Search Engine - How do you sit quietly in the middle of a storm?

Episode Date: November 1, 2024

What if there was an event in the future, the outcome of which you couldn’t personally control, but it was still causing you anguish? This week, we talk to an ordained Zen priest and teacher to get ...some answers. Rev. angel Kyodo williams helps us learn how you could begin to quiet all the fears in your head that kidnap you from your actual life. Rev's website. Rev's instruction for point meditation. Support Search Engine at searchengine.show! To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to Search Engine, I'm PJ Vote. Each week we answer a question we have about the world. No question too big, no question too small. This week, a question that probably sounds like a very small one, but which to me feels like a very big one, how do you sit quietly? That's after some ads. This episode of Search Engine is brought to you in part by Square.
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Starting point is 00:02:23 I always get a little bit nervous, like reading an introduction in front of a human being. I know it's weird. It's very weird. It makes you read too fast. So just know that I'll read too fast. Okay. Okay. I have some issues with anxiety. I know everybody does, I suspect mine are unusually bad. Lately, I've started to wonder if curiosity, which is my job, and anxiety, which I consider my enemy,
Starting point is 00:03:14 might not just be the same thing. Or if not the same thing, siblings. One, the overachiever, the other, a slightly destructive fuck up. The reason I think that they might be siblings is because one not bad definition of anxiety would be a condition that floods your brain with questions. What do other people think of me? Is everything okay? Am I safe?
Starting point is 00:03:35 or maybe a question a lot of people have today, what's going to happen next week? The difference, though, between those questions and the questions curiosity asks is that those questions are frankly terrible questions. I say this as someone who loves questions, who spends my life inside of questions. I believe I have some standing here.
Starting point is 00:03:54 I believe a good question takes you outside of yourself. It makes the world feel big and bewildering. Anxiety's questions narrow the world to a straw's aperture. everything we were here to see, we become unable to see, and instead we are stuck somewhere else. Last year, I was interviewing someone. We actually cut this part of the interview out when we aired it. But I was interviewing someone who brought up their meditation practice. He said every day he sits quietly for a short amount of time. And I told him that for me, meditation felt like the final boss in a video game. Like the hardest last thing I was going to have to at some point when my life got
Starting point is 00:04:31 hard enough confront. And he was really confused by this answer. Sitting quietly in a room for 15 minutes, instead of seeing it as a helpful exercise, that was the scariest thing in the world to me. His reaction really stuck with me. I kept thinking about it. The day that I'm writing the words that I'm saying is October 29th, 2024. We're somehow exactly one week away from an election.
Starting point is 00:04:54 The national mood right now feels like everyone is visiting the place I usually live, anxiety. If you consume any media, the most asked question, you'll find is an unanswerable, in my opinion, unhelpful one. What is going to happen next? So I thought maybe this is a week to finally talk to someone about meditation. I wanted to ask someone, how do you learn to sit? And I also wanted to ask what happens to you over the years if you keep sitting. Do you mind saying your name and who you are and what you do? Yeah, I'm Rev Angel, Kyoto Williams. Most people call me just Rev. Rev. I think what I do is, I sit quietly.
Starting point is 00:05:37 Rev Angel Kyoto Williams. She's an ordained Zen priest and teacher. Also, author of the book Radical Dharma, founder of transformative change, CEO of Mindful. I've talked to a lot of people overqualified to answer their questions I brought them, but even for me.
Starting point is 00:05:54 I help people understand a way of sitting quietly that is consistent with the life that they have and not some other idea that makes them go crazy and makes them feel like they want to run away or that it's the final boss. What do you mean when you say consistent with the life that they have? Consistent with the life they have means I have this take on things, which is most of the
Starting point is 00:06:21 instruction that we have received about meditation in the big mainstream world comes from largely monastic traditions, whether those are Eastern traditions, Buddhist, which is a lot of what we think of mindfulness meditation is hailed from Buddhism and Buddhist traditions, but also Western mystic traditions and so on. So they're largely the instructions that have been given to and received by monastics, people that have unhooked from life. They have reduced the number of hooks in order to have a life that is less friction. And that's most of what we have received the instructions of people that have chosen fewer hooks, fewer decisions in life. They home leave, they go away, they cloister, they enter into a space in which they have fewer decisions, fewer things to contend with,
Starting point is 00:07:19 they don't have children, they don't have partners, they don't have marriages, many of the decisions that the thousands of decisions that are that we most of us make each day are actually made for them by way of the structure and the container that they're in. And then there's this other direction, which is what I'm in the habit of working with, which is how do we stay in life with all the hooks and smooth out the scrunchy, squirrelly, you know, jaggedy side so that there's less of us to be hooked into. So life's hooks remain, but we smooth ourselves out in such a way that our journey is less frictionful. It is less busy, less harsh on us. So just to make sure I understand, it's like there's sort of two paths that people might take, and one is you're kind of retreating a little
Starting point is 00:08:19 bit, like you're making a life that's simpler and maybe more removed, and so it's easier to find this piece because, like, for instance, I live in a city, New York that's like, it's a traffic jam and it's an assault on the senses and I work quite a bit and like the world sometimes I perceive is just as a volley of elbows. And there's people who would be like, well, just move upstate and like find a quiet room to sit in. And what you're talking about is a kind of practice that allows you to still inhabit the world but more peacefully. Yeah, they're saying get less elbows, right? Like go someplace where there are fewer elbows. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:54 And I'm saying that that's most of what we've received in terms of the instructions. And that doesn't align with the lives that many of us live. Even if we move upstate, we find the elbows. Right. My idea that upstate is a place where life is perfect is predicated the idea that I haven't spent much time in there. And so I'm saying that where I'm coming from is how do we live with the elbows? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:19 And we find a way in which we're able to navigate life. and navigate the elbows and actually appreciate them and appreciate the ways that the elbows communicate something to us about ourselves, give us information, make us more curious. So I guess what I'm curious about, I'm curious both how you got to that understanding of living with elbows, but also even how, like to even go back earlier, like what was your, you've spent a very long time thinking about these things
Starting point is 00:09:51 and sort of inhabiting different spiritual and meditation practices. I'm like using terminology that's unfamiliar to me, which is why I'm stumbling. But who were you before all of this? Like at some point I imagine you were a person like anybody else moving through the world the way, for instance, like I am right now, and something happened to make you curious. Like, can you draw me a picture of you before you were a rev?
