Tara Brach - Healing Depression with Meditation - Part 1 (2018-08-01)
Episode Date: August 3, 2018Healing Depression with Meditation - Part 1 (2018-08-01) - Most people get depressed at times, and many suffer greatly from bouts of major depression. At the heart of the suffering is the experience o...f severed belonging—of being imprisoned in the pain of separation, unworthiness, unlovability and hopelessness. These two talks explore several meditation practices that reconnect us with our natural aliveness, openheartedness and awareness. They empower us to develop our inner resources, energize us to awaken, free us from rumination and remind us that we are not our depressive thoughts and feelings. The growing realization of the loving awareness that is our home heals the very roots of depression. 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.
And when I'm welcoming, as many of you know, I'm re-welcoming you that are right here in Bethesda,
and I'm welcoming you who are listening right now and spread around the world
and those in the future who will be listening on the podcast.
because it does feel like a wonderful community that comes together, which brings me to our talk.
And the title is Healing Depression with Meditation.
And it's the first time I've ever given a specific talk on depression and as I started doing
it I realized, hmm, this is going to be a two-part talk and it may be that it keeps going, we'll see.
But as many of you know, there's supposedly by count, 300 plus million people around the world
that are depressed.
Since the leading cause of disability in the world.
And of all of us listening right now, if not ourselves,
I'm imagining that we know somebody very, very close in,
who really suffers from major depression.
And can I just see by hand raise how many here, either yourself or someone you know,
really does suffer in this way?
Can I see by hands?
I can certainly raise my hand.
This is most of us.
And maybe a pause right now and even inviting you to close your eyes
and just sense the many people, ourselves included,
who are part of this web, this community of, you might say loss,
this particular expression of suffering,
that live with something so difficult
and just feel our hearts tender and open to that.
Because one of the biggest illusions in depression
is that in some way we're really alone,
and it's our fault, the shame that comes with it, in isolation.
So one of the intentions of exploring this together
is to sense that this is a really widespread and shared human suffering.
Okay, and thank you for pausing in that way.
So we're going to be looking at how meditation can help.
And when I say meditation, meditation is,
training our awareness and there are many kinds of meditations.
So in particular I'd like to break it down some and say how different parts of meditation,
our styles of meditation, can help in different ways to relieve this suffering, to bring healing.
And there's a lot of research that's been done on mindfulness and other meditations
and that preliminary research is showing helpfulness, you know, on a par with other
leading treatments and there's a long way to go.
So part of this is that we're exploring this ourselves as practitioners,
experimenting to see what works for us.
The metaphor that I've kind of taken to that I like is to sense,
if you know in the west there's these bending rivers and in logging areas,
the logs can get jammed around some of the turns.
And at least in the past,
They used to have somebody with a long pole that could, if they went right to the certain log
or a few certain logs and could reangle them, then the logs could kind of readdap just their
positions and flow down the river.
So I think of the constellation we call depression, you know, the thoughts and feelings
and biochemistry you call depression like a log jam.
And that there are a bunch of different ways, different logs that we can target that
can help to get things moving again.
Okay, so that's kind of...
And each of the leading treatments does that,
whether it's cognitive behavioral therapies
that might target certain belief systems
and how we hold on to them
and keep perpetuating, you know, the pain.
Or sometimes it's physical exercise
that can dramatically change our biochemistry.
Or it may be met different,
medicine, psychoactive medicines, they can do it, all the antidepressants. And a big, big area
is relationships, friends, therapeutic relationships. I saw this on the web, it says one awesome
thing about E.R, you know, E.R from Winnie the Pooh, is that even though he's basically clinically
clinically depressed, he still gets invited to participate in adventures and shenanigans with all
his friends and they never expect him to pretend to feel happy. They just love him anyway and they
never leave him behind or ask him to change. So one quality of relatedness is this profound
acceptance that doesn't make us wrong or bad for being caught in this log jam. Now I mentioned on
my list of, you know, treatments. And there's also a really opening in the field to recently
research on the use of psilocybin and MDMA. And so there's a lot more coming down the
pike in terms of ways to reboot the system, kind of shift some of the logs, whatever.
But I want to just right from the start because antidepressants are in such wide use. And so often
And I have people saying, yeah, but if I'm going to use the antidepressants,
isn't that going to in some way sabotage my spiritual path?
