Tara Brach - Beyond the Controlling Self - Part 1 (2019-04-03)
Episode Date: April 5, 2019Beyond the Controlling Self - Part 1 (2019-04-03) - It's natural that we do what we can to ward off danger and further ourselves. While our control strategies - such as aggression, judging, planning, ...seeking approval, pretending - have a developmental role, they are not a recipe for happiness, intimacy and freedom. An essential part of our evolution is to recognize when we are over-managing our lives, and learn to let go of the controls. These talks explore how we can release the grip of the over-controller, and the profound awakening of our hearts and minds that is possible in the shift from doing to being. Your support enables us to continue to offer these talks and meditations freely. If you value them, I hope you will consider offering a donation at this time at www.tarabrach.com/donation/. With gratitude and love, Tara
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Greetings. We offer these podcasts freely and your support really makes a difference.
To make a donation, please visit tarabrock.com.
Namaste and welcome.
So William James over 150 years ago described the suffering of contemporary society
as this going around in a ceaseless frenzy,
always feeling like we should be doing something else.
What's changed?
You know?
How many of you can relate to that?
Always think you can, yeah.
There is something in us, this kind of chronic doing where we're anticipating around
the corner that there's yet something else that's going to need our attention that's
going to go wrong.
And so even when we're doing one thing there's a sense of we got to
to get to the next.
Of course, sometimes what we're doing is what we call the needful.
We really, really need to be doing what we're doing.
And one of my favorite illustrations is of a man who went on a safari with his poodle.
And as it turns out, the poodle started chasing around some butterflies and found that
he was totally lost at one point.
So he's trying to find his way back and then he sees a leper.
stalking him. And so the poodle goes, uh-oh. And luckily the poodle noticed some bones on the
ground close by and healy turned his back to the approaching cat and started to chew on them.
And just as the leopard was about to pounce, the poodle called out, boy, that was one delicious
leopard but I'm still hungry. I wonder if there's another around.
But I'm hearing this the leopard halted his attack mid-stride, a look of abject terror on his face.
He crawled off to some trees nearby thinking, boy, that was a close call.
That creature nearly got me.
Meanwhile, a monkey had been watching the whole scene from a tree,
and he called out to the leopard promising some valuable information
in return for the leopard's protection.
The leopard agreed to the deal, and of course was furious to learn he had just been made a fool of.
So the leopard, now with the monkey on his back, took off to find and eat the conniving canine.
Once again, the poodle saw the leopard, and this time with a monkey on its back approaching,
a very smart poodle, put two and two together, figured out what had happened,
that he wouldn't have time to escape.
So he sat down with his back to his attackers, pretending he hadn't seen them.
And just when they got close enough to hear, he said, where's that damn monkey?
I sent him off an hour ago to bring me another leopard.
So we love it when we can connive successfully and when it's necessary.
And you might be wondering what this has to do with our talk for the evening.
Now I'm going to figure out some way to link it up.
Every one of us has a survival brain that is equipped to activate actions we need
to protect us and to further our well-being.
We all have it and that survival brain makes very good use of thinking.
As survival brain tells us something's wrong, something's missing, and then it puts our brain to good use to try to fix things.
And so we go around doing a lot of conniving.
I mean, we do, we all do, a lot of problems solving and so on.
And as we know, well, it's absolutely essential that we protect against leopards, you know, the leopards in our life.
And we, in some ways that we are trying to win over and get what we want, we know that's important.
It's not a recipe for a rich, loving, creative life.
And if we spend all our time hooked by that survival brain
and trying to control our environment and control other people and get what we want,
if that's our full-time occupation because it's become habitual, we miss out a lot.
It says, John O'Donohue put it, he said,
We're so busy manage in our life that we miss out on this great mystery we're a part of.
That always strikes me because when we start looking at our lives we realize that we over-manage
things.
We're over-controlling, overdoing.
You might, and I like doing this whenever possible, take a moment to close your eyes and
just let this be some time to reflect on today.
And the inquiry really as you review the day was how much was the frame of mind that,
and there's a problem here, there's something wrong, something I need to solve it, I need to
do something.