Starting point is 00:10:15 And then what happened? Yeah, I was like you. I hope I'm still a person like anyone else. And I was a New Yorker. And I'm always a New Yorker, by the way, all of us did are New Yorkers. We know that that's true. So I'm ever a New Yorker. I was a young New Yorker, though, and living in a post-Ed Koch era.
Starting point is 00:10:40 And New York was kind of emerging from its dirty, grimy vibe. But I grew up in that. I grew up with the burnt-out. Bronx, the harsh, be afraid. We used to call Mertel Avenue in Brooklyn Murder Avenue. You know, I grew up with the New York of legend stuff, the place that is angry and harsh and rough, and you had to look over your shoulders, watch your back all of the time, and you're kind of, you know, shuffling in with like millions upon millions of people. And it had a lot of elbows. And my life had a lot of elbows. I had a lot of elbows growing up. I was a latchkey kid. I grew up with
Starting point is 00:11:23 single parents, swapped between them. My earliest recollection was living with my dad, who was a fireman. And fireman, for many of you that don't know, work either nine to six, you know, like nine to five, and nine to six, or they work from six to nine to nine, which is six at night and then to nine in the morning. And so babysitters, you know, handed off to other people, toggling between, you know, going to this person's house and that person's house and being taken care of in that way and learning quite early to take care of myself, to make my way home, to take care of myself before my dad could get home, which would be, you know, maybe 630, maybe 7. And doing that and understanding that is just what my life was
Starting point is 00:12:08 and having to navigate all of the things that come with that, you know, the scary kids in school that were not very kind to you, you know, that you had to like just pay attention to and keep your senses and your wits about you. I've got a different kind of curiosity about life. I kind of curious, but what do they have to? What's going on with the air? What's in that shadow? What's happening? You know, I did a lot of raising myself in that way in between the people that were, you know, taking care of me in little blocks of time. I was raising myself in that same space. That's who I was.
Starting point is 00:12:45 And you're describing the thing that, like, I feel like happens to everybody to some degree, but happens to some people more at different times where it's like life is teaching you an alarm system. And like the alarm system might be the right alarm system for a time to get you through a place. And then maybe you get through the place.
Starting point is 00:13:02 needs to have the alarm system. Like, you're just anticipating and predicting. That's right. Yeah. Well, that's a very particular part of my journey, actually. And it's interesting of the many podcasts and things that I've done. I've not said a lot about this, and I think I'm just in this turn, you know, this kind of place in my life now that maybe it's time to come, have this piece come through.
Starting point is 00:13:22 One of the alarm systems I was abused quite significantly when I was young. I'm so sorry. Yeah, I'm sorry for anyone that has to go through it. And those kinds of experiences in your life are a real junctures of what's going to happen with that, what's going to be the path that unfolds as a result of that. One of the things that happened is that I, by a series of events, I ended up back close to the person that was discovered and they were separated from me and so on and so forth. And then I ended up about 15 years old, back in the place close to that person's,
Starting point is 00:14:02 family, the place that I associated them with. Oh. And talk about alarm system. Yeah. I was on, you know, I considered myself a pretty precocious child. I was, you know, very, very intellectually and culturally precocious. And I was back in Queens, which felt like, you know, like back in the woods somehow. And I was like, okay, that's where I'm going.
Starting point is 00:14:27 I'm going high school in Chelsea, you know, in the midst of all the things, you know, growing up in Greenwich Village and, you know, sort of party vibe and everything is happening. It's kind of the center of all the things. And I was living. I went to live back with my granddad, and he lived in Queens. And I was on the bus, two fair zone for those of you. Like train and a bus. And I was on the bus, and suddenly I would feel this, like, prickling in the back of my neck.
Starting point is 00:14:54 And I found myself looking around for this person. And talk about anxiety. You know, I didn't know that that's what it. it was. I spent some, I don't know how long it was, you know, time is weird and elastic. I spent too long for me of a period of time feeling like I was truly looking over my shoulder at every turn and feeling this alarm system that was going off of like I might run into this person, what will happen if I see her, what goes on here, what do I do? How do I manage this? And, you know, all of this, you can feel that, like, just the internet.
Starting point is 00:15:32 as I speak about it was like that kind of energy. And I just decided like, no. I decided no, I'm not doing this. So, okay, so you're at a point where you're a precocious, like, New York teenager. You have this problem, which is that you've had a traumatic experience, and you're having the thing that people so often have, which is like your brain is trying to keep you safe. But the way it's trying to keep you safe is that it is imagining terrible things happening all the time.
Starting point is 00:15:59 And you decide this isn't how. I want to be, what do you do? Yeah, I decide something more like, you know, in New York speak, nah. You know, because by this time, as I said, I'm precocious, right? So I'm 15 and I'm in high school. And I was in 10th grade by then, so I had already moved forward some more. And so it was a little bit younger than people are typically at that time. And my crew, who I run with is even older than that.
