at all. I asked her if there was any pain, and she said yes, 24 hours a day, but that she didn't let it make inroads on her mind. In fact, she was taking her illness much better than her husband, who didn't meditate, and who was so concerned about the possibility of losing her that he became ill, and she had to take care of him.

Cases like this are by no means guaranteed, though, and you shouldn't really content yourself just with physical survival — for as I said earlier, if this disease doesn't get you, something else will, and you're not really safe until you've found the treasure in the mind that is unaffected even by death. Remember that your most precious possession is your mind. If you can keep it in good shape no matter what else happens around you, then you have lost nothing, for your body goes only as far as death, but your mind goes beyond it.

So in examining what meditation can do for you, you should focus more on how it can help you to maintain your peace of mind in the face of pain, aging, illness and death, for these are things you're going to have to face someday no matter what. Actually, they are a normal part of life, although we have come to regard them as abnormalities. We've been taught that our birthright is eternal youth, health and beauty. When these things betray us, we feel that something is horribly wrong, and that someone is at fault — either ourselves or others. Actually, though, there's no one at fault. Once we are born, there is no way that aging, illness and death can't happen. Only when we accept them as inevitable can we begin to deal with them intelligently in such a way that we won't suffer from them. Look around you. The people who try hardest to deny their aging — through exercise, diet, surgery, makeup, whatever — they are the ones who suffer most from aging. The same holds true with illness and death.

So now I would like to focus on how to use meditation to face these things and transcend them. First, pain. When it happens, you first have to accept that it's there. This in itself is a major step, since most people, when they encounter pain, try to deny it its right to exist. They think they can avoid it by pushing it away, but that's like trying to avoid paying taxes by throwing away your tax return: You may get away with it for a little while, but then the authorities are bound to catch on, and you'll be worse off than you were before. So the way to transcend pain is first to understand it, to get acquainted with it, and this means enduring it. However, meditation can offer a way of detaching yourself from the pain while you are living with it, so even though it's there, you don't have to suffer from it.

First, if you master the technique of focusing on the breath and adjusting it so that it's comfortable, you find that you can choose where to focus your awareness in the body. If you want, you can focus it on the pain, but in the earlier stages its best to focus on the parts of the body that are comfortable. Let the pain have the other part. You're not going to drive it out, but at the same time you don't have to move in with it. Simply regard it as a fact of nature, an event that is happening, but not necessarily happening to you.

Another technique is to breathe through the pain. If you can become sensitive to the breath sensations that course through the body each time you breathe, you will notice that you tend to build a tense shell around the pain, where the energy in the body doesn't flow freely. This, although it's a kind of avoidance technique, actually increases the pain. So think of the breath flowing right through the pain as you breathe in and out, to dissolve away this shell of tension. In most cases, you will find that this can relieve the pain considerably. For instance, when I had malaria, I found this very useful in relieving the mass of tension that would gather in my head and shoulders. At times it would get so great that I could scarcely breath, so I just thought of the breath coming in through all the nerve centers in my body — the middle of the chest, the throat, the middle of the forehead and so forth — and the tension would dissolve away. However, there are some people though who find that breathing through the pain increases the pain, which is a sign that they are focusing improperly. The solution in that case is to focus on the opposite side of the body. In other words, if the pain is in the right side, focus on the left. If it's in front, focus on the back. If it's in your head — literally — focus on your hands and feet. (This technique works particularly well with migraine, by the way: If, for example, your migraine is on the right side, focus on the breath sensations the left side of your body, from the neck on down.)

As your powers of concentration become stronger and more settled, you can begin analyzing the pain. The first step is to divide it into its physical and mental components. Distinguish between the actual physical pain, and the mental pain that comes along with it: The sense of being persecuted — justly or unjustly — the fear that the pain may grow stronger or signal the end, whatever. Then remind yourself that you don't have to side with those thoughts. If the mind is going to think them, you don't have to fall in with them. Then, when you stop feeding them, you'll find that after a while they'll begin to go away, just like a crazy person coming to talk with you. If you talk with the crazy person, after a while you'll go crazy too. If however, you let the crazy person chatter away, but don't join in the conversation, after a while the crazy person will leave you alone. It's the same with all the garbage thoughts in your mind.

