Tara Brach - Fear as a Pathway to Loving Presence - Night Travelers
Episode Date: February 26, 2026Shifting our relationship with fear is central to the evolution of consciousness. Our suffering arises when our thoughts, feelings and sense of identity are shaped by fear. As we learn to attend to fe...ar with mindfulness and care, we discover the vast tender presence that has room for the waves, and can fully cherish this life. Our introduction music is from "Opening" by Adrienne Torf, © 2025 ABT Music
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome, friends, to the Tara Brock podcast. I'm so glad you're here. Each week, I share
teachings and guided meditations to help us awaken our hearts and bring healing to our world.
You can learn more or support this offering by visiting tarabrock.com, where you can also join
our email list. Now, let's explore together the many ways we can live from the love and presence
that's our deepest essence.
Namaste.
Namaste.
Welcome, friends.
Thank you so much for being here.
There's a classic story of Mr. Optimist
who falls off a 20-story building
and as he's passing by the 12th floor,
somebody sticks their head out the window and says,
hey, you okay?
And the response is so far so good.
The threats we experience in our,
lives, both personally and collectively, are often quite real.
And for many, the world feels scarier than ever really.
And so a key inquiry for us all is how do we live in these times with fear?
How do we honor that this is completely natural?
It's a completely natural reaction from our nervous systems and not get hijacked.
And because friends, you know, as we can sense, human generated threats are only going to continue.
It's just part of the world.
And so we're all facing existentially aging, sickness, death.
There's going to be fear.
So again, this question, how do we live in this living, dying world and have fear as a current in our being?
but inhabit a larger space.
And there's a saying that I find real helpful,
which is if you trust the ocean,
you're not going to get rolled by the waves.
And even more, if you trust you're the ocean,
you'll be able to respond from the depth of the resources of your being.
You'll be able to respond with wisdom and care,
with creativity, with full aliveness.
So this talk that I'm sharing this week is about,
finding that fearless heart space that includes fear but is not bound by it. And I gave this
talk at a retreat and I like sharing these retreat talks with you because they often go really
deep. I mean those that are that are listening to them are already been practicing and a space
of quietness and stillness and receptivity. So in that spirit just to invite you to take a few moments
to arrive right here.
You might let the attention go inward
and take a few full breaths.
You might scan the body and see what wants to let go a little bit.
And you might sense your own curiosity and openness
about what it would mean to include fears in a fearless heart.
Okay, friends, may this serve your life and your path.
Even if you feel like your mind has been wandering all over the place, being in this kind
of space where there's a intention to be noticing what's going on, we become more intimate
with what's actually happening.
We notice more.
And I know from the groups that there's so much of the increasing capacity to sense something
and saying, yeah, under that I can feel there's sadness or feeling one thing going,
yeah, and I feel shame about that.
You know, there's this growing capacity to notice what's happening.
And one of the things that we start discovering
as we begin to be more here
with, you know, underneath the thoughts
when we stop leaving,
for most of us is that whatever is occurring,
there's often a kind of laced in with some fear
that if we're not feeling directly fearful, if there's another strong energy, usually there's
some sense of, oh, this is a problem and some fear about it.
That's the second arrow.
That something's wrong.
Often, though, it's quite in the foreground.
I know for myself that many moments, if I just randomly check in through the day and sense,
okay, so what's going on inside me, I'll find a kind of...
It's not agitation, but a kind of edgy sense of, a staticy feeling of just, it kind of feels
like existential anxiety.
It's just like something around the corner could go wrong.
And I find when I check them with others, it's there for most people.
And if we really investigate, there's an apprehension of loss that we all live with, a feeling
of both knowing the pain of something.
separation and fearing separation, fearing disconnection. It's always about loss, loss of our own body,
mind, loss of someone else we love, loss of a sense of esteem or power or respect or whatever
it is. But it's loss. And deep down, it's a kind of, on some level, it's a dying. We're afraid
of dying. We're holding on to this selfness and afraid of dying. Okay, this is one of those
Catholic priest, minister, and rabbi stories. Get ready. Catholic priest, minister, and a rabbi are
discussing what they would like people to say when they die and when their bodies are on display
in an open casket. And a priest says, well, I want someone to say, he was a righteous man, an honest man,
very generous. The minister says, well, I'd like someone to say, she's very kind and fair, and she was
good to her parishioners. And the rabbi said, I would want someone to say, oh, look, he's moving.
We want to live, you know.
I'm right now at the kind of home stretch of an online course called Awakening Your Fearless Heart.
And I love the title because the basic teaching, which is really a perennial teaching, you'll find it in all the different traditions, is that if we, instead of pulling away from our fear, if we let fear be a portal, it carries us to,
what you might call the fearless heart or Bodhita, the awakened heart,
but it's through opening to and not resisting the fear that's here,
that we actually find a refuge in a vastness and a tenderness and awakefulness
that's our true nature.