Starting point is 00:16:33 So typically I grew up in a world of people that were maybe, you know, four to five years older than me. That was just how I moved through the world. And so that's also informed by that, you know, it was like, nah. It was like, this is not happening. Whatever this is going on, this is not happening. So my response to it is I've just got to go and face it. And so I went and went to her parents' house and said, you know, where does she live? And turns out she lives literally blocks from where I was.
Starting point is 00:17:09 And got the address and, you know, pulled myself together and did some of the self-talk of like, yeah, you know, like, I'm not five anymore. You know, I'm this person. I have a life. I have friends that have people that, you know, care about me and you can't hurt me. this person can't hurt me. And so I talked myself into that, and I rang the doorbell. You rang the doorbell of her home.
Starting point is 00:17:39 I rang the doorbell of her home. And I sought her out, and she wasn't there that particular day. But the point here was that I got to have a conversation with the person that created the conditions for the most terror and horror in my life and ask them why, what was that? this about? Nobody have, it's so rare for people to get to ask that question. Can I ask me, what was her answer? Entirely unsatisfactory and probably untrue, but what she could offer at the time,
Starting point is 00:18:14 which this piece is true. She was suffering. And that became clear to me that the piece of the suffering that she shared with me wasn't the entirety of it. And it was a very slim slice of it, because I came to know her for a little while over a couple of next few years. But it was clear that it was suffering and that she didn't know what else to do with her own suffering. And her own suffering, her own not knowing what to do with the box that she found herself in,
Starting point is 00:18:46 of also kind of abuse within her family, with confusion, and, you know, trying to be in a relationship that was probably too soon for a person at her age. And at that time, that was the story that I told myself. And that's the story that I came away, that this was a person that didn't know what to do with the suffering that they had. So all that they could do was to extend suffering to someone else. That was the way that they found control.
Starting point is 00:19:13 That's how she found control was to try to control someone else. And that's what she did is try to control me through these, you know, various forms of abuse. The way you just described it is that how you understood it as a talent? I think in bits and pieces, yeah, I think it unfolded. I think that the abuse, as much as people speak about the horrors of abuse, I think it also gave me a window and an awareness and a tenderness about the frailty, like how I wouldn't have used that word then, but, you know, how exposed we are and how easy it is for people to assault us. I had a sensitivity as a result of that abuse that gave me an insight and a care for what it means to be so tender. And so the very abuse that she visited upon me gave me access to a tenderness about the abuse that was visited upon her. Wow.
Starting point is 00:20:20 Did you feel safe after that? I did much safer. Yeah. you know, safe as relative. I'm, for those of you know, I'm black. And so, you know, black in America is safe as a negotiated term. But I felt safer. And I felt like I had claimed my life.
Starting point is 00:20:40 And I think that that opened a path for me to make that my business, to claim my life, that every place and every turn where it felt like something else sought to determine, frame, feedback, what my life could be, I decided that, nope, it's mine. I get to decide, and I would. You know, people are weird when kids get abused. They don't, they didn't ask questions. They didn't want to know. They wanted it to disappear and make it like it never happened. So no one had ever asked me about it or said, you know, what happened or how'd that happened. So all of the meaning making of it got pushed away. I didn't get to make any meaning. I think that's why I was able to ask the question and want to ask because I needed to make some sense of it.
Starting point is 00:21:30 That's what we do. We want to make sense of this life with all of his hooks and barbs and figure out why me. You know, why did this, whatever was going on, why did this have to land here with me? What was it about me, you know, that made me worthy of abuse? And that question felt gone after you spoke to her because it sounds like what you saw was just this person was suffering and you were just there. Yeah, I was in the space.
Starting point is 00:22:04 It wasn't about me. And I carry that to this day that most of the things that people are up to that are causing and creating harm is not about you. It lands on you. It landed on me. It landed on this body. and it has all of its impacts, but I now have a sense of, oh, I get to decide that I'm not going to land my suffering and extend that and have it land on someone else.
Starting point is 00:22:32 And so then where did you take that lesson? Like, where did you go next? So that lesson took me to so many ways of having more curiosity about the way in which the experiences that we have can be able. metabolized, right? Like, I got to metabolize a tremendously difficult, painful, life-altering terror in my life. And that metabolizing, that's the word that I would use now, led me to being able to take things, not as a personal offense to me, but part of... life that could either be metabolized or it could be something that I end up, you know, making me like terribly ill and, you know, and just hugging the toilet bowl of life trying to
Starting point is 00:23:30 vomit everything out again. And then rinse, wash, repeat, we just do it again and again and again. It doesn't go away. That's what I got. It doesn't go away until you metabolize it. How do you, in the project of metabolizing these things, I think what's often hard, I'm going to say for people, but really it's for me. is that you can't always knock on the door. Like, how do you metabolize? Yeah. If it sounds like part of the work is that when you suffer
Starting point is 00:23:58 to not see your suffering as personal, but to see it as part of a chain of suffering and unskilledness and confusion, what if you don't have that opportunity to meet with the person? Like, how do you metabolize those experiences? Yeah, you mostly don't get the... Actually, if this the truth is you mostly don't get that,
Starting point is 00:24:19 opportunity. I slipped it in and it's probably the most important thing. The answer was entirely unsatisfactory and likely untrue. That was the best gift of the whole experience. Had she said something that just made sense and it just like all lined up, I probably just would have gone on with my life expecting things to line up and make sense. Because it was unsatisfactory and because it was likely, as became clear very quickly, likely and true, other than the suffering piece, it was like all that was left was the suffering. The only thing that was solid and had meat was the suffering. And so what that gave me was the kind of access to the sense of like, oh, yeah, I'm not going to get an answer here. This is not going to get an answer.