As you strip away all the mental paraphernalia surrounding your pain — including the idea that the pain is yours or is happening to you — you find that you finally come down to the label that simply says, This is a pain and it's right there. When you can get past this, that's when your meditation undergoes a breakthrough. One way is to simply notice that this label will arise and then pass away. When it comes, it increases the pain. When it goes, the pain subsides. Then try to see that the body, the pain and your awareness are all three separate things — like three pieces of string that have been tied into a knot, but which you now untie. When you can do this, you find that there is no pain that you cannot endure.

Another area where meditation can help you is to live with the simple fact of your body being ill. For some people, accepting this fact is one of the hardest parts of illness. But once you have developed a solid center in your mind, you can base your happiness there, and begin to view illness with a lot more equanimity. We have to remember that illness is not cheating us out of any-thing. It's simply a part of life. As I said earlier, illness is normal; health is miracle. The idea of all the complex systems of the body functioning properly is so improbable that we shouldn't be surprised when they start breaking down.

Many people complain that the hardest part of living with a disease like AIDS or cancer is the feeling that they have lost control over their bodies, but once you gain more control over you mind, you begin to see that the control you thought you had over you body was illusory in the first place. The body has never entered into an agreement with you that it would do as you liked. You simply moved in, forced it to eat, walk, talk, etc., and then thought you were in charge. But even then it kept on doing as it liked — getting hungry, urinating, defecating, passing wind, falling down, getting injured, getting sick, growing old. When you reflect on the people who think they have the most control over their bodies, like bodybuilders, they're really the most enslaved, having to eat enough each day to keep ten Somalians alive, having to push and pull on metal bars for hours, expending all their energy on exercises that don't go anywhere at all. If they don't, their pumped-up bodies will deflate in no time flat.

So an important function of meditation — in giving you a solid center that provides you a vantage point from which to view life in its true colors — is that it keeps you from feeling threatened or surprised when the body begins to reassert its independence. Even if the brain starts to malfunction, the people who have developed mindfulness through meditation can be aware of the fact, and let go of that part of their bodies too. One of my teacher's students had to undergo heart surgery, and apparently the doctors cut off one of the main arteries going to his brain. When he came to, he could tell that his brain wasn't working right, and it wasn't long before he realized that it was affecting his perception of things. For instance, he would think that he had said something to his wife, would get upset when she didn't respond, when actually he had only thought of what he wanted to say without really saying anything at all. When he realized what was happening, he was able to muster enough mindfulness to keep calm and simply watch what was going on in his brain, reminding himself that it was a tool that wasn't working quite right, and not getting upset when things didn't jive. Gradually he was able to regain his normal use of his faculties, and as he told me, it was fascinating to be able to observe the functioning and malfunctioning of his brain, and to realize that the brain and the mind were two separate things.

And finally we come to the topic of death. As I said earlier, one of the important stages of meditation is when you discover within the mind a knowing core that does not die at the death of the body. If you can reach this point in your meditation, then death poses no problem at all. Even if you haven't reached that point, you can prepare yourself for death in such a way that you can die skillfully, and not in the messy way that most people die.

When death comes, all sorts of thoughts are going to come crowding into your mind — regret about things you haven't yet been able to do, regret about things you did do, memories of people you have loved and will have to leave. I was once almost electrocuted, and although people who saw it happening said that it was only a few seconds before the current was cut off, to me it felt like five minutes. Many things went through my mind in that period, beginning with the thought that I was going to die of my own stupidity. Then I made up my mind that, if the time had come to go, I'd better do it right, so I didn't let my mind fasten on any of the feelings of regret, etc., that came flooding through the mind. I seemed to be doing OK, and then the current ceased.

If you haven't been practicing meditation, this sort of experience can be overwhelming, and the mind will latch on to whatever offers itself and then will get carried away in that direction. If, though, you have practiced meditation, becoming skillful at letting go of your thoughts, or knowing which thoughts to hang onto and which ones to let pass, you'll be able to handle the situation, refusing to fall in line with any mental states that aren't of the highest quality. If your concentration is firm, you can make this the ultimate test of the skill you have been developing. If there's pain, you can see which will disappear first: the pain or the core of your awareness. You can rest assured that no matter what, the pain will go first, for that core of awareness cannot die.