And so that understanding is that everyone, everyone that's on this,
planet has a nervous system with fear in it. And so that we're in it together. The metaphor I like,
one of my favorite ones of this pathway through fear to the fearless heart to Bodhita,
it comes from the Tibetan tradition. And in Tibetan Buddhism, the challenging energies that Pat
talked about so beautifully last night that the attitude towards them is not one of, this is the
enemy, this is wrong, but rather it's the understanding that every emotion has its intelligence,
that every challenging energy is really an expression of awakened heart-mind, but it's in some
way torqued, and it's by bringing our presence and our attention to it, that it untorks it
so that our natural, free heart and awareness can flow in a, in a, in a, in a, in a,
complete and whole way. So it's by going and engaging with the energies that that happens.
And the way they're depicted, and this is what I like so much, there, if you look on the
tankas, which are the mandalayas from Tibetan art, are if you look at the temples, at the
entrance to the temples and surrounding some of the borders of the tankas, you'll find these
goddesses, these animal-headed goddesses, they're ferocious and fierce and passionate and
filled, they're fearsome and they're filled with craving and they're all the energies
that are naturally arising in these body minds that should we be willing to engage with,
we then are able to enter sacred space. So I really think that's quite beautiful that what we're
encountering, Pat described them as limbic gloves, there's this aliveness that wants to be alive
and yet it expresses itself in different torqued ways sometimes that we're freeing up as we engage.
And the peace that we're doing it together, this is Rumi. Rumi speaks of night travelers
who turn towards the darkness, they're willing to know their own fear. He writes this. He says,
life's water flows from darkness. Search the darkness, don't run from it. Night travelers are
full of light and you are too. Don't leave this companionship. So in a way I feel like that's
what we're doing together. We're in this song or companionship where we're choosing to be with
reality, with the energies that are moving through us. And in that being with,
we actually discover the fullness of who we are.
I think in an evolutionary way,
the shift in how we relate to fear
is absolutely the key to waking up.
So we're shifting from being the self
that is possessed by fear,
scared of fear, is fighting fear,
to the awareness that's relating to fear.
From fight, flight, freeze,
to attend and be friend.
So this is what we're going to be exploring tonight.
We're continuing, Pat, set the groundwork so beautifully,
for how we pay attention to these energies,
I'd like to deepen it with how we as night travelers
can work with the fears that are here
that naturally arise and discover Bodichita, the fearless heart.
And we'll do it by examining how we get identified
with what's called the fear body, and then the practices that loosen that up.
So it's part of emerging into form that we perceive ourselves as separate.
The brain is designed to perceive separation, and then we attach to these vulnerable body
minds, and then there's this fear of whatever threatens our survival.
And we're endowed with that negativity bias, that
has us fixate on danger. So any of you today that were, we came up in both of my groups,
that tendency to think something's a problem, that's, we come by that honestly. That's part of our
genetic inheritance. You know, if you have a hundred dog encounters and 99 of them are
friendly, fun ones, but then there's one that where, then a dog bites you, that's the one you'll
remember forever, you know. I think it takes eight compliments or positive feedback to undo one
criticism. It's just the way we are. The limbic system's reaction is to fixate on what's wrong
and build, and that's our fear response. And fears nature's protector. If you didn't have fear,
you'd be brain dead. Really? We need it. We need it to alert us to, to what we're
where there's danger and so that we can respond.
It lets us know.
There's five types of fear.
Terror, panic, seeing the message username or password is incorrect.
Your partner is saying we need to talk and 14 missed calls from mom.
I've added a sixth, which is the spinning rainbow wheel of death on my Mac computer.
That's Jonathan's label for it.
But as indicated in this, the challenge.
is not that we have fear, but that our fear response gets jammed, the on button gets jammed.
And so that what happens is rather than it being just a predator that is stalking us in the
jungle, are being cut off on the beltway and having that alarm, it's not just that, it's so many
parts of our life. And it's usually very psychological evoke fear. And I'm thinking right now
of one man in a recent workshop
who described how growing up
his father was pretty distant and pretty critical
and he got a lot of kudos
when he did well in school
or did well in sports,
but that was the only access
to positive feedback.
And so as an adult now,
every time he doesn't feel like he's meeting a certain standard
in almost anything.
You know, the way he dresses,
the way he plays his tennis game, the way he's doing at work,
it goes down to a very deep place of,
I don't belong, I'm going to be rejected.
It goes from anxiety to the belief I'm a failure
to I'm going to be rejected.
Our fear generalizes in a very painful way.
So we develop what's called over time the body of fear.
And this is when the fear button is jammed on.
