"I'm sorry I just have to rant", she said. And then she went on for some minutes about the death penalty and about our droan policy, and about ISIS and how we condemned them for killing while the US engaged in both kinds of killing. "It is hypocrisy!", she ended. Then she asked me how one sits with this sort of horrible thing, and what is wrong with humans that they act so ignorantly? I have been known to have my own such rants, so I was sympathetic to her anger and turmoil. But the question she asked me was far more important.
I have come to this belief through a variety of interlocking and reinforcing teachings and could not even recount exactly how, I can only say what I believe, but I think it is probably worth sharing.
We come with free will and not all of us are tuning into God and making choices that are aligned with the highest truth available. But it is almost like souls also follow developmental stages - young souls learning about scarcity, violence, addiction, appropriate and inappropriate uses of power, etc. Perhaps slightly wiser souls learning about cooperation, giving, receiving, closeness, etc. and eventually the Bodhisattva souls who have come back just to help others. What this means to me is that within a particular life time people may be born into wars, or gang violence, or addiction, or political dramas as part of the lesson they are working on in this life time. Some people maybe come famous actors in larger historic struggles whether they come as Rosa Parks or as George Zimmerman. They are both working on their own personal lessons about (in this case) race or violence/non-violence - but they are also helping these themes be held up to societal awareness and learning. They are helping our whole society learn about these themes.
Have you ever noticed how certain issues/themes show up repeatedly in your life, others not at all? How certain issues capture your attention completely and others do not engage you? That is probably not an accident. I for example have absolutely no interest in addictive substances. While not wanting to hang out with addicts I also have great compassion for the suffering that they engage, and the struggle to be free of it. It simply feels like something I have dealt with at some other time. It is not a concern for me in this life time.
On the societal level I have even heard some argue that the likes of Adolph Hitler, took on lifetimes of suffering in order to offer us a most perfect symbol of hatred, violence and abuse of power - that in a twisted backwards way that was an offering to our collective learning. That by seeing the dark and the ugly we can better see the light and the beauty. I do not know if I would go that far, but it certainly suggests that the project of collective learning is not straightforward.
So unlike the person above, I do not feel that people who are engaging in violence or hatred, or abuse of power are ignorant. I simply feel they are human souls struggling with the lessons they have come to this life time to learn. Granted I may not like their behavior, and in my turn I may rant about it. But when I am in a centered place, when I sit on the banks of the River of God, as I spoke about last month, I simply see the teeming masses of humanity struggling for resources, for love, for connection and for growth. From that deeply centered place I see that we are all the same. I may not be a murder, or an addict or an adulterer in this lifetime, but I know I have been in some other lifetime. I also see that even in a current lifetime of such actions is a person who wants love, who bleeds, who hurts, who yearns. These are other ways we are the same.
The hard part has been to sit with the pain of the world. I have known people who have committed murder and rape and I have known people who have had family members murdered or been raped themselves. I have known people who have lost family members in war (well even people whose last life time was to die in war) and I have known soldiers. Their suffering has been equally real to me. It stopped looking as simple as the victims and the perpetrators.
One of the greatest gifts of the little Buddhism that I have learned is to learn how to breathe it through - breath the suffering through. A practice I first learned from Joanna Macy, who is a Buddhist and and environmentalist. In this practice you see the suffer you breathe it in, passing it through your heart with compassion and you imagine it leaving a whole in your heart and your chest and returning to the world.
A friend of mine recently talked about "spiritual bubble wrap". She was talking about the ways in which we insulate ourselves against the suffering of the world. How we turn away from stories like the next mass shooting where innocent people have been gunned down for simply being somewhere. We go numb. We do not want to feel. Before learning breathing through I would deliberately turn my attention away from certain stories, certain kinds of suffering which felt like too much or "not my issue". I still do this sometimes.
But one day after a week of Joanna's workshop I had the radio on and the story came on about the sentencing of the police officers who during hurricane Katrina shot several black people on the bridge in New Orleans. I started to turn away from the story, to put on the spiritual bubble wrap, but then I remembered to do the breathing through. When I could do that I could notice the sadness of the racism so thick in our society that the police walk in fear of Black people, I could feel pain for the Black people who had already lost their homes and now would loose their lives or limbs because of racism, I could feel the sadness for the people of New Orleans effected by the climate change we have collectively brought. and I could breathe it through. Somehow it was less painful when held in compassion rather than sealed out with bubble wrap.