How many moments were you trying to figure out something or prepare for something that
were behind it that was stress, you were being driven by stress?
contrast to that, to the managing of today, how many moments were there of what we might
call being, you know, just being, there's a sense of listening, taking in the wonder of
spring, how much being.
And just to consider that in order for us to continue to evolve.
in order for us to have true well-being to meet our potential.
We need to develop the capacity to shift from that doing to being.
We need that capacity.
We need to be able to sense, okay, I don't have to be, you know, protecting from leopards
or winning over monkeys right now.
I can rest for a bit.
And you might even ask yourself and bring it right into this moment,
if there's nothing to do right now,
what's here?
Right in this moment, if there's nothing to do,
who am I?
What's the sense of myself?
If there's no problem to solve, what is here?
As you're ready, you can open your eyes.
You might have sensed if you got a little quiet
and you ask those questions, you know, really if there's nothing to do, what's here,
that all of a sudden one of my friends describes this, like, kind of the roof comes off
of the room and like there's just a lot more openness and mystery and aliveness and who knows,
but we're no longer in a box in that trance of I'm a self on my way to do something else
and do it right and not make a mistake. We're out of that.
So, what we'll be doing this class and the next is exploring really how we loosen the grip
of that kind of addictive doing, of the over-managing, over-controlling, and how we can move
more and more to have the choice to rest in that being state, that more mysterious, vibrant,
open-hearted space, from doing to being.
And again, why is that important?
I can speak for myself and if you've been following these talks and podcasts for a while I come
back to this theme fairly regularly shifting out of the controlling self, you know, letting
go of so much controlling, being more just here.
I can speak for myself, you might know FOMO, the fear of missing out, well my big FOMO
is that I'm going to manage my way down to the deadline, the end of the strip, death and not
have really been around for the moments as much as possible.
I think that is the deep fear that we're going to miss out on life, you know?
And the way we miss out is that we're in a doing trance or human doings.
How many of you can relate thus far?
Are we together on this?
Okay, okay.
I speak of it because I know my inner controller and you know it's sometimes very gross and
sometimes very subtle but I know that and I know how of course we have to do a certain
amount to take care of our lives but we way overdue.
So the beginning of understanding the shift of the shift.
to, from a doing to being, I find a very useful kind of metaphor from Aldous Huxley who describes
the reducing valve of awareness.
And what he says is, let's say you can think of it as in the early development of our species
when we were pretty much in the grip of the limbic brain, you know, of really survival
brain.
The valve of awareness that has a potential to be wide open.
and experience everything, the totality, is very narrowed to just what we need to pay attention
to in order to make it.
It gets very fixated, it's narrow and it's rigid.
And the basic felt experiences something's wrong or about to go wrong and so there's a lot
of vigilance and a lot of looking around for what's going to go wrong or something's missing,
how can I get it?
And that is kind of a description of the primitive brain, a very narrow valve.
And if you think of it like you're on a cross-country trip and how the valve of awareness
is going to be if you have engine trouble, well, you're looking for a mechanic or you're
on a cross-engine trip and there's a blizzard.
Well then you're going to be looking for a place to get off the road and stay narrow.
Or your person that you're going with, your partner has a acute appendage.
and then you're looking for a hospital.
So it's that kind of thing.
You're in flight, freeze, or you're a vegan looking for a meal you can have.
But now, but now you can go to Burger King and you can get a vegan whopper.
Did you know that?
Just in New York Times last day or two.
Yeah.
So your valve opens again a little with happiness.
So that the idea is that we can spend when we're stressed and our on button of stress is
really jammed, we can be going around with a narrowed valve all the time and not really take
in the world around us, not really be able to listen to loved ones and really be there
and present, are to take in beauty, our sorrow, not, we're just not there for our life.
Now, as we know that the way the narrow valve works is when we're stressed, there's a message
that something's wrong and then the message is you have to do something.
As soon as there's something wrong we get the message of do something.
And again, sometimes it's useful and sometimes it's not.