And some of you might have wondered the same thing too.
So I'm going to, I'll just say a few words about that in a moment.
But I just want to share that now about 15 years ago,
I went to a conference that was on trauma.
And one of the posters for the conference had a big, you know,
the title there was
if there was Prozac back then
and first it had a picture of Karl Marx saying
you know
hmm capitalism could work if only we tweak it a little
you know
but my favorite one
was Edgar Allan Poe
who's looking out the window
and he's saying
hello birdie
so
okay so antidepressants
it's nice to have a hardline
position and many people
feel very strongly one way or the other. And I can say that over these decades, I have seen,
for some people, antidepressants seem to be really, really helpful, make it even possible
to meditate and exercise and this and that. And I've seen others get very habituated and seem
to plateau and who knows. So it's really in
individual how it works. For some, there is a stagnation that can happen not to keep on
investigating how to wake up and work with depression. Science has a long way to go on
this. It's a very inspecific science. Friends sent me a cartoon today and there's a doctor
and the patient sitting on, you know, the table they sit on and we sit on. And the patient
saying this, I think we should cut back on my antidepressant. I watched old yeller and it was
hysterical. So talking about dogs, there are more natural ways. The same person sent me another
therapist, a client, the client's on the couch. Therapist saying, go home and let your dog
look your face. Dog slive is the most effective antidepressant you can get without a prescription.
So we're going to focus on the meditative strategies that can bring healing.
And the important thing, I guess one important thing I want to communicate is that I think
of meditation as rarely sufficient by itself.
I think meditation is essential in really fully healing.
and yet it needs other elements like a real focus on relationships.
And for some people, medication or for others, you know,
really strong exercise regime or whatever, but it's not alone,
but I do think of it as essential.
And the reason why is because not only does meditation shift the logs around,
I mean, you can actually do MRIs and see the shifts in the brain and so on,
But it's empowering because we start realizing that we can direct our own attention in a way that
starts to heal and free us.
So it shifts the logs around, helps to get us back into a flow state, it's empowering.
And the final thing is that the very nature of meditative attention is it helps us realize
who we are, that we are not the log jam. You are not your depression. Your depression
doesn't have to define you. And through meditation we get those glimmers of that who we
are something more. We're that tenderness, that awareness, that kindness, that weakfulness, that we
start to sense in the background. And those glimpses are
are really what's liberating.
So we're going to be digging into the different meditative strategies,
but to set a bit of a context, the first is so what is depression?
And there's different facets to it,
but you might say it's a low and unpleasant, painful mood.
And it's characterized by a loss of interest in life and engagement,
and often a sense of helplessness,
hopelessness and hopelessness, feeling numb or empty, disconnected.
It's very often accompanied, as I mentioned earlier, by shame.
Like, I feel low and this is my fault and I'm bad and it reflects something bad about me.
So it's accompanied by that shame and it's also accompanied by anxiety because we feel at risk.
So that's the kind of the cluster.
You can see in the statistics that it says, you know, usually see women as higher up on depression
and men is a bit lower.
But many professionals feel like men present with symptoms of depression, like aggression,
or like anger or addiction, but underneath that is depression.
So it's hard to tell.
An important thing to explore in ourselves and others is the difference between depression
and sadness, sorrow, grieving.
In this culture, we're not so good at creating the space for sorrow and grieving.
There are some cultures that have a whole ritual around, you know, when somebody's had a major loss,
creating a lot of open time where there's no demands,
where it's just to assume that person's going to kind of burrow in.
And the recognition is that grieving and sadness is entirely natural.
And we see it in animals.
I mean, I think of elephants because of a few books I've read about elephants and articles
and they're just such a fascination.
But they live about as long as we do.
they have really tight herds.
And when an elephant mom loses a calf, I mean, she's in grief.
Sometimes they have to leave behind the weaker ones.
There's mourning and grief.
It's very visible.
And with humans, we have all these losses that are inevitably part of being alive,
whether it's the losses of our own aging and sickness and death
or people that we love are the relationships that don't work out and break our hearts.
Our losses of job or losses of freedom, you know,
our loss of home, our loss of a place to live.
It's just all these different levels of losses.
And then we have the more subtle but very deep ones
where we have the loss of,
I sometimes think of as the unlived life,
the sense of what could have been or might have been
or that we wish we'd have.