And I would say for all of us, if we're suffering at all, it means we've got a slightly,
at least jammed fear button where it's not just, we're not just registering valuable input
that, you know, there's a threat to us, but we're caught in an associative loop where
we've turned a much broader swath of our lives into a danger.
The fear body, fear takes root in our tissues.
your issues are in your tissues.
It takes root in our thought forms,
takes root in the emotions that are here in our behaviors.
And that's the fear body.
And when we get identified with it,
in other words, when we're triggered
and we're living inside the thoughts and feelings of our fear,
in those moments we're in a trance
that has cut us off from our capacity.
It's interesting, we can't learn
when we're in fear, really learn.
When we're anxious, we're not able to learn.
We're not able to be creative.
We're certainly not open-hearted.
All our energies, you know, zooming out to our legs and our arms so we can run,
fight or flight.
It cuts us off from our hearts.
So what I'd like to do is to kind of shine a light on the trance.
We'll just look at the fear body.
I'm going to invite you just to sense for yourself
what you notice how your fear body manifests, we all have one.
Just to listen with that lens, because the more you shine a light on the trance,
more quickly you're alerted to when it is taking over,
and then you can begin the practices that we'll explore,
which are you've already been exploring here,
to wake up out of it.
So one level of the fear body is that our body contracts,
and you might have noticed here as you've been sitting,
that you start noticing how there's habitual areas of tightness
or tension that are very hard to loosen.
I certainly know them very well in my shoulders.
To have my shoulders go back and down, to have my chest out,
to have my posture correct after all these decades,
it takes a lot of work because if your body has the shoulders go up and forward, the chest
sinks, you're protecting your torso. Does that make sense? So this is the musculature and what happens
is that it becomes like a permanent suit of armor that's so familiar, we don't notice it in daily life
which is why we get here and we start being mindful of our body and we start noticing the contraction.
Jogam Trunkpa, Tibetan teacher says, it's like we're a bundle of tense muscles defending
our existence.
Then there's the mind which gets, when we're in a fear state, we've got these neuro-pathways
of repeating fear thoughts about what's going wrong, what's going to go wrong, comes
out in judging and obsession, figuring things out.
Have you noticed how many moments you're trying to figure something?
thing out, you know, when we don't have to be figuring things out.
From the old days, decades ago, one of the first jokes I remember my father telling us was
woman sends her son a telegram, this is how long ago it was, and the one-liner start wearing
details to follow, you know?
And it's like that.
It's like we're anxiety ready to kind of hitch itself to something.
And then there's the emotions that loop around with the fear body.
We're afraid and then there can be depression which is trying to push down the fear, our
jealousy, our anger.
There's a lot of emotions.
But the interesting thing is that you have to keep having fear thoughts to have the emotions
lock in.
So if you've noticed an emotion has set in here, it's because there have been thoughts
to keep it going.
emotion left to its own devices takes 1.5 minutes to come and go. But it's the fear-thinking
that keeps fueling it. So those emotions and thoughts go together. And then there's our
behaviors, our fear management strategies that I usually refer to as false refuges, which are ways
we're just trying to feel better. And they can be very mild seeming like just the
daydreaming kind of things where we're just trying to find our way to more pleasant territory.
For many of you, we talked today a bit about sleep, how you can come here and be sleepy
because you're really, really exhausted.
We can also be sleepy because there's something in us that doesn't want to deal with some
rawness that's there.
So sleep can be a management behavior.
And then probably the addictive behavior.
behaviors, the consuming is one of the biggest, that when we're very young, pre-verbal,
and there's anxiety that's been handed down to us or that's right around us or in our culture,
the quickest control strategy we have to self-soothe is eating.
And that's why such a huge portion of the population is eating disorders.
Fear management strategy.
And of course there's different ways we use drugs and other medications.
I personally feel like there's many medications that can be used skillfully and many that can be abused,
so I'm not weighing in on that, but I will tell you about one poster at a conference on PTSD.
And it had the question, if there was Prozac back then with a question mark, and then it has a few examples that might have been different.
It has Carl Mark saying, sure, we can fix capitalism if we tweak it a bit.
And then it has Edgar Allan Poe and he's looking out the window and he goes,
Hello, Bertie.
A really big fear management strategy is speeding up, staying busy, moving fast.
It's like we're on this bicycle, pedaling fast to get away from the present moment where there's fear.
Another fear management strategy is rationalizing things to ourselves.
I mean, trying to make things okay to ourselves or misrepresenting the truth.
You know, how many children grow up with a fear of punishment for telling the truth?
So there's a really good reason that we present things so we look good and so we don't look bad.
And since I'm on this thing about rabbis, ministers, and priests,
they're playing poker when the police raid the game.