Buddhists have a loving kindness meditation. It starts with sending love and compassion to yourself, then to your family or loved ones, then to a friend, then to an acquaintance, and then to a stranger and then to someone you are angry or upset with, and finally to the whole world. This for me is simply another way to sit on the banks of the River of God, another way to breath it through. Somehow remembering that we are all just struggling to grow into our better selves, our greater soul, the collective consciousness, really helps me be with the suffering that is this world.
For people who identify as spiritual but not necessarily religious. For those who see spirituality as a journey for truth and to know God experientially. This blog is based upon the idea that we all can and should create our own theology. It attempt to explore key theological questions to help people figure out what their central beliefs are, and it shares interesting spiritual ideas.

Showing posts with label soul. Show all posts
Showing posts with label soul. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 30, 2015
Sunday, June 7, 2015
Sitting at The River of God
In my last post, I mentioned Michael
Singer's book The Untethered Soul -- how good he is at
bringing Eastern ideas of meditation or mindfulness to our Western minds. In
the first two chapters of the book, Singer patiently explains how there is a
constant stream of noise going on in our mind. In fact in the second chapter
he, to my amusement, refers to "the roommate" - the voice that is
always talking to us. He invites us to
really observe that voice by imagining it as a roommate who sits on a coach,
and to listen to what is it saying to you? I have previously been taught
by meditation instructors to watch my thoughts, to label them
"thought" and return to breathing. This frankly seemed like an
endless, pointless, and not very useful process of noticing that as I am still
breathing and thus also still thinking. But Singer engaged my curiosity about
noticing "but what am I thinking?"
As a therapist I am aware from the
different avenue of Internal Family Systems Theory (a modality which I
practice) that we all have "parts" within us: a very effective
project manager, a wounded child part, a nurturing parent part, etc, etc, and
that these parts are not always in accord. (Yes this is not the same as someone
having the diagnosis of multiple personality disorder.) In fact the most
common reason why my clients can get stuck is two parts inside them are at war,
literally, with each other. Singer invites us when we are upset to notice
"who is upset?" (He would argue that none of our parts are our
true self. IFS would argue that all of our parts are our true self, but
that we function best when the parts work in concert rather than randomly and
independently). IFS would suggest that when we can notice which part is
upset that we need to step into an observing part and learn to speak for a
part, not from it. An example of this would be the difference between
speaking from a hurt child part and saying to a spouse: "I hate
you" vs speaking for that hurt child and saying "When you ignore me I
feel hurt and unloved, and it makes me angry with you."
Interestingly, Singer also suggests
we go into an observing part, and that from that place we can release being in
the drama of that part. Singer says:
"The process of seeing
something requires a subject-object relationship. The subject is called
"the Witness" because it is the one who sees what's happening.
The object is what you are seeing, in this case the inner disturbance.
The act of maintaining objective awareness of the inner problem is always
better than losing yourself in the outer situation. This is the
essential difference between a spiritually minded person and a worldly person."
His reference to the spiritually
minded person and the worldly person is interesting to me in how often
Christianity makes the distinction between God's kingdom and worldly kingdoms -
or the powers and principalities.
He goes on to say: "There's a
separation between you and the anger or the jealousy (or substitute
any emotion here.) You are the one who's in there noticing these things.
Once you take the seat of consciousness, you can get rid of these
personal disturbances. You start by watching."
As my friend, Scott Gaul, has
mentioned this seat of the consciousness or this witness, is not just a place
in the brain, it is actually the place of our soul. Think of that: your
soul is observing your life. Sometimes very passively without you having
any real awareness of it, and sometimes like in meditation very distinctly so.
I have written elsewhere about my
own experience of what I call "the river of God". This for me
is an experience of going out to a wide lens shot, of sitting on the river bank
of humanity, and looking at the teeming masses, the abundance of nature, the
dramas of human life: birth, coming of age, marriage, illness, striving,
conflict, love, and death as God views it. Being quite and observing it
all. Not from judgment, not from intervention, but as witness to the
eternal aspects of life itself. From this vantage point I can let go of
my own knot of emotion, my own 'caughtness' in the dramas of this hour, this
day or this year. Things drop into perspective - they may still be
"issues", but no longer ones that grip me by the throat. For in fact with a wide enough lens we realize
that all issues are temporary - even those which are life and death - are life
and death of this one life time. When I can remember to do it (and that
is the catch to all mindfulness) it is a reliable way for me to enter into my
observer part, or to my soul sitting in the lap of the divine to watch life
itself unfold.