And then there's the loss in our world,
and we see the loss of species,
and it breaks our heart.
We see the suffering and loss of other animals that are alive
and the cruelty to farm animals, and it breaks our heart.
There's loss after loss,
and then the human losses are alive.
around the planet. So here is the basic principle that when there's loss and we don't
feel it and grieve it, it converts into depression. Ungrieve loss, ungrieved sorrow. When
we haven't faced it, felt it, digested it. It's like a wound that never healed,
it prematurely got covered over and then it gets septic in some way.
Does that make sense?
It's one of the great, you know, kind of spiritual crises in our culture is ungrieved life.
It gets buried and it turns into depression.
So, sadness is intelligent.
It's adaptive.
Sadness, you know, really if you sense, well, what does sadness do?
It moves us towards accepting loss that something has passed.
And it moves us towards reconnecting in some way, restoring connection.
That's what sadness does.
It brings us to often a more timeless loving.
For me, I've found grief when I really grieve.
I open to what's embedded in the grief, which is a love that's undying.
That often happens when I'm feeling the waves of missing my parents,
that I will feel the sadness but then right in the very ever,
of that sadness is just the loving of them.
They can't go away.
The difference is important and also the relationship between ungrieved losses and depression.
Now when we're going into depression and into major depression, just to look at that, the
brain is no longer regulating our mood.
We're out of wax, so to speak.
When we lock in, when the system gets low like that, it takes over and it defines us.
Our life is defined by depression.
It limits us.
And the challenge is itself sustaining and it kind of is virulent.
It extends itself on its own once it begins looping.
Because think about how we experience depression.
There's depressing thoughts going on about what's wrong
that reinforces a biochemistry that's depressed
and there's also the level of the electrical messages, the neuropathways and so on.
So all of that goes on, which then generates more thoughts,
which generates more feelings and on and on it loops
unless we have a pole and we know how to move one of the logs,
which we'll get to.
Part of the looping is that when we have the thoughts and feelings looping,
they create behaviors that then sustain our situation.
So the thoughts might be, I'll never find love,
and the feelings might be that sinking feeling
and the sense of shame and the fear,
and then the behaviors that come out of it
are not really open to relationship,
which then reaffirms, I'll never find love.
And I know you get it.
But that's what I mean by self-sustaining.
That's why when the weather system of depression sets in, it's very tenacious.
So what inclines us?
How come some people, I mean, we can all get set off and feel a real sense of loss and real intense stress.
And all of us can go down a bit for into depression, not just grieve it, but like in some way,
delay the grieving and avoid our feelings and get depressed. That happens to everybody I know.
How come some people lock into major depression? It's 50 cents inheritable. So, genetics, big
one, okay? Fifty cents inherited. Chemical imbalance in certain ways. There can be, if there's
trauma early on, it changes the neurocircuitary and it inclines.
us more to depression. If there's trauma in another generation, the circuitry from that generation
get inherited. So there's pre-existing conditions that make us more inclined. But the key understanding
if you sense, you know, how come we go down into depression, is that we get stressed by something,
some loss, some intense loss, or maybe it's ongoing pain
because pain can go right into depression.
I know that one personally how, you know,
after a certain amount of chronic pain,
my system just became depressed,
and my thoughts were depressed thoughts,
and I just began looping.
So some form of trauma,
whether it's in a past generation or this lifetime,
or really severe stress,
ends up throwing us off.
In other words, our basic needs are not being met.
The trauma of it could be starvation,
but more likely not being nourished in relationships,
not being seen, not being loved,
not feeling safe, not feeling belonging.
It throws us off.
Poor parenting.
So then we have severed belonging.
That's depression.
I mean, when severed belonging, the loss of connections not processed, we get depressed.
And then we feel more disconnected, which makes us more depressed.
So depression is about disconnection.
Everything we're going to explore in terms of meditation, moving the logs, has to do with reconnecting to a liveliness,
to our hearts, to awareness.
When we're disconnected,
the limbic system basically is dominating,
so it's not just depression, it's also usually shame and fear and anger and other stuff.
And our frontal cortex,
not so much of a flow of communication,
so we lack access to our most important resources
of empathy, compassion, mindfulness, humor,
good reasoning. Okay, so that's part of the challenge. You can see it in animals and you
can see it in humans. I've always been struck by some of the studies, one study of chimps
and I share this and as I'm saying it I'm realizing that I very much don't approve of
and want to have any studies of primates that hurt primates.