Turning to the priest, the lead police officer says,
Father Murphy, were you gambling?
Turning his eyes to heaven, the priest whispered, Lord, forgive me for what I'm about to do.
And to the police officer, he then said,
no officer, I was not gambling.
The officer then asks the minister,
Pastor Johnson, were you gambling?
Again, an appeal to heaven, the minister replies,
no officer, I wasn't gambling.
Turn to the rabbi and the officer says, again,
Rabbi Goldstein, were you gambling?
Shrugging his shoulders, the rabbi replied,
with whom could I be gambling?
Okay, so misrepresenting things.
And then there's how we perpetually try to control others.
When there's fear, we have to take.
control. So we try to control others, we try to control ourselves, and then the last one
I'll mention is aggression. And when we're afraid, we aggress against ourselves by means of judgment.
We get very, very harsh towards ourselves. And when we're afraid, we aggress towards others,
again, lashing out, judgment, and more physical aggression. Rumi writes, which reminds me
the mother who tells her child, when you're walking through the graveyard at night time,
and you see a boogeyman, run at it and it will go away. But what replies the child,
if the boogeyman's mother has told it to do the same thing? Boogiemen have mothers too,
so there's aggression. Then we see the trans of fear in a societal way, of course,
with the addictive consuming that we do as a society
and the way that we deplete the earth of its resources.
We see the damage that's done there with unfaced fears.
We see the deception on a societal level
because you can't believe anything that's reported.
Everything's a spin.
And we see most vividly how the trans of fear
turns us into aggressors against others
that seem like unreal others, others that are different in some way.
And so we have the fear of others, we need to control them, we need to exploit them.
And then you see racism and you see sexism and you see all the violations
and the circles of violence that are going on and on, the repeating ones.
And I've been thinking a lot about generational trauma because, you know, we think,
okay, somebody, some group attacks another group and then that's that, but it gets handed,
I mean, research is showing how it gets handed down through the genes, that fear is genetically
transmitted, it affects the DNA in sperms, it affects the brain, and it affects the behavior
on future generations. So, generations back, those in this country, dominant culture,
kidnap and bring enslaved Africans here, continued oppression through the last generations,
and it gets handed down the fear and the fear response, which leads, of course, to addiction
and aggression and everything we know, including self-aversion. We see it in the First Nation
people, what's happened when it's fear is handed down generation to generation. Faulkner writes,
The past is not dead. It is not even past.
And so it is with us that each of us grew up in a culture that has a huge amount of fear
and with parents, with their own fears.
And yet somehow or other, we feel our fears and take them very personally
and we feel bad about ourselves for them and feel bad about the fear body.
We don't like the way we get tense and we don't like
the way our thoughts go and we don't like the way we behave. And yet it's conditioned
and it's not our fault. So, in order to loosen the fear body, we begin to pay attention
to these different layers. And it's important to see them all because if you catch the fear
in your body but you don't sense the thoughts that keep on fueling it, then you're still
identified. And if you catch the fear thinking, the worrying, but you don't feel it in your body,
you're still identified. And if you catch the fear but you don't realize the shame that you've
laid over it, you stay identified. I'd like to pause here. We'll just do a brief reflection
together and invite you to kind of just check out what you notice about yourself here. And as you
kind of set yourself for reflecting, you might just sense that there are different degrees of being
identified with a fear body. When we're really suffering, we're very identified. We're very cut off.
When we're in the fear body, we're cut off from the whole. That's the nature of fear. Feeling
separate, cut off. Trauma is the most extreme. That's the
That's the most major dissociation where we're really cut off from our sense of wholeness.
But there's different degrees.
And in order to be free, we need to see the way that cutting off is affecting our body, our
mind, or behaviors.
So as you reflect on this, I'd like to invite you to sense yourself as a witness that's
friendly and interested with the intention of growing, of waking up.
And you might bring to mind a situation that arouses moderate fear, not trauma.
It might be something around the corner that's coming up that you're anxious about.
It might be a situation with another person, a difficult conversation or a conflict
or something that triggers off fear or anxiety, something at work, something to do with finances.
let yourself get close in enough to the situation that you can feel what it's like when your system
starts registering fear.
You might imagine the situation visually, if another person's involved, what they might be saying.
Notice how the fear body expresses itself in your physical body.
Where do you feel fear?
Sometimes if you're experimental, you can even exaggerate it a bit and exaggerate your body posture
and the facial expression if you really want to get in touch with the fear body.
You actually let a facial expression that you sense has got fear to it and it'll help
you get in touch with the feelings in your body.
Getting familiar is actually helpful.
When you're feeling fear in this situation, what are you believing?
What are you believing is going to go wrong?
What are you believing about yourself?
About the world?
What's the worst thing that's going to happen?