Starting point is 00:25:13 Eventually, we learn to, in order to metabolize things that we are not given, like a data said, and we can add it up and put it in a spreadsheet and it all compute nice and neatly, is that we sit with it. And then when we sit with it, we metabolize it in a way that comes with every single one of us as human beings. There's all sorts of things that can come about and disrupt. our natural operating system of being able to metabolize life. We are all given that that is what we come with. I don't believe that whatever it is that is necessary for that is hidden under the deep ocean or in a cave. In some mountains, it doesn't belong to some particular culture
Starting point is 00:25:57 or some people or some time. Every single one of us have a navigation system for life itself that is endemic to who we are. It is our fundamental nature. It is our birthright. and then we have shitty things that happen in life that can disrupt it and throw that operating system offline, but we can go back and try our best to get it back again. After a short break, Rev, before she was Rev, decides to pursue sitting quietly more seriously. After an interruption, we'll return. Springstiles are at Nordstrom Rack stores now,
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Starting point is 00:27:35 for citizens back. Welcome back to the show. Back in the early 90s, when Rev first wanted to deepen her meditation practice, she started going to retreats. You might not be familiar with these until a few years ago I wasn't. I've never gone, but people close to me have.
Starting point is 00:28:03 What I understand is that at a retreat, people interested in meditating come together to meditate. A retreat might last five days, a week, or longer. If you go, you agree to follow set of rules. You'll agree to wake up at the break of dawn. Often, these retreats are entirely silent, meaning for the whole time you will not talk. At a retreat, you are meditating many times a day.
Starting point is 00:28:29 Rev would say you are sitting meditation many times a day. In these sessions, you keep meditating until you hear a bell ring. There might be a walking meditation as well, or what's called a work meditation, where you're helping the center with chores. The people I know who have gone describe this experience of mostly being alone in silence in your own mind for a week as exactly as excruciating as I imagine it. But they also describe it as beautiful, and most of them go back. I don't understand any of this at all. And part of the reason why I was talking to Rev and ordained Zen priest was because I was hoping to understand it more. She told me what it's like to go learn to sit in retreat. It's like a pendulum swing between like,
Starting point is 00:29:15 the most profound stillness, you can enjoy the feeling of your body or the movement of a butterfly and utter excruciating, why is that person coughing? Well, somebody please ring the fucking bell. It's all the things in between, and that's the best thing about it, is you realize that in this, you know, spaces that are set just so and everything is right and it's all prepared, you still manage to drive yourself nuts. And to hate people and to love people, you do the whole gamut in there in a little tiny, tiny, tiny, tiny, tiny, constructed container. And yet you manage to play out all of the shenanigans, do all the things. You hate people. You love them.
Starting point is 00:30:15 You want to have sex with them. You want them to get as far away as possible. You know, the smallest things hurt your feelings. You get upset. You get cold and distant. You do all the things. And you realize, well, wait a minute. If all of this is here, even though I'm in a different space,
Starting point is 00:30:37 maybe I have something to do with creating. Maybe that I have something to do. with creating all of this, and it's not everybody else's fault. I might have to take responsibility for my life. I see. So it's like the thing that it offers, or one of the things it offers, is that if it's like you find out that even if everything were taken away, like the things we think the world is doing to us,
Starting point is 00:31:04 when you take away the world, you see that we do them to ourselves. And so then it gives you a place to start to find a way to not do that. Yeah, well, first it humbles you. You bring you to your knees, you know. And it's a space of reconciliation. You reconcile the distance between the truths and untruths of your life. Can you tell me a story about for you what it was like early on when you were sort of less skilled, like what it was like to do a retreat like that, like what you walked in with and what it felt like to grapple with it?
Starting point is 00:31:38 What it was like was, this is awesome. That's such a great question. It was this cycle of trying to find a way out. You mean like out of the physical location? Everything. Trying to find a way out. Trying to game the system. Whatever your shtick is, you're going to see it,
Starting point is 00:32:08 and it's going to be like glaring. And so if seducing is your schick, you're going to try to seduce everyone. and everything. Me, it was gaming. I was a good talker. And so internally and externally, I was gaming the system in every way that I could possibly find.
Starting point is 00:32:29 I would sneak like extra bits of sleep or I would try not to be asked to do the things that I didn't want to do. I would sort of get myself into a little corner somewhere and try to disappear so no one would notice me to ask me to do the task that I didn't want to do. You know, you try to sit and look like you're sitting while you're really like, you know, doing your taxes and your head, you know, you sit there and it's like, yep, I look really still. Nope, they can't see that. I'm so, so still.
Starting point is 00:33:03 Okay, if I just move this little way, then I look even more still. And I look like I'm very concentrated. And I really, I mean, I want to say that that's not the very earliest, because the earliest early is you just, holding on by the seat of your pants. It's like, why, why did I do this? Yeah. I shouldn't be here. I could just get up and walk out. Yeah, but everybody will see you, but I could still just, I'm grown, I can just get up and walk out. You do that for at least four days. Well, what will happen? You play out fantasy. Well, what would happen if I just got up? And, you know, and then you get to your clothes and you're like, okay, nobody's stopping you. You could pack your clothes. And you used to
Starting point is 00:33:42 make a decision. Yeah. And you make a decision. and you make a decision. And that's all it's made up of is making a decision to come back. And so at that point, like you're walking up a mountain in a way, like you're going to these retreats and you're finding that
Starting point is 00:33:56 the practice is worthwhile for you. What did it mean then to decide to become a Zen priest? I don't know how that, like I know nothing. Like how to, what is, what was that? It's like, I feel like it's when you, you know, you watch the movie,
Starting point is 00:34:09 you're like, oh, I could be a wizard, you know, I could be a mugwort, or whatever they call that. Yeah. I could be a wizard. That's it. You're like, oh, it's going to be hard, and there's going to be the snake people and the, like, rough people that are doing terrible things to me
Starting point is 00:34:23 and playing jokes on me and stuff like that. Or I could go back and just be a human. You're like, I'm going to do it. And I might fall off my broom and end up being dragged. and I'd rather be a wizard. You know, I'd rather know a little bit more about what's going on in this life and not feel so confused and put upon.