So I share you this with you this, with that understanding that in this study,
the baby chimps were deprived, they had erratic mothering,
the outcome of deprivation, maternal deprivation,
binge eating, antisocial behavior, withdrawn, fearful, depressed.
When we don't get our needs met,
When there's severed belonging and there's not a way of processing it, we get depressed.
And you see it in humans too.
You see it culturally, you know, in a culture where there's not so much natural belonging,
how much addiction there is, how much depression and anxiety, and particularly in the
most historically marginalized groups that have been.
have been traumatized. It's, you know, societally induced trauma, severed belonging,
goes into depression. For anybody that's experienced, any of you listening, any that you
know, being cut off from aliveness, from hope, from feelings of connection is a horrible
biological, psychological prison. It's horrific.
So that's context.
Now the healing, as I mentioned, is we're restoring connection.
And from the Buddha, he says, I would not be teaching you this Dharma, this path,
if it weren't possible to experience freedom and happiness.
So the first message is, it's possible.
Now this is really important because the key feature of depression is it's not going to work for me.
Okay, so this is the core teaching of the Buddha.
I wouldn't be teaching you this if it weren't possible.
And modern neuroscience is saying the same thing.
Neuplasticity, neuroplasticity, neuroplasticity, right?
That even though the patterning can be deeply grooved, the brain.
as plastic throughout our lives. So we're going to be, for the rest of these two talks,
maybe more, but we'll see, we're going to be looking at intentional pathways of reconnecting.
I'm going to be emphasized, I'm going to name them now, and then we'll get probably to two of them
for the rest of tonight. The first pathway is reconnecting to our heart's intention.
to what matters to us. The second pathway is moving from thoughts to presence,
being able to come out of the ruminations and coming into the here and now.
The third that we're going to explore is mindful self-compassion, how to bring
mindfulness and compassion into the present moment. And then the last is gladdening
the mind. Gladdening the mind. And each one is a way-to-way
up to wholeness. And different ones of us need different emphasis at different times.
So we'll start with intention. And because that really is the opening of the door. And when
we feel the logs are jammed, when we feel stuck, and stuck is the best word, it feels like
there's no way out of the downness and the unpleasantness and all the self-negative and the disconnection.
It feels like there's no way out.
And yet there's something in us that wishes we could get out and that wish is the beginning of intention.
A couple of years ago, there was a New Yorker article and it was about a Japanese monk, his name was Nemoto,
that was responding to people who were severely depressed and suicidal
and he set up this website and so on.
Japan's suicide rates twice that at the United States,
or at least it was.
So he was having a workshop at his temple
and he describes this workshop
and he did an exercise.
We're going to do a kind of tiny little piece of it,
a little version of it.
But if you had three months to live
and you were diagnosed with cancer,
answer, what do you want to do? That was the exercise. And he gave people paper and then
he said if you had one month, if you had a week, if you had 10 minutes. Okay? So let's say
you decide that what's important is being loving or helping or expressing your creativity
with poetry or realizing your true nature, you just start writing about that and what it would
be like. So you lean into like, really what is it you want? How would you want to live?
So one man was there weeping and he had a completely blank piece of paper.
And he said that he up until this moment had only thought about wanting to die, about what
was wrong and bad, not about wanting to live.
And if he hadn't really lived, how could he want to die?
So the insight was really freeing for him.
In fact, he returned to his job.
He was a lot of suicidal people who stopped doing everything.
He had stopped doing everything.
He had been adverse to communicate him to others.
He started to do that and his life really shifted.
So the basic teaching here is that the log jam does not include a sense of positive intention.
We're cut off from that part of the frontal cortex that imagine
and intends and has aspiration for something positive,
but it can be activated.
We can reconnect to that.
So the challenge here is, again,
that even when you bring this up for somebody that's really stuck,
the response is a hopelessness.
This habit of I can't change is right at the root.
It's a deep, deep belief.
the negativity bias completely honed in on one cell.
So I was teaching at Omega last weekend and one person who came up to talk to me was really,
really hopeless about her life.
And that was what she led with, she said, I just, you know, I can do something here, Tar,
you're leading this meditation, I can feel a little bit of whatever, but there's no way.
I mean, in the force field of how my day goes, there's no way.