One of my favorite examples of this is a prank that was played in Montana some years back
at a high school where students released three goats into a school.
and they had numbers painted on them, number one, number two, and number four.
The school teachers and the admin spent the entire day looking for goat number three.
So there we are, something's wrong, rigid, narrow, fixate on something.
So what is evolution? What happens as humans evolve?
We go from being dominated by our limbic brain
and harrowing this kind of narrow, more fixated attention,
to a much more, with the emergence of the prefrontal cortex, the development of it, a much
more flexible valve so we can take perspective and we can be mindful and we can, we have compassion
and there's a larger sense of belonging, we intuit that, okay, I'm not just this individual
self, you know, moving around on the surface, the earth I am, the earth I belong to this
living web, there's a larger perspective.
And with that there's a capacity, it's not like we've gotten rid of our limbic brain, but
there's a capacity to choose and say, oh, right now I need to keep my attention really
focused.
This is dangerous.
Oh, oh, right now, oh I've been through that before, I know how to deal with that, I can
widen it again and I can let this person into my heart.
So there's more flexibility.
If you're back to the metaphor of on your cross-country trip there's times you're
can really open and take in the landscape and feel wonder because the valve is open.
And this is how Rumi puts it.
This is how a human being can change.
There's a worm addicted to eating grape leaves.
Suddenly he wakes up, call it grace, whatever something wakes him and he's no longer a worm.
He's the entire vineyard and the orchard too, the fruit, the trunks, a growing wisdom and joy
doesn't need to devour.
So we can shift from this doing, I need more of this and I don't want that, the self-centeredness
to this spaciousness that doesn't need to devour, they can feel joy.
So if we look a little more at the nature of the controlling self and the suffering we get
into and we sense, well how did this happen.
Then there's a limbic dominance.
When we're moving around always trying to manage things, the whole sense of who we are
shrinks.
We get very small, we get grim, we get burdened, we feel a sense of I'm unprepared for what's
around the corner, we get very small and anxious.
And so we're kind of hooked on seeking the grape leaves or on manipulative.
manipulating things.
And it's a developmental arrest when we're always, always living in that controlling state.
And the myth that many of you are familiar with that describes being caught in that
limbic trance is the myth of Sisyphus.
Okay?
Where the, we're just absolutely condemned to doing.
Sisyphus is condemned by the gods to constantly be pushing the boulder up, constantly doing,
doing, doing, doing.
But it always rolls down.
It's like we can never do enough.
We're condemned to pushing the boulder, whether the boulder is our judging other people or
are trying to do more to prove ourselves.
We're condemned to pushing and pushing.
And this is the transfer in.
We're caught in being a self that's on its way somewhere else, always trying to deal
with trouble, solve a problem and never getting to rest, never opening to that being.
So this is the arctypal trance and how come we have it?
Like why do we get caught in that trance?
Well for many many, many of us the stress we experience through our families and our culture
is such that we're outside our window of tolerance.
So rather than being able to have the valve open and sometimes close it gets jammed closed
because we get hooked on certain strategies to try to make it through.
We get hooked on trying, let's say, in our relationships to pretend or present a certain self.
We just are trying to protect ourselves.
Or we get hooked on trying to win people over by always accommodating or making them dependent on us.
Or we get hooked on judging or blaming or threatening people so they'll cooperate
with us.
We get hooked on our strategies.
Why?
Because we have unmet needs and we're trying to meet our needs.
Some of them don't look so bad.
Like we can get hooked on strategies of impressing people but you can't quite tell or
hooked on strategies of getting sympathy and getting rewards.
And yet if we're hooked on it we're just going to keep on doing the same thing.
In this cartoon, a mama dog is telling her little baby dog and there's a guy the owner's
about to do some training, the mom's saying, they give you a lot of treats while they're training
you so play dumb for as long as you can.
So the deal is that these strategies of pushing the boulder carry over also into spiritual
life.
We can do it when we meditate and really have this sense.
that we have to try really hard and get hooked into trying really hard.
One of Garrison Keeler's famous lines is,
My ancestor were Puritans from England.