Knowing how profound and how
comforting that experience of being in the witness position is, has brought me
full circle from the part of me fairly disinterested in the encouragements to
watch my thoughts and label them "thought" to an appreciation of the
power and groundedness of stepping out of my thoughts and emotions, to
observing them.
Sunday, February 22, 2015
What does Your Soul have to Tell You?
The title would almost seem to imply that we are sitting having a conversation with our soul which is not what I mean. However, if the soul is God within, this at minimum suggests a different path to hearing God. Sometimes I have the experience, described elsewhere, of sitting on the banks of the River of God. This is the experience for me of listening to my soul and its connection to eternal time, and all the rushes of humanity thru all time, humans grasping for survival, growth and joy. It is a profound experience when I can sit on the banks of the River of God. Usually I am dropped into this by some sort of reflective experience that connects me to a sense of the eternal human struggle: big crowds in timeless cities, some reminder of the various ways humans have gone about some basic task, or the timelessness of human rituals of love, childrearing, and death, or some reminder of the universality of human traits/behaviors across cultures and eras. Sometimes I can get on the banks of the River of God from simply sitting quietly and alone somewhere where I can hear the indistinguishable sound of human voices at a distance: not close enough to make out words or even emotion, but just the babbling brook of human existence.
And if one believes in reincarnation the soul also holds the life wisdom of many lifetimes and so therefore holds the greatest truth we know. Those who believe in reincarnation will say that some of the things the soul remembers are things like how we died, accounting for "irrational" fears of heights, water, things around the neck, etc. But for the soul to serve us well it must remember more than what it fears, it must also bring us towards other familiar souls with a willingness to do it differently, to do it better than last time. And it must bring us to this life with a goal and a purpose.
If you believe in karma not as punishment for past failings, but as an attempt to live more wisely than last time, then the soul can come with a goal. Examples of this: I remember dying in two different war;, I came to this life not only born to two pacifists (too guarantee my own intended path?) but with a determination to work for peace and disarmament. I know someone who says she knew as a child she would be in a life threatening car accident...which she indeed was suffering a severe life altering brain injury. She says she came to learn about power, and about the not-wielding of external worldly power but rather of self-directed power. Another person I know has been chronically ill for several decades; she has struggled against not being able to "do" things in the world but finally realized she's been left with one always present endeavor: the focus on her spiritual life. She realized with some surprise that if she had come to focus on the spiritual life she could not have set the table more perfectly.
If you think also of what it is like when you act in accord with your conscience, when you take action for what you deeply within you know to be right, even at great cost....this I think is also listening to what our soul has to tell us. I have known many people in my life who were called to acts of civil disobedience, as have I been. Quite commonly is the holding of the question: should I do this? and some spirit filled experience of answer - some inward prompting which will not quit. This I think is the soul speaking to us, of the Truth it knows, as well as about our life's purpose. This is an aligning of our outer actions with our inner knowing.
And if one believes in reincarnation the soul also holds the life wisdom of many lifetimes and so therefore holds the greatest truth we know. Those who believe in reincarnation will say that some of the things the soul remembers are things like how we died, accounting for "irrational" fears of heights, water, things around the neck, etc. But for the soul to serve us well it must remember more than what it fears, it must also bring us towards other familiar souls with a willingness to do it differently, to do it better than last time. And it must bring us to this life with a goal and a purpose.
If you believe in karma not as punishment for past failings, but as an attempt to live more wisely than last time, then the soul can come with a goal. Examples of this: I remember dying in two different war;, I came to this life not only born to two pacifists (too guarantee my own intended path?) but with a determination to work for peace and disarmament. I know someone who says she knew as a child she would be in a life threatening car accident...which she indeed was suffering a severe life altering brain injury. She says she came to learn about power, and about the not-wielding of external worldly power but rather of self-directed power. Another person I know has been chronically ill for several decades; she has struggled against not being able to "do" things in the world but finally realized she's been left with one always present endeavor: the focus on her spiritual life. She realized with some surprise that if she had come to focus on the spiritual life she could not have set the table more perfectly.
If you think also of what it is like when you act in accord with your conscience, when you take action for what you deeply within you know to be right, even at great cost....this I think is also listening to what our soul has to tell us. I have known many people in my life who were called to acts of civil disobedience, as have I been. Quite commonly is the holding of the question: should I do this? and some spirit filled experience of answer - some inward prompting which will not quit. This I think is the soul speaking to us, of the Truth it knows, as well as about our life's purpose. This is an aligning of our outer actions with our inner knowing.
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