And I get slammed around and I just end up hating myself and feeling like everybody, you know,
so she explained her how it was.
And so I said, okay, so you're here.
What brought you here?
He said, well, I want to feel better.
And so I said, so what would that be like?
And in a way that was like a shocking question, just like for that man.
in the story. And I said, just start there. What is better like? And she said, well,
I guess I would trust myself some. Well, what would that be like? And we started going into it
and what I really want to communicate is you can't artificially hope. You can't say, okay,
I'm going to be hopeful. But what you can do is start sensing you.
your longing to move in a direction. Because it's in us. There's something in us that
intuits a possibility. And you can build on that. Now, I want to pause here and say,
there's a real difference between, you know, I want to live my life, I want to wake up my
heart, and what you might call the more narrow attached wants. So if you ask a person, well,
get in touch with your intention.
And they say, well, my intention is I really want my ex-partner to come back and then I'll be happy.
Or my intention is I want to get this particular job and then I'll be happy.
Or, you know, I want to be able to dance professionally even though I've just had both knees replaced in the next two weeks.
Then I'll be happy.
You know, and it goes on and on.
I want to win a competition.
In other words, narrow fixated wants.
are not going to reconnect us with our hearts aspiration.
A Baptist pastor was presenting a children's sermon.
And during the sermon he asked the children if they knew what the resurrection was.
Now asking questions, during the children's sermon is crucial,
but same time he asked in front of the whole congregation,
so that was pretty interesting.
Now, so he asked what the meaning of the resurrection was.
The little boy raised his hand, called them,
and he said, this is what the little boy said.
I know that if you have a resurrection that lasts more than four hours,
you're supposed to call the doctor.
It took the congregation like 10 minutes to settle down after that.
So this was a very bad example of when we fixate our wants.
But what I'm really suggesting is there's a difference between narrow wants.
And when we start really getting in touch with our deep aspiration,
and one of the ways to sense a deep aspiration
is like an acorn to an oak.
It's that in us which wants to experience our full potential
to love, to live, to be creative.
It's what's already here that we want to allow to unfold.
Second example for you
from the story about Namoto, the monk.
So we had this website.
and people that were depressed would, you know, wanted help, would write to him and call him.
And he'd have these phone calls and these conversations would go on and on,
people would call him back, and he felt like it was really, really circular,
and there was often no progress at all.
And it was just him burning out, but he didn't sense people getting better.
So he figured he was doing something wrong and decided that if people who were depressed
wanted his counsel, they had to come to his temple.
and his temple is in a really remote place.
So they'd have to really want help.
So one man walks five hours to get to Nomodos temple.
And the walks like this heroic journey
because he had been living as a shut-in.
You all know what a shodding is staying at home, never going out.
So there he is.
Suddenly he's in the sun and he's walking and sweating
and moving and feeling his body active.
And as he walks, he's thinking about what he's.
he's going to say and he's becoming really aware of what's really, you know, okay, this
is really what's been so challenging, this is what hurts, so he's actually paying attention
to his inner experience.
And it's been a really long time since he's spoken to anyone so this is quite a thing to
feel like he's having the courage to bring his intimate experience to someone else.
So he's sweating and reflecting and walking and he finally gets there after five hours.
And that's the peak of the experience.
Five hours.
And he goes to Nemoto and he announces that he's achieved understanding
no longer needs his help and he turns around and he walks back home.
So that's the prescription of you.
But it's really interesting.
What happened there?
This is a real story.
And I think it's kind of archetypal in a way, which is why I wanted to share it, that in some way
he was in touch with his aspiration.
He did want to get better.
And what aspiration does, when you start getting in touch with the pain of not feeling
like you're living who you could be, that's a loss and it's an ungrieved loss.
you start grieving it and then feeling in that grief I really want to be who I can be, that longing
energizes you to take some steps. And the problem with depression is it's paralyzing.