What all this boils down to is that, as long as you are able to survive, meditation will improve the quality of your life, so that you can view pain and illness with equanimity and learn from them. When the time comes to go, when the doctors have to throw up their hands in helplessness, the skill you have been developing in your meditation is the one thing that won't abandon you. It will enable to handle your death with finesse. Even though we don't like to think about it, death is going to come no matter what, so we should learn how to stare it down. Remember that a death well handled is one of the surest signs of a life well lived.

So far I've been confining my remarks to the problems faced by people with AIDS and other life threatening illnesses, and haven't directly addressed the problems of people caring for them. Still, you should have been able to gather some useful points for handling such problems. Meditation offers you a place to rest and gather your energies. It also can help give you the detachment to view your role in the proper light. When an ill person relapses or dies, it's not a sign of failure on the part of the people caring for him. Your duty, as long as your patient is able to survive, is to do what you can to improve the quality of his/her life. When the time comes for the patient to go, your duty is to help improve the quality of his death.

An old man who had been meditating for many years once came to say farewell to my teacher soon after he had learned that he had an advanced case of cancer. His plan was to go home and die, but my teacher told him to stay and die in the monastery. If he went home, he would hear nothing but his nieces and nephews arguing over the inheritance, and it would put him in a bad frame of mind. So we arranged a place for him to stay, and had his daughter, who was also a meditator, look after him. It wasn't long before his body systems started breaking down, and on occasion it looked like the pain was beginning to overwhelm him, so I had his daughter whisper meditation instructions into his ear, and to chant his favorite Buddhist chants by his bedside. This had a calming effect on him, and when he did die — at 2 a.m. one night — he seemed calm and fully aware. As the daughter told me the next morning, she didn't feel any sadness or regret, for she had done her very best to make his death as smooth a transition as possible.

If you can have a situation where both the patient and the caregiver are meditators, it makes things a lot easier on both sides, and the death of the patient does not necessarily have to mean the death of the caregiver's ability to care for anyone else.

That covers the topics I wanted to deal with. I'm afraid that some of you will find my remarks somewhat downbeat, but my purpose has been to help you look clearly at the situation facing you, either as an ill person or as someone caring for one. If you avoid taking a good, hard look at things like pain and death, they can only make you suffer more, since you've refused to prepare yourself for them. Only when you see them clearly, get a strong sense of what's important and what's not, and hold firmly to your priorities: only then can you transcend them.

Many people find that the diagnosis of a fatal illness enables them to look at life clearly for the first time, to get some sense of what their true priorities are. This in itself can make a radical improvement in the quality of their lives — its simply a shame that they had to wait to this point to see things clearly. But whatever your situation, I ask that you try to make the most of it in terms of improving the state of your mind, for when all else leaves you, that will stay. If you haven't invested your time in developing it, it won't have much to offer you in return. If you've trained it and cared for it well, it will repay you many times over. And, as I hope I have shown, meditation has much to offer as a tool in helping you to solidify your state of mind and enable it to transcend everything else that may come its way.

Thank you for your attention.

Thanissaro Bhikkhu
(Geoffrey DeGraff)
Metta Forest Monastery
Valley Center, CA 92082-1409

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Demons


[Spinning wheel, Blood, Sweat and Tears, posted on YouTube by flutooth.]

I was going to write a post on my current experience with steroids titled "Two weeks in another town," but it is looking like more than two weeks. Before you kick me out of the Football Hall of Fame, let me explain.

Two weeks and two days ago I let the musculo-skeletal doctor ("sports doc") inject my ankle and hip with two half-doses of a gluticosteroid. I know I'm reactive to steroids, and I won't take them orally, but I had gone in limping with what turned out to be a magnificent flareup of arthritis and bursitis in two locations. And this doctor has done good things for me before. So I took the shots.

