There is little I have heard from others -- and it is my daily business to listen -- that I have not seen in myself as I sit. But I also know the necessity of work, training and restraint. Dependence, loneliness, sensuality, exhaustion, hunger, petulance, perversion, miserliness, yearning and inflation are my old friends. I can greet them openly and warmly in people close to me, because I know them from the inside and therefore cannot condemn them without condemning myself. I also have been learning to harness and ride their energy.
Sitting pushes me to the limit of my self-directed effort; it mobilizes my willed, committed direction, yet it also shatters my self-protective, self-defining maneuvers and my simple self-definition. It both builds and dismantles "me." Every memory, every hope, every yearning, every fear floods in. I no longer can pretend to be one selected set of my memories or traits.
If observed, but not reacted upon, all these psychic contents become acceptable, obviously part of myself (for there they are, in my own mind, right in front of me); yet also impersonal, causally-linked, objective phenomena-in-the-world that move ceaselessly, relentlessly, across the screen of my existence, without my effort, without my control, without me. I can see more, tolerate more, in my inner life, at the same time that I am less driven by these forces. Like storms and doves, they are the persona of nature, crossing one's inner sky. Psychic complexity swirls up from the dust of cosmetic self-definition. At the same time, the determination and endurance I have to muster to just observe, grow like muscles with exercise. Naturally the repetition of this mixture of tolerance and firmness extrapolates beyond its source in sitting, out to relationships.
I sit because knowing that I will die enriches and excoriates my life, so I have to go out of my way to seek the discipline and stability that is necessary for me to really face it. Sitting rivets me on the psychological fact that death is life's door. No power can save me. Because I am aware of death, and afraid, I lean my shoulder into living; not reactively, but with conscious choice and decision of what will constitute each fleeting moment of my life. To embrace life I must shake hands with death. For this, I need practice. Each act of sitting is a dying to outward activity, a relinquishment of distraction, a cessation of anticipatory gratification. It is life now, as it is.
I think about death every day. It helps me take the long view of things. I really appreciated Paul's passage. It was timely in that I have a draft email sitting in a folder for the last few days, deciding if I should send it or not. I decided to let it "sit" and see what unfolded as the days passed. I will not be sending it. Sometimes waiting...sitting, as Paul put it, gives us a chance to take the long view rather than the short view, which may include reacting rather than responding.
A favorite quote by Tagore's: Death is not extinguishing the Light. It is putting out the Lamp because the Dawn has come."
Thank you.
Mr. Fleishman... I read and now reread your post... I'm inspired to truly sit and listen to the quiet, to me, to the outside... the theme of death stopped me at the first, then in rereading I'm understanding the idea...
I've a need to listen, to stop and listen and to hear.
I appreciate the humility in your statement , "There is little I have heard from others ... that I have not seen in myself as I sit." We're all so much the same, it's good and ok to love ourself as we appreciate and love and listen to someone else.
Thanks for a well written thought and a well stated discipline and practice... I'm inspired!
Susan