So aspiration gets you into motion. It lets you take a risk. It lets you walk in the sun five miles
to a temple. Okay? And so that was the first thing. So he dedicated
energy to it. And then as he was dedicating that energy because things are moving and
he's moving around, he's paying attention to some of the layers of what's there that aren't
so static and so buried, reconnecting with flow and with aliveness. And that is, that reconnecting
is the antidote to depression. The lag jam is there because flow is blocked. Connecting with
intention and our energy to move and our bodies and the layers that are there starts to undo
the jam. He understood that. So we're going to do a brief reflection on this. The Hebrew prophets
warned that without vision people perish. So this connecting with what matters to us, it's really the
poor element of hope, of healthy hope, this imagination, being able to imagine and sense into the
potential. So this reflection right now, if you knew right now that this is the last month,
what would matter to you? What would you want to be doing or experiencing or paying attention
to? If you bring to mind a few people you care about and imagine that in this life,
last month you're with those people.
What is it that's going to matter?
And if you could sense you don't know how long you have,
feel into the prayer in your heart, please may I,
and just fill in the blank, what's the longing?
What happens if you let that longing really fill you?
Like really mean it, be sincere.
When you're feeling sincere prayer or longings,
what's your sense of who you are?
Notice what it's like.
Can you sense the difference between the sense of presence
and being missed who's that in you which is praying?
And they stuck so inside the logjam.
The sign of the meditative pathway
and the healing is that shift.
sensing who you are, that enlarged sense of being.
Take a few full breaths.
Okay, so the first way of reconnecting,
getting in touch with intention.
The second calling thoughts to presence
and one of the key perpetrators of depression
is ruminating thoughts.
And even if we're not depressed, we have,
you know, most of us get carried away into virtual worlds
and we lose touch with our aliveness.
So one of the most basic practices
is to have an anchor in presence.
In other words, your breath, your body,
feeling of aliveness right here.
Often people that are very depressed
or cut off from full body awareness
because trauma cuts us off from body awareness,
so then use another sense.
Feel the hands alive
alive because you can feel your hands even when you're generally dissociated, or feel your
breath, or listen to sounds, but something that helps you be here. And once you set that anchor,
then when, and kind of name ahead of time, what are the thoughts and beliefs that you know
are the typical ones that keep fueling depression? Well, we know them. They're the ones that are
saying something's wrong with me, right? We know that kind. I'm not going to change. I'm
trapped. I'm isolated. I'll never have what I want. It's that that range. So we start getting
to identify those when they come up. Okay, limiting thought, limiting thought, come back
to the anchor. That's a nutshell summary of how to practice.
That's the meditation and then through the day we kind of look for them.
I mean, the Buddha put it this way, which I think is a great nutshell summary.
Whatever a person frequently thinks and reflects on, that will become the inclination
of their mind.
Whatever a person frequently thinks and reflects on, that will become the inclination of their mind.
neurosciences, neurons that fire together, wire together, you know?
The more you think negative self-thoughts, the more deep those grooves are, the more that
becomes the habit.
So, ahead of time, we say, okay, when those come up, we're going to notice them and we're
going to come right back to here and we're going to breathe ourselves right here until it
becomes a habit of interrupting rumination, it's really important because that really shifts
things. If the more we're in those thoughts, the more we're living in an idea of a self, a role
that then perpetuates the very behaviors that confirm our beliefs. So interrupting the thoughts
is a really big one. I heard a story of a lifetime smoker and he was high
hospitalized for emphysema and he had had a series of small strokes so his daughter was urging
him, you know, she'd often done to give up smoking and he's refusing and you know he's been
pretty addicted for his lifetime and he says look I'm a smoker of this life and that's how it is.
But several days later he had yet another small stroke and this one hit up the memory centers
in his brain. So then without a concern he stopped smoking for good.
And it wasn't because he decided to.
He woke up one morning, he forgot he was a smoker.
You know?
We're so used to thinking about ourselves as a certain kind of person, including an unworthy
person or unlikable person or whatever, if we keep thinking it, it's there and then our
behaviors come out of it.
Now we hopefully don't have to have a stroke.
But in a way, this kind of meditation can decrease the frequency and help to shift our sense
of who we are.
So in this cocoon of thinking, we have a lot of repeating thoughts.
A lot of them are projection.
The more we're under the grip of the limbic system, the more things that are going on
with us, we project onto other people.
So there's that sense of, I don't like me, you couldn't possibly like me.
You know, that kind of a thing.
An old man, just another story was wondering if his wife had a hearing problem or just wasn't
listening to him.
So one night he stood behind her while she was sitting in the lounge chair and he spoke softly,
he said, honey, can you hear me?
No response.
Moves a little closer and says again, honey, can you hear me?
Still, no response.