And my, I felt good, once I got over two nights of serious sleep disturbance. Interested in life, creative, generous, and - this is important - the pain reduced radically. I didn't mind a bit that my instructions were to "take it easy" the first week. As a poetic type, I've spent my life looking for an authority figure to tell me that.

I didn't realize I was up until after my mood switched. A couple of days of being too apathetic to run the Roomba found me telling Tom, "I have a sense that I'm coming closer to death, that I don't have long." Then the mood switched back last Sunday night, around 9:00. Hello, come on in!

As moodswings go, this one will. (I couldn't resist.) Seriously, as moodswings go, this has been okay, more like being a boat in a lock, the water rising, then back down, not like the biggest roller coaster in the world. There were also days in this little trip where I found myself in the blue lagoon, balanced, calm, happy, interested in everything, tending to use the adjective "beautiful." Sort of like we feel on those magical days in spring.

I once saw moodswings as a demon that popped its trollish head into my pleasant cave, or more accurately, did a home invasion. Now I think a mood is a mood, and the demon is more general than that. Around its neck it wears a name tag that says Attachment. Attaching to the high, attaching to the peaceful moment of balance, attaching to the idea of how I like to feel, seeing that preference as terribly important.

Shunryu Suzuki says we are given just enough problems (83). This morning I picked up the results of my last blood tests. My serum creatinine is high, which indicates lowered kidney function. Tom reminded me that this has happened before, and I recovered from an incipient drama that stars me being reintroduced to dialysis. The good thing, Tom reminded me, is that things always change. Yes, and sometimes for the better. In this case, my fresh problem took my mind off my mind.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

The importance of every knot


Yesterday I encountered another quiet hero.

At one time, the people who draw blood for a living didn't matter to me, but things change. I have small, slippery veins, and one arm you can't stick. Over years of getting blood draws perhaps an average of once a month, the best vein has gotten scarred, making it harder. Someone who isn't skilled or isn't thinking can make a real mess of repeated tries, and further scar the vein. I've run into many a person like that over the years. And so I have become devoted to the lab at Riverside Hospital's Thomas Lane facility. No matter who I get, they do it right. No talking to someone else about what they had for dinner while sticking me. No sweating and cursing under their breath because my veins are difficult.

What a job it is. At the rate they go, they must easily do 100 draws a day. Every single one demands attention to such details as, how many vials? Is the person in the chair the same person the lab order says? Exactly this vein. You can't get all this right while feeling sorry for yourself that you have to be on your feet all day, and the boss makes more money than you, and you're not going to get anything for Valentine's Day. You have to put your story aside, just like Captain Sully, and focus on the job. Instant enlightenment!

I thought of this yesterday looking at a slide show of preparations for the space shuttle launch. I was awestruck realizing the infinite number of details that all had to be right. Every single detail. Get one bolt wrong and it could shake loose and throw the whole thing. How in the world do they make that happen when I lose socks in the washer? There must be a group culture of personal responsibility for the whole thing. Individuals must have a sense that their little piece of the work is vital.

Actually, our little piece of the work is. And I really don't mean the high-visibility, high-ego tasks; Bill Gates knows his work to end malaria is important; everyone knows it, and we are in danger of lionizing him. I mean the essential significance of everyone involved. If you imagine mosquito nets being handmade, you can see the importance of every knot. If you think about the actualization of the project, the destination of the net, the mother in the malaria belt who draws that net around her child, the success of the whole thing is right there in her hands.

Monday, February 9, 2009

once I had a compass
it is broken
now I wander the roads
in the ten directions

Sunday, February 8, 2009

Keeping your cool


[Video by Youralone]
We have been watching the 60 Minutes interview with Captain Sully Sullenberger, the perfect hero for the new age of responsibility. I remarked to Tom that this is a highly visible event, with people thanking him for saving their lives - but that for all these years, every time Captain Sully flew, he was sober, focused, and professional. Who knows how many disasters he evaded, in the same way that we might be going through a parking lot and stop because some fool is backing out in a hurry, and there is no accident; no one gets hurt, no one applauds. You don't make the headlines. Sully saved 155 lives not because he magnificently tapped some superpower, but because for decades he took his work seriously.