They arrived here in 1648 in the hope of finding greater restrictions
than were permissible under English law at that time.
You feel the boulder there, right?
Pushing the boulder.
And then, of course, in the Zen tradition,
you have the new novice coming to,
the Zen master saying, I really want to be enlightened, how long is it going to take me?
And the master said 10 years and he said, well what if I try twice as hard?
And the master says 20 years.
Wait a minute, you just said 10 years.
For you 30 years.
But you can see it the striver, you know, it's that striving energy, never enough, the feeling
of never enough.
Now here's a few other pieces about what locks us into always pushing being an over-controller.
We get a temporary fix.
I mean if let's say we are an over-controller by trying to impress people and prove ourselves
and accomplish this and accomplish that, we get a temporary surge or if we're over-controlling
by being angry we get a surge of power with the anger.
But then what happens?
We know very well.
There's a reaction to us and then we have to rev up the anger again.
Or we've proved ourselves with one thing but because deep down we don't feel enough we always
have to do yet the next.
There's never a sense of enough.
We still have to push the boulder and we're still addicted to doing.
It's compounded, the Sisyphus complex that being caught in it is compounded.
by the fact that we don't like ourselves for the way we're pushing boulders.
There's self-aversion.
Sisyphist does not like himself.
And you can sense it that whatever our way of controlling things is,
whether we try to control by judging or proving or whatever it is,
our control by in some way, you know, if we feel unlovable,
then we'll control by giving ourselves more food maybe,
and then we'll feel shame, which will make it.
which will make us feel more unlovable and then more food, we get caught and hooked in
the cycle. It keeps us pushing boulders, the self-aversion. So, what can Sisyphus do?
I mean if you think of the myth, what can Sisyphus do? I mean you know that any revenge
against the gods isn't going to work, can't take the boulder and hurl it down at the
people below, can't, you know, try hard
or that's not going to work, doesn't help to bang his head against the bolder and self-hatred.
What can he do?
What can we do if we're caught in that overdoing and that over-controlling?
What's going to help?
If you think again in an evolutionary way, if we're hooked on an activity, if there's
enough mindfulness if you can look at your life, if we can look at our lives and say, okay,
here's where I get caught in overdoing.
You know, here's where I'm just kind of on it and I'm leaning forward.
We can, if we can see it and there is some mindfulness, we can choose to interrupt
it and stop doing just for a little bit but stop doing.
We can pause.
And this is why we often think.
come back in spiritual trainings to the sacred art of pausing.
Pause.
Even if you're in the midst of pushing and you pause for a few seconds you begin to interrupt
it.
And in the not doing, in the moments of not doing, there's a kind of space that comes that gets
filled with an intelligence with a presence and with heart that can sense some other options.
you have to interrupt the doing first. You have to be willing to pause. You have to stop doing.
For Sisyphus this might mean he stops doing and in that intelligence and that moment of stopping
doing, he senses I can just kind of let the boulder go and leave the mountain and take a shower
and maybe listen to Mozart or go dancing or make love. I could do other stuff, you know.
The pausing comes first.
One of the examples of this in more recent contemporary writing by Tom Molf and this is an example
I share when I can remember because it's such a good one.
He wrote about in the 1950s all these fighter pilots and highly trained pilots in the US Air
Force where they were attempting to fly at altitudes that had never ever been explored
before.
beyond the denser atmosphere of the earth.
And what would happen is that the ordinary laws of aerodynamics did not apply when they got
way out there.
And so as he described this, this is in the right stuff.
These pilots, their planes would skid into a flat spin like a cereal bowl and a wax form
like a counter and then they'd start tumbling.
They weren't even spinning and diving but they'd just be tumbling through space end over end.
And the pilots had no idea how to deal with it.
And so they'd be frantically trying to stabilize, they'd be doing all the controlling you possibly
could do and they'd be screaming helplessly to ground control as they went to their deaths.
You know, what do I do next?
I've tried A, I've tried B, I've tried C.