Starting point is 00:34:55 So Rev chose the more interesting path. She studied the precepts, she trained. Eventually she was ordained as a Zen priest. She was the second black woman recognized as a teacher in her lineage. That was three sentences, but they described many years. So I did all of that,
Starting point is 00:35:11 and I went through the ranks, so to speak, I hold the most senior title in the Zen tradition. It was a very small handful of black women that actually hold that role as a sanctioned Zen teachers, and I'm one of them. And then I got a, you know, like cool honorific. It's called Roshi means old teacher. Not that old for those you can't see me. But I got, you know, so I hold that and right around the time that I was heading towards that. and they were, you know, I was getting the titles and all the ranks, and I was like,
Starting point is 00:35:49 I don't know about this. Y'all. In fact, I wrote an essay called, I may not get there with you. And it was saying that, yep, I did this thing where it was like climbing the mountain, you know, doing all the ranks and all the things. And I was like, I don't know if this is really what most people are going to be, I know most people are not going to be able to do this, what I just did. They're not going to commit the time, the energy, the, you know, whatever. And it's not because they're bad or because they're less or they're less deserving of liberation and freedom in their life. It's not because of that. It's because we haven't structured in a way. And we are, I'm an activist, social, justicey, all of that. And I was like, we're jacking the planet up
Starting point is 00:36:31 and creating destruction at a rate at which this will never solve. And so this journey, this 20-year thing that I've done, now 30 plus years, we are not going to be able to deal with the crises of the world and the planet if we don't have more people mature, right, become more mature human beings, more kind human beings at a more accelerated rate. And we need something that will operate, forgive me for saying this at scale. Enlightenment at scale. We need to be able to, I don't know if that we,
Starting point is 00:37:17 I don't think we need a thousand more Buddhas. I think we need millions of more people that are, I like to say, aware, more aligned and more alive. And when we do that, it is not that all of our problems will disappear. We will learn to conflict well with each other. We will learn to conflict honestly and with integrity and with a willingness to meet life as it is and not to abdicate to fantasies and the fictions that we're creating and getting ourselves looped into.
Starting point is 00:38:01 To be clear, Rev still holds the title of Zen Priest. It's just that she's decided, in her words, to leave the track, to help people find liberation where they are. Presumably, this mission includes the slightly unusual choice to talk to doofy podcasters. such as myself. After a short break, where does someone go to sit quietly? No one goes to Hank's for his spreadsheets. They go for a darn good pizza. Lately, though, the shop's been quiet.
Starting point is 00:38:39 So Hank decides to bring back the $1 slice. He asks co-pilot in Microsoft Excel to look at his sales and costs to help him see if he can afford it. Co-pilot shows Hank where the money's going and which little extras make the dollar slice work. Now, Hanks has a line out the door. Hank makes the pizza co-pilot. handles the spreadsheets. Learn more at M365 copilot.com slash work.
Starting point is 00:39:02 This episode is brought to you by Indeed. Stop waiting around for the perfect candidate. Instead, use Indeed sponsored jobs to find the right people with the right skills fast. It's a simple way to make sure your listing is the first candidate C. According to Indeed data, sponsor jobs have four times more applicants than non-sponsored jobs. So go build your dream team today with Indeed. Get a $75-dollar sponsor job credit at Indeed.com slash podcast. Terms and conditions apply.
Starting point is 00:39:30 Spring is in the air, which means now is the time to save during spring outdoor power deals at the Home Depot. Make cleanup easier when you go cordless with the Milwaukee M18 string trimmer, designed to deliver more runtime, more speed, and maximum performance. Then grab a select Milwaukee fuel attachment, like the pole saw, edger, or brush cutter, included at no extra cost when you buy the Milwaukee EULW. M18 string trimmer. Shop seven days of spring outdoor power deals at the Home Depot. Now through April 29th.
Starting point is 00:40:10 Welcome back. So my life has begun to fill up with meditators. I mean, not fill up, but they've been sneaking in. And, you know, they still seem to experience the world roughly the way I do. They don't seem like different, you know, in like they're not so different. But it does feel like they have access to a practice that, I don't know, it's like if you never jogged and everyone's jogging. and they seem a little bit happier, and they seem like a little bit fitter, and, like, they're breathing a little bit easier.
Starting point is 00:40:38 And I honestly don't understand the relationship between, I understand that the very few times I've tried to sit down in a room quietly, it has been surprisingly excruciating. But I don't understand the relationship between closing your eyes for 15 minutes or 20 minutes and contending with that feeling of wrongness or re-centered yourself. It's not that I'm skeptical of it. I'm really curious about it. and I'm slightly in awe of it, but I don't understand it. And maybe it's something they have to experience to understand, but I'm just curious about it. I know that's more of like a question mark than a question.
Starting point is 00:41:14 Yeah. I do think there's something of experiencing it. So there's a state and there's trait, right? So there's the state of meditation. There's people that practice meditation. They have a kind of meditation practice. and letting that system, that operating system, go offline for a while and not just keep churning and churning and churning and churning and churning.