It might be easy to sense the belief.
It might not be.
If it's not, just drop it.
It's good to check in and see if you notice the belief.
Is it that I'm going to fail, that I'm going to be rejected,
that something's fundamentally wrong with me?
There may be related fear-thinking that you're aware of
when you're in the body of fear. You might notice as the fear thoughts and beliefs are
there with the whole felt senses in your body, your heart, and what behaviors come out of
it. What are your particular fear management strategies relating to this situation?
Do you try to ignore it and do you try to fix or control or plan or rehearse more generally?
Do you know your false refuges, your fear management strategies?
And please now check and sense, are you still witnessing?
Or is there some layer now of judging the fear body?
And if there is, with gentleness, just note that, because if you're aware of it, you won't
get so caught by it.
Okay, you might take a few full breaths and open your eyes.
evolving or waking up from the trance of fear, the first piece is really just the aspiration,
that there's something in us that intuit this possibility of relating to the fear body, but not
being caught in it, of living in a fearless heart, that heart space that can include.
One teacher calls it a heart that's ready for anything. I like that expression.
that you're not having to spend your time defending.
So we're going to explore two domains of practice that then get integrated that really are bringing
mindfulness and heartfulness to the fear in a way that we can engage with the deities,
you know, have tea with Mara and wake up through it.
And the language we'll use is, for one domain, we call it, resourcing, it's very
really very on purpose, finding your way to some sense of connection, some at least basic
level of safety so you can be safe enough to engage. Okay? That's resourcing. And then the other
domain is an unconditional and full presence. And generally, when we're really caught in fear,
we need to do some resourcing first. In other words, we need to soothe our
nervous system some, keep in mind that when we're fearful, we're disconnected. We need some sense
of connection. And I think one of the most useful ways to understand resourcing and how
resourcing makes it possible to then work with fear comes from Dan Siegel, who is a psychiatrist
and author, and he has a hand model of the brain that I know some of you are familiar with.
It's useful for us all just to kind of have it in the room, I think, which is a person.
is that he, you might raise your hand for a moment, all of you, if you will.
Place your thumb in the middle of your palm and your four fingers over the top.
And this is the model of the brain, okay?
This is your brain right here.
And if you open it again, the wrist is a spinal cord, okay?
And then the lower palm is the brain stem and this is the limbic area right here, okay?
And the limbic area regulates arousal, emotions, fight, flight, freeze.
That's what's involved with all of that, right?
roll your fingers over again.
This is the frontal cortex here.
This is the higher part of the brain.
And this is what allows us to think and to reason.
When information comes up through the brainstem that says,
uh-oh, danger, danger, you know, it's the frontal cortex that says,
yes, it feels dangerous, but you've been through this one before,
and you're really okay, and here's how you can deal with it.
Plus, you poor dear, you really are a good person.
empathy, compassion, it's all in the frontal cortex, right?
That's where it's at least correlated with the brain parts that are there.
Now, here's what happens.
When we're stressed or when we're triggered
and when this frontal cortex isn't fully online
and by online I mean really integrated.
And by the way, mindfulness practice is what integrates this frontal cortex.
The information comes up but when this part isn't activated
and it's a strong rush, we flip our lid, okay?
Which means that in those moments,
we're being dominated by the limbic,
this is kind of more primitive parts of our brain,
and we don't have access to mindfulness, to perspective,
to humor, to compassion.
Okay?
So the whole job at that point is,
what will help us to reconnect? We need some reconnecting, some reactivating, so that we can begin
to be present with the fears in a way that doesn't re-traumatize. How many of you find this
model of the brain helpful, this flip your lid? Okay, because I find it so useful just to consider
it that way. So, resourcing. There are many different strategies that help to
strengthen the parasympathetic nervous system, which actually allows us to relax and subdue a bit
the sympathetic. One of the ways I sometimes like to talk about this, this resourcing,
Jonathan and I do a lot of kayaking. And one of the things with kayaking is if either you're going
upriver or downriver, but if the currents are really strong and you're either getting exhausted
or things are going too fast, you can tuck behind a rock.
just get out of the currents
and when you're behind the rock
you can resource you can
look at the river and plan your strategy
you can catch your breath
you can relax yourself
you can talk to
for me talk to Jonathan
and whatever it is
but you can resource yourself
so you re-access your strength
your resilience your capacity to navigate
okay
and that's what it's like
when we're when it's like
this and we're all dominating
to buy the limbic, that's the time to pause, take a break and say, okay, I need to do some
resourcing here.
So what does resourcing look like?
One of the strategies, the most simple, is just to name what's going on, just to mentally
whisper, okay, a lot of fear.
Just in those moments you're beginning to reactivate and reconnect with the frontal cortex.
Again, this is a lot of research on this.