So it was a horrible situation and the more they tried to maneuver the controls the worse
their situation. So when it changed was inadvertent, as often happens. Chuck Yeager was in the plane
and his plane started tumbling and he was thrown around in the cockpit and he got knocked
out. So he paused. So he's unconscious going towards earth and then when he regained consciousness
who's already in the denser atmosphere of the earth and then he could do the controls
and stabilize and land safely.
But he discovered the only life-saving response possible which is that you don't do anything.
You take your hands off the controls and it's the only choice you have.
This is really the deep teaching and it's an evolutionary teaching that
we get addicted to controlling, it's driven by the fears of our survival brain, but there's
some intelligence that can say, okay, experiment a little.
You don't have to always control, just pause.
And in that pause, and this is the whole practice of meditation when we really pause, you
can sense in that space the light, the radiance of the sun shining through, there's a natural
intelligence that comes and heart. So if we look at it in terms of our lives, there are a lot
of small things in the denser atmosphere you can control. Okay, you can just, you can make
your list and decide whether you're going to go here first or there first because of the
distance and plan it properly and you can plan what you're going to say to somebody that's
going to be appropriate when there's difficulty and there's a level that you can control
things.
But the big stuff, whether we think of the process of aging or the sicknesses that come or the
things that happen to loved ones, or how loved ones behave, or even the emotions and moods
that go through us, we can't control those things.
We need to learn when it's wise to take our hands off the control.
That's the only way we can access a deeper, intelligent.
intelligence and a deeper compassion and more freedom.
So we're going to look now more closely at how we do that.
And one of the kind of models that I think is really beautiful for, well, how do we relate
to our inner controller?
And I hope that as I've been speaking you've started identifying places where I'd like to
take the hands off the controls there.
You know, how we relate to the inner controller is key.
You can't control the controller.
You understand that, right?
If you are, if you have your grip tight and the way you control things is you're controlling
other people's behaviors by threatening or by judging or your way of controlling is to keep
a distance and keep a mask and you don't let people in and you don't feel authentic, you
You can't control that.
You can bear witness with interest and kindness and in that bearing witness you're creating
an atmosphere for change.
And this was described, kind of came through very beautifully in the movie The Horse Whisperer
that how many of you saw The Horse Whispers?
Can I see by?
Okay then some of you might remember this scene.
The theme is Robert Redford is playing the role of a man that agrees to help to work with
a traumatized horse named Pelgram.
And so he created this very nurturing relationship with Pelgram and it was not one of controlling
but really of being in relationship with him.
So you can think of Pelgram as the kind of limbic out of control or over-controller that
would just dash off or be dangerous to other.
and his nurturing relationship began to calm Pilgrim down.
But at one point in the movie Pilgrim got triggered by a woman's cell phone and
limbic went off and he started contorting and writhing and then he just ran off into open pasture.
Here's what's interesting.
The trainer didn't chase him.
He didn't try to lasso him or force him into submission.
What he did instead was he was he, he,
He started moving calmly towards him but he stopped at a really respectful distance.
So he's kind of witnessing and he kneeled down a form of submission and simply attended to what
the horse was doing and needing.
He just kind of paid attention and he waited until Pelham was ready to reconnect.
He just waited and after some time Pilgrim slowly walked back over to him and
where the trainer was kneeling and he came closer and the trainer was very present and still
and finally Pilgrim lowered his head and that's a sign of a horse's trust and willingness
and readiness and the trainer gently stroked his head and with one finger and this is just
nurturing was able to guide him back home to continuous healing.
It's this kind of relationship with the parts of us that get controlled.
Because when we get controlling, and again, controlling could be aggressively controlling
but also be self-protective defensive, but when we get controlling, there's an unmet need
in there.
It may be trauma, it may be heard of a different kind, but something needs attention just
the way Pilgrim did and we need to pay attention like that.
I'm here, patient, respectful, caring.
So I want to give you an example of my own process with the inner controller and then
invite you to practice a little.
Is this sound okay?
And the story I want to share, I mean I've had different, as I mentioned I've had different
levels of the inner controller come out but I remember when I was a college sophomore I did
a phase of psychoanalysis, I was feeling depressed and anxious and so on and I remember
I never had a dream of, a repeating dream of struggling to get somewhere and always being exhausted
and that's when I started talking about the image of Sisyphus.