Starting point is 00:41:43 And giving it a break and letting it reset so that you become a little bit more aligned and in tune with your own pace, rhythm, speed, and the frenetic pace, rhythm, speed, or sometimes the too slow pace, rhythm, and speed of life, you recognize them as not being yours, and so you can stick closer to your own pace, rhythm, and speed. And when we are more attuned to our own pace, rhythm, and speed,
Starting point is 00:42:21 then we feel happier. When we are more aligned within our own pace, rhythm, and speed, within ourselves, within whatever confluences of this thing that we call, this fellow once said, the thing I shamelessly refer to as me, when we're more in tune with it, we feel more aligned with it, even with those, with weird, how weird we are and odd we are out of, you know, sync we seem with everything else, we feel more happy. That's our navigating system. Our navigating system says that you are here to be you. You're not here to be anybody else. You're not here to be me. You're not here to match up in sync with my rhythm in the way that I am, you're here to be you. And that's telling that even when we
Starting point is 00:43:07 don't seem to fit in whatever else is happening, that we are more, and this word is a funny little word for me, but I'll just use it happy, right? We're more content when we are more true to ourselves. That is just real. And the other thing is we are more content when we're just doing what we're doing. What do you mean? When we're not running other programs while we're doing what we're actually doing. So in other words, we're not talking about what we're doing, questioning what we're doing, wondering about what we're doing as we're doing it, when we're just doing what we're doing. We experience ourselves as more content. So it's like what you're saying is one of the things that people might develop from my practice like this is like the voice
Starting point is 00:44:02 gets quieter or goes away sometimes? Yeah, for sure. I would say that what the voice does is the voice sinks up and it's got something to do, which is the thing it's doing. Instead of watching the thing that it's doing, it's like we're separated from ourselves, literally. right because there's us doing what we're doing and then there's us watching us and having commentary and having judgment about what we're doing and anxiety about what we're doing and then we're like wait a minute well i don't think you should be doing that it's like when you're watching a movie you're like wait you don't don't go over there i know what's over there i'm not sure what's over there but i have a sense because i've watched this movie before if i've watched movies just that are like
Starting point is 00:44:43 this and so that i'm anticipating what might happen if that person and you're getting all of the you know, anxious feelings and the heart racing and the blood rushing of what happens. And when you're watching someone else and you're closely connected with the watching, but that's your life that you're doing. You can turn it off if it's Netflix or a movie or something else. But when it's your life, you live with that and you're just running on that fight or flight. You're running in the sympathetic nervous system all the time because you don't get to turn the movie off. And it's It's sometimes time to just join in and just be the character. And for you, for most of the time, you don't have, like, the voice in your head is in sync in that way.
Starting point is 00:45:27 It is very much in sync. In fact, the voice in my head just now was your voice. What do you mean? So as you were speaking, the only voice is in my head is your voice. I'm with your voice because that's what's happening. So I'm in the habit and the practice of being with what is and not running commentary along. side, which for some people maddens them because it means I respond to things slower as a result, because I have to process. I'm with life. I'm with what is happening, not watching life and being a spectator. I am in my life. I feel being alive, rather being a spectator of my life that's sitting there on the sideline, you know, annoyingly having all kinds of judgments and interventions. and, you know, postulating about and perseverating about what's going on or what could happen
Starting point is 00:46:23 and what might happen and what happened. Why didn't I do this or that? You know, it's like you can feel the energy of it. It's just, it's maddening. And when you throw that offline, you just get this. So when you set, what do you hear when you sit quietly? So when I said earlier that the instructions that I think most of us get is, you know, we think and even sit quietly, right? So that conjures up all sorts of weird stuff for us, you know, and so then we sit there and we're actively trying to be quiet. And so then we're in a little bit of a battle. So here's the way that I come to it. We're super stealthy, right?
Starting point is 00:47:08 Like the ego structure or that extra voice, the side show. is super stealthy. It's faster or smarter than us. And so my approach is you have to kind of get out of the way of even getting out of the way. And the way to do that is to have one single instruction. And the one single instruction is that you just return. You just come back to yourself. Just come back.
Starting point is 00:47:39 Everything else is a sideshow. Everything else that you're doing. is a sideshow or a rationale for the side show, or it's a judgment of the side show, or if it's a judgment of why you should have the sideshow, or maybe the side show is worthy this particular time, and it's all a side show. All of it is a side show.
Starting point is 00:48:02 There's just your life. Can we just pause and say, you've just got a life, and that's it. That's it. And when I'm fully in my life, that's kind of enough for me. It's just my life. It takes up all my time, takes up all my energy, it takes up all my attention. If I'm fully online with my life, that's all I need is my life. I don't need the sideshow. I don't need the conversations. I don't need the judgment. I don't need the perseverating. I don't need the postulating. I don't need going into the past, projecting myself into the future, wondering about that. I can just take up the full. full-ass space of my existence with facing my life and meeting my life just what's right here. So rather than sit quietly, I just invite people to come back to themselves, because that's what we're trying to do. It's kind of a shortcut. Instead of doing all these other things that are
Starting point is 00:49:04 about coming back to your life, how about just come back to your life? Just come back. You don't have to sit quietly. The way that I say it is you're getting quiet enough to hear yourself. Whatever is happening, you can hear it, and you're getting still enough to be able to feel yourself. Because if you've got a lot of things happening and moving around so that you can't even feel the condition of yourself, then you're not even in the game at all, right? So enough means just enough for you. And if you can feel yourself and hear yourself when you're running, that's awesome. That's good enough.
Starting point is 00:49:42 You don't have to sit in a room. If you're on a bike and you just go and it's just like, wow, I can feel my senses. I feel my heart. I feel the quality of my skin. I feel the temperature. I feel the air moving through my hair and I'm in this body. That's still enough. That's quiet enough.
Starting point is 00:50:05 And that's the point. When Rev uses that word point, she's referring to something specific. I might use the wrong words here, so you'll have to forgive me, but my understanding is that she means a particular place where you learn to rest to your attention and awareness, a place you will drift away from, but which you'll learn to return to. I'm describing a place I'm trying to learn to get to, but the instructions for getting there, as I've heard them, go like this.