When there's a lot of trauma, a lot of disconnection, grounding is one of the best things.
It's right now if you want to ground, what you do is close your eyes.
You feel the weight of your bottom on the cushion or the chair.
You feel the pressure and warmth of your feet on the floor.
And you sense gravity.
You sense that this body is belonging to the earth.
you're here on the earth, on the ground.
To further resource or a different kind of approach is a conscious breathing.
One of the simplest is a long, slow, deep, full in-breath, long, slow out-breath, equal
length.
Total of maybe six seconds, count to four slowly.
No pause in between.
That's described as coherence breathing and it helps to calm.
on the sympathetic nervous system. Just doing that for a couple of minutes.
Or as one person described today, and this for many, has been helpful. If you're just following
the breath, in breath, out breath, notice the gap after the out breath. And just let go
and relax and just be in that stillness. And then the in breath will come naturally. But just
finding the gap after the out breath can be helpful for some. A whole other way of resourcing is to
visualize a place that feels safe. And probably the most effective has to do with visualizing
and sensing the presence of another person or a deity or some energetic being that in some
way helps you feel connected. And in doing that, you can see the being's face and sense
the eyes looking at you and the felt sense of it and perhaps there's words that are offered.
that can be very powerful because, again, fear has to do with disconnection.
Anything that begins to establish a sense of connection, including talking to the fear
and listening to the fear, begins to bring online again the frontal cortex.
You can walk, you can move, you can have tea, things that bring you back into your body
and into activity in a connecting way.
and then communicating with others, that night travelers talk with each other.
And there is, again, so much research on if somebody's scared and they hold the hand of a loved one,
the fear level goes down.
When we introduce Rain, we begin with recognizing and allowing,
and then it goes right into investigating, you know, feeling the fear words here.
But what I'm describing tonight, actually, you would do before you begin to really contact,
the fear. You've already noticed it. You've already felt you're caught in the currents. This is
actually, instead of going right into investigating and contacting, you do some resourcing that'll
actually enable you to be more available for the next step, which is full presence, having tea
with Mara or tea with the deities, however you want to think of it. So I wanted to give you an example
tonight of a process of resourcing and being present with fear that I have found incredibly
instructive in my own understanding. And it starts with a story that a woman wrote that was about
her own healing and she wrote it as in the process of us doing therapy. So I'm going to read
you the story and then tell you how she worked with her fear. Okay?
It's called a fairy story.
In it, she's
just by way of context, she's seven years old.
She's hiding in a closet terrified
after an unexpected attack
by her drunk and enraged father.
And the little girl is praying.
She's saying, help, I can't take it anymore.
And she opens her eyes to see a fairy
in a haze of blue with a glittering wand.
She lets the fairy know how her father's been beating her
and her mother doesn't help
and how she feels like they both wish she was dead.
And the fairy listens with tears in her eyes
and then tells her that while she can't make all the pain and fear disappear,
she can help get her through this time.
She can help her forget and then remember later when she's able to handle it.
With the wave of the wand, the good fairy said,
I'm going to send things into different parts of your body
and they're going to hold them for you
until you feel strong enough to let them move freely again.
And she explained she's going to be.
to tighten and dull her pelvis and her belly. She's going to constrict her heart and throat
some to protect her from feeling the raw intensity of hurt and fear and brokenheartedness.
I'm reading the rest of it from what she wrote. You'll have trouble feeling and being close
to people, but it will be your way of surviving. At those times that the pain erupts, you'll find
your own ways to control it that may not look good to the world but will be of temporary comfort.
and you, my darling, will be fairly functional human being in spite of all this
because you have a strong mind and you can hold all the sin, and I'll be helping you.
The child looked directly into the fairy's eyes and asked,
how will you help? Will you come back to see me?
You will not forget everything.
I will leave a voice inside you that will urge you to reconnect with your whole self.
It may be a very long process, but in time,
you'll feel an urgent calling to step out of,
imprisoning beliefs, to unwind your body and release what it's been holding all these years.
You'll learn the art of sacred presence. There will be physical and emotional pain as you open,
but you'll have what you need, the compassion and wisdom, the support of loving others,
to be a whole person, spiritually awake, but still the same. This is because your soul has always been
there, just hidden by the scars of this lifetime. The good fairy put her arm around the child's
shoulders and gently led her to bed. She waved her wand and stood by the little girl as she finally
relaxed into a deep sleep. She gazed tenderly at the small innocent face and then whispered her goodbye.
When you wake up, you'll forget I was here and you'll forget that you asked for help. You'll forget
the sharpness of your daily pain. This is the only way I know to get you through this.
You're a beautiful child. I love you and in fact your parents love you although they're incapable
of showing it to you. You'll have to love yourself enough to heal so that one day when you're
older, your life will be powerful, full, and free. One day, you will know who you really are.