I think we are additionally fascinated because he kept his cool. Questioned, he admitted that when he realized what had happened to the engines, he was struck by a greater fear than he had ever known. The interviewer asked him how he could continue being cool in the face of that fear. He answered that he put the fear aside, because he needed to be completely focused on the job he had to do. What is fear, after all? A physical sensation based on a perception. A sort of mental emission that will quickly pass away in the stream of our mental emissions.

I remember fondly a guy whose lecture I went to once, long ago, though I don't remember his name; he had been following Grizzly Bears, studying them. He told of hiking around a bend in the trail and there was a mother Grizzly standing up on her hind legs. I don't recall what he did, if he told us, but he must have kept his head, because there he was, showing us his slides. Someone asked him how he felt at the time. Interestingly, he didn't refer to emotion, but to a sudden insight. He said, "That's when you realize you are not the top of the food chain." Keeping your head; the alternative to losing your cool.

(The Slim Whitman song is the fruit of one of those internet searches, this time for "cool" that leads you somewhere interesting. This song was around when I was a child. To me in those pre-television days, it presented a breathtaking narrative.)

Friday, February 6, 2009

The Great Matter


Busy with nothing, growing old.
Within emptiness, weeping, laughing.
Intrinsically, there is no “I.”

Life and death, thus cast aside.

Above, the death poem of Taiwanese Chan Master Sheng Yen. I just learned of his death on February 3 from the blog "In Pursuit of Mysteries." The link attached to his name leads to another blogger's review of his autobiography, which has the wonderful title, Footprints in the Snow. And the poem - "Busy with nothing, growing old" - certainly speaks of ordinary life as I know it.

The death poem is a tradition among Zen masters. It expresses their acceptance of the truth of all organic life: it is (we are) born and dies, and transforms into other life. My husband Tom, the physicist, tells me that sometimes instead of trans-forming, organic life can fossilize, that is, turn into a mineral. There's a metaphor.

What's all this resistance to dying? I feel it within myself. When I learned I had cancer in 1997, I fervently didn't want to die of that. Later, when my kidney function fell so low, I sincerely didn't want to die of that. I, I, I. I haven't figured out what I do want to die of, but I know I'd like it to be slow and comfortable, on clean sheets, and not today.

You can hang on to life because it is a good time, a party you don't want to leave, an interesting conversation. Once, leaving Deb and Karl's annual fall party, we found ourselves under a clear, starry sky. Straight from the bluegrass jam into the vast, beautiful universe. I thought, This is what a good death would be like. It might not be like that, I don't know. But I think it is important to leave the party willingly, having been immersed in the rhythm, having had a very good time, and knowing it's time to go

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Let your mind alone!

[image: a Thurber cartoon]
Let Your Mind Alone! Humorist James Thurber stole that book title from me before I thought of it. I have always been sorry.

This is (or was) America, so it's fix, fix, fix, isn't it? Everything except the infrastructure. And call in the experts, let's get this over with. Talk therapy was a sort of cultural fad that gained tremendous popularity as we gained affluence, so that the all-purpose word therapy has come to stand for psychotherapy or talk therapy. I'm not saying it didn't do me some good to pay someone who to sit and listen to me talk about myself, and accept me, someone whose hidden agenda was probably to get me to think about someone else. I just note that the insurance companies will only pay for short courses of cognitive therapy; they claim the long talks, the insights, have not been shown to work. (Not to say they are experts on what works; they won't pay for acupuncture.)

Cognitive therapy is sort of like Zen with a nail gun. You go in there and get right to work on your ignorance/delusions, only they are called something like "logical fallacies." I tried it once, and found that I could work my way through to seeing the error of my ways for an hour or two. Then I went back to the old normal. Habitual thinking has a lot of magnetic force.

The fact is, and I don't have to cite religion on this, what matters is not what we think, but our actions. If you want to say what we think informs our actions, there's some truth to that. But I don't care what kind of mean sexism, for instance, is in some guy's mind, as long as he keeps his mouth shut around me and pays women fairly. It's not so black-and-white. Sometimes someone like that has a paternal sense of commitment and responsibility, and is kinder to women than the up-to-date guy who argues that equality means his sexual partner should take care of her own abortion.