Starting point is 00:50:34 find a place that's quiet enough. Get your body into a position that's comfortable enough. Find the specific place. Reb specifies your lower belly. That's the place where your attention is supposed to rest as you breathe naturally. And as you find your attention awareness moving away, and it will, to a to-do list, to questions about what's going to happen next week, or what happened in the past, you'll just gently return to point.
Starting point is 00:51:04 That's the whole thing. But I'm at the very beginning of trying to understand it, so it feels very strange to try to explain it. But the most basic instruction is just return. Meditation is not for me about sitting quietly or becoming quiet. It's about the choice. That when you find yourself anywhere other than where you intend to be, you come back.
Starting point is 00:51:30 That's what I did when I was a kid. I was like, I don't want to be there. I want to come back. I am out here someplace else, tripping on some other possibility that hasn't happened. I don't know if it's going to happen. I'm just going to come back right here.
Starting point is 00:51:51 I'm curious how many people come to you, like me, like whether election week for people who have a meditation practice is sort of like January at the gym, like just like a lot of nervous people who think like help. Yes. Yes? Yes. Absolutely. I don't personally entertain it anymore. Like, it's not how I face the world, but I always get my most podcasts and everything, right? In January, right? When everything jumps off, it's like prayer. You know, it's like, you know, lose your keys and suddenly you get religious. I need to pray. I need to do something. But that makes sense. You know, it's when the bottom falls out. We feel the bottom is falling out, or we fear the bottom is going to fall out beneath us that we want to find some ground. So,
Starting point is 00:52:34 It's right. It's the right thing to do. Whatever it brings you there, whatever throws you over the edge, that's the thing that should get you there. The thing I've been most astounded by in the people in my life who have been drawn to this hasn't. It's funny, like, I feel like this, not the sales pitch, but the sales pitch a little bit feels like maybe it would be easier to live in your own mind, which for me is very attractive. But then what I've seen some people growing into has been instead meditation that's about compassion. That's about not just being in your own mind as easily, but extending compassion to people who might be difficult or just far away from you. And I was wondering if you could talk about compassion practices. Yeah. I would love to say that compassion naturally arises out of every type of meditation. I don't think that's actually true.
Starting point is 00:53:33 I think there's ways that people can meditate and use very focus meditation, right? Where it's about focus and concentrating attention that if there's no moral container, there's no moral container and it doesn't necessarily cause compassion to arise. So, yay, for your friends and the people that are like this. This comes along with it as well because they clearly have enough of a moral container, either that they brought to it themselves or that's coming along with it as they teach. That is the ideal, if we want to be useful for humanity. Meditation that doesn't cause and incite compassion to arise who's not going to be of much use to us on the planet, frankly.
Starting point is 00:54:26 Meditation is not in and of itself, like, it's just going to be good. it makes us better at something, but not necessarily things that are pro-social all the time. We pitch it as pro-social, but we should be clear about that. You could be like an executioner who was living in the moment, and you would still be an executioner. Totally. But what about, I mean, like, I guess one of the things that I was at, I was, I won't say drag to, but I attended as like a, as I just like was going with my editor, Shruti, to this event that was a bunch of meditation people and they were speaking.
Starting point is 00:55:00 And I found it interesting, and it was nice to be among people who were not my people, who were, like, trying to ask and answer some of the questions I care about. And the moment that stopped me short was somebody, I think it was an audience member, asked one of the people on stage, they said, well, you know, I'm somebody who's trying to practice compassion meditation, and how do you, when you sit and you try to extend compassion to, you know, difficult people. What do you do about Donald Trump? And I had a moment.
Starting point is 00:55:33 It was funny. Sitting in the audience, the first feeling I had was like a groan, which was interesting, where I was just like, how can we have to talk about this right now? Or maybe it felt very like, we're in Manhattan
Starting point is 00:55:45 where everybody's of the same tribe and everybody agrees that the same person is bad. And there's something, but then really sitting with a question for a moment, I thought like, it's a great question. It's a really hard question.
Starting point is 00:55:57 Like, how do you feel compassion towards people who have become an avatar of people who just, like, inflict suffering on a really wide scale? And I think, like, I live where I live and I'm in the tribe where I am. And so, like, it's, like, not hard for a person to predict, like, most of the people in my life, what they want to happen in a week. But everybody in the country right now has kind of been, everybody feels like the world's about to end. Maybe you feel like the world's about to end because Donald Trump's about to be elected, or maybe you feel like the world's about to end because Kamala Harris has been elected. And it feels like a moment of, I think most people feel alienated and most people feel like who are these people, even if they don't agree, which the people are. And I'm curious whether your meditation practices, when you think about having compassion for people where you really disagree with them, or you really feel like they are moving through the world without compassion and just like, like, kind of like human bulldozers, but those feel like the people that you're supposed to aim it at. And again, this is more of like a series of statements that are shaped like a question mark than a question. But like, let me put it as a question. Okay, you, I assume, have a smartphone.
Starting point is 00:57:14 I do. And you open your smartphone and like one of the apps pushes you a notification. It's just like, here's the last thing Donald Trump said and it's horrible. And, you know, a part of your brain comes online. What do you do at that part of your brain? What is the way you talk to yourself or what is the way you think about that? I'm from New York, so I say, oi. I'm like, oi, and then I put it down.
Starting point is 00:57:43 Yeah, it's like return. Yeah, I'm just like, I put it down. I want to, I, actually, I feel a lot of compassion toward him or for him. I don't, doesn't mean enough to keep him close or, you know, make them my bedfellow or want them to win the presidency. But I feel a great amount of suffering from that human being. And mostly because I believe, I don't believe much,
Starting point is 00:58:09 but I do believe that human beings are designed to be human. And so when they're acting outside of humanity in ways that are in conflict with humanity, then there's something wrong. And I feel badly for that. I feel badly for anyone that's been fashioned or shaped in such a way. that the demands of their nervous system express themselves as operating against humanity.