You will trust your goodness and know your belonging. Until then, and for always, I love you.
When I first shared this story, it was at a Wednesday night, my Wednesday night class in
Bethesda probably around 15 years ago.
And many people came up to talk afterwards
and said that what most affected them
was the realization that, you know,
that they too had, their fear had been pushed away.
They weren't living in terror all the time,
but they had all these habits that looked ugly,
to them of overeating or of being defensive or whatever it is.
And that hearing this, hearing how it's actually part of the design almost to be able
to deal with fear, it was like they started seeing the second arrow and realizing it wasn't
their fault.
Because when fear is really strong and we're young, we don't have a way to be with it.
We don't have rain.
We don't have a capacity to recognize it and hold it and view with it.
So we have to disconnect from our body some.
We have to use pain management strategies.
And the way to free ourselves includes being profoundly forgiving of that.
Profoundly forgiving of any strategies that we use to defend ourselves, to control things,
because it's not our fault.
So that for this woman was, in writing and telling the story, there was a really deep sense
of forgiving.
And then what her practice, she had a resource.
Her resource was a sense of, for her, the good fairy became more a kind of the divine feminine,
that sense of just energetically, a kind of benevolence, a warmth and a loving energy that
she would call on and she called on again and again.
And so whenever she was afraid, she'd call on that.
And, you know, it would work some, but she practiced a lot when she wasn't afraid.
And that's really critical.
To be practicing, resourcing when we're not in the midst helps to build the pathway
to our resources.
And so when she actually, finally, the time that she most directly encountered the rawness,
it was not during a therapy session.
She had done a lot of resourcing and she was on her own.
And it was then that she felt like this sense of being more shooken than she ever had.
She could feel like her whole nervous system was rattled and she was feeling into the memories
of being in the closet and the enormity of the fear.
So she called on that energy but then she started saying, okay, what is this like really?
What does it feel like?
And then that's when she was beginning rain.
and she was really, she had recognized and allowed.
She was investing and she was contacting, and she was being with it.
She was being with it.
And she said it was like broken glass, you know, ripping through it.
It was very, very difficult.
And then she just put her hand on her heart and just kept calling, calling on.
That's the nourishing.
And what played out was that she felt broken apart
and then described it like she had finally discovered the space
inside and around her
that could handle all that fear.
Her language wasn't the fearless heart,
but she felt this loving, vast presence
that really was her own heart
that could hold the fear.
Many, many rounds
of circling back when fear arose,
it wasn't a one-shot, it wasn't one va-voom,
now I know how to find Bodichita,
many, many rounds.
And this is the way it goes,
that when we're working with decades and decades of a fear body that has all of its patterning,
all of its neural wiring, it takes many rounds to rewire.
And yet, I love the metaphor.
I first heard it through Jonathan of how indigo cloth gets dyed, that there's a vat of the dye.
And you take a white cloth and you dip it in and you pull it out and you see the indigo color,
that brilliant, beautiful blue, but it fades right away to a little bit off white.
So you have to dip it in again, pull it out.
It fades again, but not quite so much.
And each time you dip the cloth into this incredible, brilliant, luminous blue,
it holds it a little more.
And so it is when each time you feel fear,
there's a willingness to be with yourself, to name it, to feel it,
to hold it each time you engage with the deities,
you become more and more familiar
with the tenderness and space that has room for fear.
Your identity shifts.
You're less and less identified with the fear body,
the self that feels oppressed and unprepared and anxious and so on.
And more and more of you is resting
in that openness and that tenderness.
There's many different ways that people find their way to the fearless heart through resourcing.
One vet who had PTSD would see images or war images have feelings of panic,
and his mantra was just, may I be held in God's love?
May I feel protected?
May I touch peace?
You just say it over and over again.
One woman today in a group who gave me permission to share
described being six years old in Iran
her mother had already immigrated
and the secret police came to the house
and the fear.
And this is one of the first time she'd let herself feel the fear of that.
And when she asked herself what that fear needed,
it was some sense of a mother's embrace,
but not some amorphous deity,
a real sense of a body holding her.
And that's her resourcing to practice again and again feeling that holding of a real body
and the warmth that came with that.
One high school student with social anxiety, for him, he was impacted by Ticknat Hans,
who had an image of a mountain and he felt himself as a mountain.
Whenever the anxiety would come up, he goes, I feel himself as a mountain and feel the strength
and the steadiness in the midst of storms and just say, it's okay.
One last example I'll share with you because it came again from here a couple of years ago.