And the insight that I had was that I'm always trying hard, I'm always pushing to make
something happen, I'm always trying to solve a problem.
It was this kind of generic thing we're talking about here.
And the big one was that I'm always pushing to in some way prove myself.
And then of course the next insight was I need to push myself to prove myself because underneath
I don't feel worthy.
So this is me pushing the boulder because I felt unworthy, that was the unmet need.
And then the next insight that came along the way was, and I'm giving you a very quick summary
of actually turned out to be a year of psychoanalysis, that the harder I try the worse
I feel about myself.
When I'm trying hard, when I'm trying to prove, when I'm trying to impress, when I'm
trying to look good. And if any of you know the aneogram, I'm a three, that's the performer
and the shadow side of the performer just has to keep on trying to look good. So then I tell
you about how I'm trying to look good so I don't have to try to look good anymore.
But anyway, you get the how it works. That how exhausting that was and how much I didn't like
my striving self. I didn't like the Sisyphus, the control.
And I, around that, when I graduated college I moved into an ashram, where primarily yoga,
we were practicing yoga and continued to be paying attention to the stride and I brought
all my striving and proving and impressing into the spiritual world and I was going to be the
best yogi and the best yoga teacher and, you know, so I had, I was competitive and I was
trying to make up for some feeling like I wasn't okay.
And finally, I was on to myself enough that I remember being with a group of women from
the ashram, the spiritual community and naming that I, you know, I might appear one way but
inside I was competitive and I was vain and I was always trying to get everybody to think
I was a great yogi.
I didn't know it then.
I'm hypermobile but back then that made for being like a really good yogi.
Now I can barely stretch but back then and I joined an ashram community that actually had
a Kundalini Yoga Olympics which was just made for me and it was perfect.
I could compete in yoga you know which is crazy of course right.
We actually had these competitions where I remember one summer at the solstice where the
competition was on doing wheel pose which is a back bend and I remember doing wheelposts for
20 minutes and winning that and then over the years thinking about it because of this hypermobility
when now if I begin to try to do something like that you know how quickly I'll injure
myself and just the karma of that of developing a pride around something that actually was physiological.
I wasn't owning it and ended up causing trouble.
So I confessed.
I said okay so I've got all this inner controller that's trying to impress.
I don't remember what happened in the group beyond that.
This is probably 40 years ago that I'm speaking.
But I remember going back to my room and processing that and initially I thought, oh, I'm
going to do some Phronomayam because I felt so bad I just wanted to get rid of it.
That was controlling the state with something else.
Then I started staying with it and that's where the Horse Whisperer came in.
I didn't know anything, the movie didn't exist but I just started watching what was going
on and what was going on inside was I was beginning to see.
not only was there the self that wanted to prove herself, but underneath that there was
a real sense of something's wrong with me, I'm not worthy.
And so that witness part of me got much more tender and just really present and I began to
sense all the different ways that I was trying to control the world were really coming
out of wanting to be loved.
And when I could see that, I could then offer myself kindness and a calm,
down some of that need to prove. That was of course over time. But in those moments of just
being kind to the controller parts, all the parts that were trying to prove quieted me and
it kind of opened to me to a sense of beingness where I wasn't so identified with the three.
I wasn't so identified with the performer and I started getting a taste of who I was beyond
the controlling self. That is the gift of this exploration. If you can sense the way
you become addicted to doing and even some of the strategies of controlling that might
be defensive or aggressive and begin like the horse whisperer just to bear witness and
to pause them, to put them on pause and just hold the space for them and sense
the need underneath, you start opening to a space of who you are beyond them and then that
makes a lot of room for them not to have such a grip.
So with that I'm going to invite you to reflect a little and I'll walk you through it.
In this pause I'd like to invite you to sense what part of your body can let go a little
bit.
Let's see if there's a little bit of relaxing through your shoulders, your hands.
your belly, let yourself take a few full breaths, and scanning your life, sense if
there's any particular place or situation or you know you go into that over-controller mode.