Starting point is 00:58:33 I feel for that. And if I didn't feel for that, I kind of should just jump off of this whole ship and get out of here. Because that it means that I've lost a hope and aspiration for us to do better. When I take it as, you know, somehow, it's okay that that person is like that, and they're just a shit because they're like that. and I can write them off, then I've lost aspiration for all of us, honestly. Or I've decided that I'm going to partition and cut everybody up into the, like, the ones that deserve to be here and the ones that don't,
Starting point is 00:59:10 because they align with my values, beliefs, orientations, wishes once, and I'm queer and I'm black, and I'm, like, so many, like, points on the little, like, marginal spectrum. I would just suffer immensely if I spent all my, I spent my time, not even all, some of my time, suffering because of what other people are doing in ways that are contrary to the way that I want to live my life. I take it that just they're doing their thing. And I put my time in, my effort in, my energy in to try to slow down the wheels that are grinding
Starting point is 00:59:47 some of my freedoms to a halt, the best that I can, and then try to advance it and accelerate the ones that open up portals. to evolutionary leaps to something else like marriage equality, that just leaps us forward despite our best intention, many people's best intention to keep it from going that way. Then I just play that. But you know what? None of that is my life.
Starting point is 01:00:10 That's not my life. That's the structures and the contours that we're living within and operating within. But I think the trait of, I don't want to say meditation, I would say liberation. The trait of liberation is to not mistake the mechanics, in operation stuff for who I am. I don't mistake all of the things that are happening.
Starting point is 01:00:33 I have to contend with them, but they're not who I am. I get to keep being me. I get to keep choosing who I am and how I show up. And when I find myself veering off the track of how I'd like to show up in relationship to life, then I return. Get back on track. Return. What do you think people come into meditation typically wanting?
Starting point is 01:01:00 And do you think that they get the thing that they come in wanting? Yeah, I think they come in wanting escape. Escape, quiet, right? Which is escape. And if they mature, they don't get it. And if they don't mature, they do. So if you don't mature, you do get the escape, and when you mature, you don't get the escape, and when you mature more,
Starting point is 01:01:35 you don't want it. Is what you're describing that you're able, it's like you're able to sit more fully and completely, I guess people talk about wanting to be in the present more. Everybody says it, it's like this, I always joke with my part of it. I'm always like, you need to be in the MoMA. But like, what it really means to be in the present is to, it's to not to, turn away from what hurts as well as what is beautiful about it. Yeah, and not just not turning away to welcome it.
Starting point is 01:02:06 Welcome it as an understanding of it's the flip side. It's just another facet of the joy and everything that we want to welcome. That's like, oh, yeah, that comes to that too. That's my favorite thing to say. I'm like, oh, that too. Like, that too. Yeah, and then you take a breath and you make more space in your body, your heart, and your physicality.
Starting point is 01:02:29 And welcome it. We don't get a single direction door where we can let all the good stuff in and, you know, keep out and ward off the bad stuff. It all comes in. How should I start? Well, you've started already. You just return. You know, that curiosity that you have, that yearning to find yourself is all you need. respond to it.
Starting point is 01:03:02 It's like, oh, where am I? One of my, okay, right here. That's the whole thing? That's it. There are courses. If you want 14-week courses, they're there. But, you know, I don't know, call me lazy. Call me expedient.
Starting point is 01:03:26 Interested in Scale. That really is it. What we're building on is the motivation. to heed it. You have it, it's there, we all come with it, that you ask the question, it means you're already there. What we build is the motivation and the practice to heed it and to heed it so much that it becomes second nature
Starting point is 01:03:52 and then to heed that so much that becomes backward belongs, which is first nature. It's so intimidating, but I really, I'll try it. I hope so. I hope it's a little less intimidating. You know, it's intimidating because we are intimidating. Meeting ourselves is intimidating. That's the thing that's we find out. It's like, turns out none of that other stuff and we spend a lot of time fabricating things to be intimidated by, but it turns out that the most challenging thing is to turn around and just meet ourselves where we are. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:04:35 Rev Angel Kyoto Williams. You can find her online. at revangel.com. If you visit, you'll find audio recordings of instructions for point meditation. Also, on November 16th, she's holding a half-day sitting meditation. It's over Zoom. You can join from home.
Starting point is 01:04:52 If you want more information, you can also find it on her website. Rev, thank you. Thank you. That's our show this week. If you are getting any value out of this show and you would like to help us make it, please consider signing up
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Starting point is 01:05:49 It was created by me, PJ Vote, and Shruti Pinmanani, and was produced by Garrett Graham and Noah John. Theme, original composition, and mixing by Armand Bizarian. Our executive producers are Jenna Weiss Berman and Leah Reese Dennis. Thanks to the team at Jigsaw, Alex Gibney, Rich Perrello, and John Schmidt, and to the team in Odyssey, J.D. Crowley,
Starting point is 01:06:08 Rob Morandi, Craig Cox, Eric Donnelly, Kate Rose, Matt Casey, Moore, Curran, Josephina, Francis, Kirk Courtney, and Hillary Scha. Our agent is Orrin Rosenbaum at UTA. Follow and listen to Search Engine with PJ Vote now for free on the Odyssey app or wherever you get your podcasts. Thank you for listening. We'll see you next week. Hey, business owners, the NFL season is a big revenue driver. Now there's a smarter way to get ready. Everpass is the only authorized commercial platform for NFL Sunday ticket delivering every live out-of-market regular season Sunday afternoon game. Locking the best offer now with up to 40% off saving up to $2,500. For the first time, you can pay over nine months. Get up to six free
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