One woman was waiting for a biopsy and was feeling that grip of uncertainty and not knowing,
was sitting in a group in our circle and she named that and others named what was going
on for them. One woman who was, or one man actually was really scared for a son who was addicted
to heroin and not in treatment. Another woman was describing her husband with Alzheimer's,
another person's job threatened. And they became like night travelers because each of them in
their own way was being with something and when they're, and she described, the group met
again at the end, she described during the sittings that when she felt really afraid,
that sense of others feel this too. Because if we remember that, we remember that, and
we're beginning to reconnect. We're beginning to get online again with the frontal cortex.
We're beginning to become more integrated and whole. In the deepest way, when we're disconnected
and we start to reconnect, we are evolving past an old identity. But it requires a kind of dying
to that old identity. So when you begin to face fear,
It's a kind of dying because to face fear you're going against all your normal egoic
strategies.
And one way to understand it is that, because I started this whole talk with, that fear is
about fear of loss and disconnection and death, there's a deep relationship between opening
to fear and love.
And it's really that we're not free to love, really free to love, from our wholeness until
we've faced fear and faced death.
As long as there's any part of us that's defending from an egoic stance against what's
going to go wrong, that defendedness will stop us from sensing our full belonging.
So we have to die in a way and opening to fears a way of kind of dying.
And yet when we do, then there's a capacity to cherish what's here in an entirely new way.
I wanted to share as part of closing a story Ticknaudhan describes.
He talked about how his mother's death was one of the great misfortunes of his life.
And I could really relate, when I first heard the story, I could really relate because the
first fear I remember in my life was being afraid of my mother dying. And I remember being
very young and telling her it and her reassuring me, I have no idea how she reassured me,
but just being able to tell her, remember if you say something and communicate, you're beginning
to reconnect, soothe me. And I did it a lot of times. I told her a lot of times that
is afraid of her dying. And as it happens, as she got old,
I already was so in touch with the grieving and the loss.
I was so open to the realness of her dying
that the love became incredibly strong.
And I'm thinking about her a lot today
because she was here at this retreat three years ago.
I said pictures that Law took of her with the goats
and she would always sit right over in that corner there
and I realized as I thought of her, I felt all the depth of sorrow, but so much a kind of love that
was timeless. And it came from absolutely opening to the fear and underneath that the grief
about her going. So Ticknaut-Han describes his mother's dying and his grief. And he says he
grieved for her for more than a year and then she appeared to him in a dream. And in it
they're having a wonderful talk and she's young and
beautiful, then he wakes up in the middle of the night and has this distinct impression that
he's never lost his mother because she's alive in him. He says, when he stepped outside his
monastery had him began walking among the tea leaves, he still felt her presence by his side.
He says, she was the moonlight caressing me as she had done so often, very tender, very sweet.
and continuing to walk, he sensed that his body was a living continuation of all his ancestors
and that together he and his mother were leaving footprints in the damp soil.
It takes opening to the fear of loss, the fear of personal loss, to discover that which is eternal.
As long as we're defending against our loss of this body, this life,
We really aren't able to open to a loving that's always and already here.
And Ticknachthan says, all I had to do is look at the palm of my hand and feel the breeze on my face
or the earth under my feet to remember that my mother is always with me available at any time.
So I'd like to have us end with a brief reflection together.
just bringing our hearts and awareness to wherever there might be a sense of the fear body right now.
Knowing that this is just a very brief reflection, it's something you can explore on your own as you have more time.
One of the ways that we sometimes think of the spiritual path as of transcending and getting beyond,
but an alternate and more true understanding.
is that we're going in and in and in.
It's like we might sense ourselves as separate wells,
but as we go in and in and in,
we discover the waters of a timeless undying love.
We go in and in and in and in.
So you might, if you'd like, bring your attention right to your body here
and your heart right here,
your mind right here.
And as you sit and as you breathe,
and pay attention, just notice if there's any expression of the fear body that you're
aware of.
And there may be or there may not be.
Just notice what's here.
And with whatever you are aware of, whether it's quality of openness, presence, tenderness,
sadness, fear.
Let's explore this going in and in.
You're recognizing and allowing how it is right now, investigating by deepening your attention,
perhaps feeling from the inside out wherever there's strongest sensations or emotions in your body.
Poet Banafalfalds writes, go in and in, be the space between the cells, the vast resounding
silence in which spirit dwells.
dive in and in as deep as you can dive.
So investigating, feeling what's here.
And exploring whatever brings a sense of warmth and connection,
you might put your hand on your heart
and sense that you're offering
very tender, sweet care to what's here.
Or you might sense that that loving, caring energy
is flowing through you from beyond
from the heart of the universe, from a spiritual figure or through others that you know,
see if you can let in. Just explore that. Go in and in, letting in. She writes,
go in and in and turn away from nothing that you find. And sensing whatever your contacting
can float, unfold, be held in a very vast,
and tender space.