And he was right behind her and he said, honey, can you hear me?
And she replies, for the third time, yes.
We project.
Okay.
So, as mentioned, we can shift the logjam by coming back to our body every time we catch
ourselves in thoughts.
And we can also begin to reflect because if you can catch yourself in thoughts,
what you're doing is becoming mindful of thinking,
which means you're bigger than the thoughts.
You're resting in the awareness that's bigger than the thoughts,
which reveals, and this is the insight,
you don't have to believe your thoughts.
Now, if you can leave tonight
with a little bit of a sense of it's possible
to start catching on to thoughts,
coming back to presence and then not believing them so much.
Not believing them so much.
Remember that line real but not true
that one Tibetan teacher taught me.
You can get that yes, it's a real thought going on,
but it's not true, it's just the programming here.
So you can start to sense from mindfulness
this, that you don't have to believe them, that you can challenge them.
Do I know this is true?
How do I feel when I'm believing this?
What's it like not to believe this?
Okay, so William James, this is to me one of the most fascinating historical examples
of the log jam being moved by working with thoughts.
Many of you know it came from a super accomplished family who was a very successful writer.
And in his 30s he was unaccomplished.
He wanted to be a painter.
Then he enrolled in med school.
Then he quit to do an expedition up the Amazon.
And then he quit that.
And then in a moment of, you know, real facing his life, reckoning in his diary,
he questioned his capacity to be productive in any way in his life
that he should be alive at all.
So he was hitting bottom.
And he decided that before doing anything rash,
he was going to do a one-year experiment with his beliefs in his unworthiness, his beliefs
that he would never be successful, his beliefs in his failure.
So his one-year experiment was that every time those kind of thoughts would come up, he
going to let them go and come back to that sense of change as possible.
He didn't use the word neuroplasticity, but, you know, something, that was it.
He was just going to say, look, change is possible.
And he tracked in his diary and practiced every day.
So his view was as if things could change.
And that as if created a receptivity to opportunities and his energy increased and he got more aligned
with his deepest interests.
And he got married and then he started teaching at Harvard and then he had a study group
with a metaphysical club, and this is what he wrote in a letter.
I possessed for the first time an intelligible and reasonable conception of freedom.
When we began, I described the power of these meditative strategies.
They shift our mood, for sure, but they do more.
They're empowering because you don't have to have somebody else guidance.
you or be taking something. You can do that too to support it. But there are actually
ways we ourselves can shift our attention to access our aspiration, to energize, to engage,
and to step out of rumination. So we're going to end with a short practice on this too.
And this is, as in many of these reflections, something that requires more time than we'll
be giving it.
So this is a taste and I invite you to practice on your own.
But for now just bring an area to mine in your life where you feel doubt or you don't
feel as hopeful as you want to feel.
It might be in work, relationships, hell, spiritual unfoldings.
or you feel some stuckness.
Maybe it's an emotional reactivity
where you are not trusting that you can change your pattern.
And once you have it in mind, sense what you're believing.
When we're stuck, we have some corresponding belief.
Sometimes it's I'm going to fail or I'll never get what I want.
I'll never find intimacy.
I'll always let people down, always be rejected.
What are the limiting thoughts that go through your mind or the beliefs that surround this stuck place?
Maybe it's that basic I can't trust that I'll ever change.
Just recognize.
And since that you could really call on your full mindful presence,
what you might call your future self, your most awake awareness,
so you can shine a light on the thought and the belief.
And know this is one you want to track and keep waking up from.
And for now notice what happens when you're believing it,
sense how it imprisons,
how it depresses and severs you from possibility,
from openness,
from receptivity to something.
different and from your wisdom self, your highest self, sense that understanding that change
is possible. And just ask yourself, what would my life be like if I didn't believe in this?
Just get a glimmer, a glimpse. What would my life be like if I no longer believe this?
Who would I be if I didn't believe this? You might notice the difference between
that sense of beingness, that mystery, that presence, and the one who believes and is
called in the logjam. Just notice the difference. We close with the words of Rumi.
Be empty of worrying. Think of who created thought. Why do you stay in prison when the door
is so wide open? Move outside the tangle of fear-thing.
thinking, live in silence, flow down and down and always widening rings of being.
Namaste and thank you for your presence.
For more talks and meditations, and to learn about my schedule or join my email list,
please visit tarabrock.com.