It might be with another person or a difficult situation or in some way you notice that
you get particularly judgmental or blaming or defended, or you start over accommodating,
but you have your way of trying to manage it that might not be so healthy for you.
Maybe it's a situation where you feel driven to prove yourself as was the case for me and
then again proving yourself again and it's never enough.
like you always have to push the boulder.
Some situation where you'd like to be able to pause and have a different way of responding,
you have the situation in mind and you go to right where you know you're caught in your
over-control or self, where you're caught in the reactivity, imagine pausing and simply notice
everything you see about the controlling self right now, whether it's aggressive,
or judgmental, you're trying to change someone, defended, withdrawn, trying to prove,
just like the horse whisperer, just attentive, witness, interest.
You might notice if you're not liking yourself for what you're doing because that's often
a part of the over-controller and you might deepen your attention to sense what's really driving
the behavior. What's the fear or the unmet need, the hurt? What are you really trying
to get that's deep? There's always an unmet need if we're hooked in pushing a boulder
and over-controlling. Sensing that you can look the view from your most awake being,
your heart, your awake heart, kind of like that whisperer.
Some think of it as their future self at the stuck place that has that unmet need and just sense
that you can and it might help to put your hand on your heart, send kindness, just energetically
send kindness and whatever can help to comfort or meet that need in this moment.
For me it was seeing that I was feeling unlovable and just sending love, saying, I'm here,
you're lovable.
Even the intention to offer kindness within can help to meet the needs of the, that are underneath
the controller.
And just sense the quality of beingness of presence that's here when you can pay attention
in this way, when you can pause and pay attention in this way, when you can pause and pay you
attention, it's like that valve of awareness opens and there's more kindness and
there's more perspective, there's that shift from being caught in the doer-controller
to beingness and you might even ask really if nothing's wrong with me who is here, who am I?
The controller never likes itself but when we open up to this presence,
We can sense a kind of homecoming from doer to being.
And taking a few more moments and opening your eyes when you're ready.
There are ways that we can move in our daily life that help us to be more inclined towards
being.
Sometimes we'll be interrupting the controller when it's full throttle and this is an example
of that where we just begin to pause and sense I don't have to be interrupting the controller
have to live inside that. But we can also, in our day, take more pauses and it's necessary
to do as individuals and it's necessary in a wise society to take pauses because that invites
us back to that beingness. It helps us to know we're home. And this is Mary Oliver how she
describes it. She says, when I'm among the trees,
especially the willows and the honey locusts equally the beach, the oaks and the pines.
They give off such hints of gladness, I would almost say that they save me and daily.
I am so distant from the hope of myself in which I have goodness and discernment
and never hurry through the world but walk slowly and bow often.
Around me the trees stir in their leaves and call out, stay a while.
The light flows from their branches and then they call again, it's simple they say,
and you too have come into the world to do this, to go easy, to be filled with light and to shine.
We started by, I brought in the early on, this fear of missing out,
and the big one is missing out in our lives.
Sometimes the controller is really blatant and we're manipulating and sometimes it's just
that more chronic doing where we forget to stop, we forget to pause.
And if we're doing a lot now, if you looked at today and you saw that you were always tumbling
into the next thing, that's what we do in our whole life.
It's not like it's all of a sudden going to stop.
It's a habit.
We can break that habit.
So you might close this particular session with closing your eyes again and you might reflect for
a moment on even the words, human being, sense human as a modifier for being and ask yourself,
well what is it mean to be a being?
What does it mean in this moment and maybe being is more like a verb, being, this awareness
that's experiencing moment to moment?
There's a great blessing when we can open that valve of awareness and shift from that
doing where we're chronically on our way somewhere else and senses beingness, this space of
light and aliveness, of loving awareness.
And they call again, it's simple they say, and you too have come into the world to do this,
to go easy, to be filled with light and to shine.
Thank you for your kind attention.
For more talks and meditations and to learn about my schedule or join my email list,
please visit tarabrock.com.