Words are a form of action too. Most of the violence done to me in my life has not been physical, but verbal. Somehow it sticks with you more than a beating. The taunting of a junior high bully. The hate letter - more common now that you can send one with one click. The habitual criticism of neurotic parents.

But here's the thing: the only way to keep ourselves from wounding others, doing harm with words, is to become aware of them. Ultimately, this is compassion, and wisdom is the understanding that when you hurt someone else, you drop poison into the whole world, and you are an intimate part of that world.

But to work, compassion and wisdom have to be accompanied by awareness of your actions, what you're saying and doing right now. We seem to have a remarkable resistance to any self-awareness that shows us our errors, and awareness is not selective. Maybe this is why Pema Chodron says meditation practice begins in bliss and ends in bliss, but the road inbetween is hell. Or at least, a challenging climb, not for the faint of heart.

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Dream, dream, dream


You poke a stick at dream analysis with the same caution you would use in implying that Oprah is fallible. It is one of the routes to self-knowledge favored by a number of people I know, including me. For years I have made a practice of describing my dreams in my journal, in the hope (watch that word) of understanding my self. Only now does it occur to me that this activity was based on the conviction that I am a self, a me, and the unexpressed notion that this Wun is fascinating. I am not alone in that - just watch a baby play with its toes. Sometimes I think of this self as the sssself, and our devotion to it as the snake in the garden.

This morning I awoke from an unusually fanciful dream about a sort of mad doctor-artist. You can have fun with an image like that, especially if you are an artist, though the dream may have been the result of the electrolyte imbalance that was giving me foot and leg cramps at the same time. But I didn't take the dream as a little puff of smoke; I took it as possible insight into my "real feelings" about either the doctor I saw yesterday or myself as an artist, and off I went, asking my sssself what was hidden in my subconscious. This is what comes of reading Freud when you're fourteen.

Fortunately, I have been exposed to another understanding of the self these last years, though Wun is slow to really get it. Dogen famously stated in Shobogenzo -
To study the buddha way is to study the self.
To study the self is to forget the self.
To forget the self is to be actualized by myriad things.
Sometimes I revise this mentally: To study the self is to get sick and tired of it. That's what happened to me on my first retreats: the chatter of monkey mind was driving me crazy, going over the same old, like a Roomba that has locked itself in the bathroom.

Zen Master Dogen was not talking psychotherapy, the examination of our individual motives and behaviors. He was pointing to the examination of fundamental reality - how we are not an isolated thing, a self, but a stream of passing feelings, sensations, mental reactions, changing form. Meditating on retreat, you see this, for there is nothing else to do, no TV in the zendo, and you're not supposed to be looking out the window, lapsing over and over into dreams, fantasies, stories.

If you would like to recall puppy love, and hear purely beautiful harmony, play the attached video of The Everly Brothers "Dream." This song, popular when I was young and impressionable, conflates fantasy and reality: Whenever I want you, all I have to do is dreeee-a-eem, dream, dream, dream. Wouldn't that be nice? But even then I found that dreaming of an object of desire was not a very good substitute for being there. You can generalize that statement.

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Final Report on Disorganization Project

My inspired vow to get more disorganized did turn out to be the easiest thing I ever did. The recovery has been a little harder. It is probably fortunate that Tom, who is slower to adopt bright ideas, just kept on his own way. But that left me this morning with a dishwasher full of clean dishes that I had to put away before we could have breakfast, because we wanted to eat our eggs with forks. And a dish drainer full, overfull, of the kind of utensils you have to wash by hand, two days worth. Somewhere in all those was the pancake turner I needed if I wanted to make eggs over light. Bad karma, bad! I said, the way you would to a dog.

Fortunately, I had not insisted on being faithful to my vow - I seldom do - and had folded my black sweater last night and put it away rather than throwing it on the bed where Sherlock, Cat of Many White Hairs would have loved to lie on it. In doing that I learned an alternative to organizing/disorganizing: common sense.

Today's vow (doesn't everybody have a bright idea every day?) is to carry my little knitting project with me everywhere I go. I think I can handle that. I won't forget it, just as, back in the day, I never forgot my cigarettes. I'm sure the analogy is obvious.

Monday, February 2, 2009

Leap, and the net will appear

Tired, it's late. But I wanted to record the small insight I had today, still being dogged by the koan "Man up a Tree." (And not stopping to think about rewriting it as Woman up a Tree. Or Wun up a Tree. I am fond of Wun, a sort of anonymous template human.)

The thought came as an image while I was carefully steering through the parking lot at the health club, where people seemed likely today to get in wrecks. I visualized a man hanging from a tree, hanging by his mouth, remember, in his dilemma, and then I saw the grass just a few inches under him. Aha, I thought. The koan cleverly omits to say how high in the tree he is. So, no problem. Just let go and fall out of the dilemma. Land on the nice soft grass. Sometimes we make our dilemma so convoluted that this is the only way to handle it.

The image reminded me of a saying that floats around Zen circles, said to be written by John Burroughs: Leap, and the net will appear. Someone I know told me that saying inspired him to drop out of his career and fulfill his dream to study for the ministry. Well, as Suzuki said about the building of a Zen Center, a lot of bad things will come out of it, but maybe something good will happen, too.

Lying there on the grass, Wun could think about the symbolism of grasses in the Buddhist tradition as Robert Aitken described it:
If you do not cut off the mind road, then you are a ghost clinging to bushes and grasses. 'Bushes' and 'grasses' are shorthand for the many fixations that provide the ghost with identity - such as money and possessions, old resentments, and persistent habits of thought.
That's what I mean when I say, I've really got to get disorganized. Lose some of those things. The possessions are really the least of the problem.

Sunday, February 1, 2009

Quicksand! and mundane reality


[photo: a golden]
There were a couple of staples of the simpler horror movies of my childhood: a dinosaur could eat you, something dead could come back to life, or you could drown in quicksand - this was a favorite of westerns, which always seemed to be the second feature. Possibly the good cowboy would throw out his bullwhip and the evil cowboy could grasp the tip and pull himself out, but it seems to me the evil cowboy would curse at being rescued and prefer to drown. So human!

Yes, I woke up thinking more about hanging in our dilemma, having posted about it last night before bed. The really strange thing, I thought, is that it is the struggle that kills you. This is exactly what happens with quicksand and, the internet informs me, most drownings. The human body is less dense than water or quicksand, which is mostly water; if you relax and lean back, you will float. Then you can paddle to shore, though you are going to have to move slowly to extract yourself against the vacuum you create. I liked everything about this as a metaphor. Relax, float. Move slowly and thoughtfully.

It is the struggle that dooms you. I am reminded of an elderly neighbor who kept nearly dying and being rescued, and finally decided against more emergency interventions a couple of weeks ago. Prepared to die, he went into a hospice facility, where he immediately felt a whole lot better, and is still alive. He had finally stopped pouring all his energy into anxious struggle.

What happens when you stop kicking around, struggling against reality? Floating is not so dramatic. And our personal take on the koan of our life will be unique to our situation.

It has recently been dawning on me that the truth is, I'm living on luck. My kidneys could fail any time, before research has figured out regeneration, before the wearable kidney is perfected, and doom me to complex, uncomfortable treatments. When I realized the truth of that, I thought, I really do need to watch my diet. The kidney diet is more complex than all Oprah's diets put together. You limit phosphorus, potassium, protein and salt. That sounds mundane and it is mundane, in the sense of being an everyday, routine thing. It is about specific, small actions: whether to eat pepperoni pizza, and if so, how much, and if so, how many Phoslo to take with it. And will all that salt (pepperoni) and phosphorus (cheese) and potassium (tomatoes) finally do me in? How many bites do I have to have to satisfy my craving?

The mundane. My favorite short story is "The Golden Mix" by Ira Sukrungruang (thus the photo). At the end of a dramatic realization of the nature of reality, the narrator . . . well, I won't spoil the plot. The action he takes is an ordinary task. That's really what we mean by living in the moment. We mean, the real moment, the space you're actually in.