Tara Brach - Healing Depression with Meditation - Part 2 (2018-08-08)
Episode Date: August 10, 2018Most people get depressed at times, and many suffer greatly from bouts of major depression. At the heart of the suffering is the experience of severed belonging—of being imprisoned in the pain of se...paration, 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. Welcome, my friends.
So it's nice to see you all and also to feel our extended field of people listening to the podcast
and those who have joined us on the live streaming.
We're doing the second class in a row on depression.
And when I've done a kind of hand-raise, it's pretty much everybody, and I can say this
from myself, everyone I know has had some experience of depression, many have had major depression,
and all of us know someone, usually someone very close and dear, who suffered a lot from it.
So it's this really ubiquitous part of our culture, and it's an important question.
How do we find depression as a portal for spiritual awakening?
How does it fit and be included and addressed on a spiritual path?
So this is part two in that.
And as I described in the last one, many, many different causes but generally some form
of stress where it's too much, trauma, poor parenting, it leads to a severed belonging,
a loss of connection. And it's connection with aliveness, a connection with love and with other
people. Often it's a connection with our own body, connection with all of the potential
of who we are. So it's a real kind of severing. We're no longer part of the flow in those
moments. It's a very stuck, contracted, internalized feeling. And I likened it to a log
jam when, especially I think of the northwest where these logs are floating down a river and
they get jammed up. And in that log jam in terms of depression, it's the jamming continues. It
reinforces itself with looping thoughts, rumination, you know, what's wrong. It sustains itself
with the whole experience of the emotions that go with that and with the physiology.
So, for instance, you can start having a sinking feeling and that will generate more thoughts
about what's wrong that then creates more feelings and more of that physiology of depression.
It keeps circling.
One of the big things that keeps depression cooking is that it then leads to behaviors
that actually reinforce depression.
and they keep us isolated in different ways, withdrawn, sleeping, addicted in certain ways.
Reader Rudner is one of my favorites and she says, I love to shop after a bad relationship.
I don't know, I buy a new outfit and it makes me feel better, it just does.
Sometimes if I see a really great outfit I'll break up with someone on purpose.
So we have our behaviors.
So, when we think of this log jam and how log jams end up being broken up so the logs
can rejoin the flow of life.
Sometimes the images of a guy standing at the bend of a river with a long pole and if he finds
certain logs that he can push a little, everything seems to rearrange itself.
So when we think of treating depression it is kind of like that.
people can treat depression really kind of pull out with the log of exercise, you know,
doing really good exercise and for many medication becomes one of those logs that's moved,
many people's therapy.
For almost everyone deepening relationships, that's a big one.
Meditation, learning to pay attention.
in a wise way to the present moment, cultivating love, cultivating loving presence.
It is not sufficient in treating strong depression.
We need relationship and we often need therapy.
So other things are needed.
So it's not sufficient but it's essential if the depression,
is going to be a portal to really waking up to true healing.
So that's kind of the frame I'd like to offer.
Not sufficient, we need other things, but absolutely essential.
The reason, one of the reasons is that a key part of depression
is a kind of hopelessness and a stuckness.
And when we start learning how to shift our attention,
shift out of the incessant thoughts if something's really wrong with me, really the one
that's flawed.
We can start shifting that.
If we know how to start paying attention to loving-kindness, which we'll explore some, we
actually change our biochemistry.
The mood and the body changes.
It's empowering.
This is one of the reasons meditation is essential.
that when our will-being isn't hooked to a medication or another therapist, somebody,
something we have to pay money for, that we ourselves sense, oh, there is a way to evolve
my own psyche. So that's one reason.
The second reason is it's only by learning to pay attention in the present moment to what's
actually here with real kindness right here.
that we actually experience a shift in identity, a radical shift in identity from being the limited,
flawed, depressed self to really being the space, the compassion that everything's happening
in.
It's not anymore about moving a log, it's about realizing that we're not just the river, we're
really all water and all earth and all sky. We're the whole universe of formless presence that
things are happening in. And that shift in identity is what liberates. So we'll explore
tonight a bit about both how we can empower ourselves, learning to move the logs and shift our
attention. And one of my favorite examples of shifting things is of these two guys will
call them Saul and Mort, who they're coming out of a religious service. And Saul's wondering
if it's okay to smoke while he's praying. And Mort says, go ask Rabbi Schwartz. He'll tell
you. So Saul goes to Rabbi Schwartz and he asks him, Rabbi, can I smoke while I pray?
And Rabbi says, no, my son, you can't. That's utter disrespect to our religion. And he goes
back and he tells his friend what the good rabbi said. And the Fred said, I'm not surprised.
you ask the wrong question, you have to shift how you're paying attention to this.
So let me try. So Mort goes up to Rabbi Schwartz. He says,
Rabbi, may I pray while I smoke?
To which the rabbi eagerly says, by all means my son, by all.
So we flip things around, we shift our attention.
And of course that example isn't totally really nail it, but it was fun anyway.
So we'll be exploring what we call gladdening the mind, shifting our attention to create a different
body-mind experience.
And then we're going to explore the second piece will be a full compassionate presence with
reality just as it is, which is the liberating piece that really shifts our identity around.
We started last week with the important.
of intention and we have to keep coming back to it because if you're caught in that
depressive space and I ask you the question, well what really matters to you?
Generally the mood of depression is nothing matters and yet if we really ask and keep paying
attention. There's something in us that wants to get better, that intuit that there's something
more in life. There's something there, there's some tendril that's still there, and if we can
find that, that what really matters and even sense a tendril of it, it energizes the movement
towards freedom. So that was, we covered that in the first part of this. The other
piece we covered is really getting the skill of recognizing fear-based thinking. Okay, thinking,
thinking, come back to the senses. And this is one of the basic skills in meditation
that we train them. So then we move on, as I mentioned, tonight, to gladdening the mind.
And these are ways of paying attention that reconnect us with positive emotion.
I saw a cartoon many years ago and had a dog that was lying on a couch and had his earbuds
in and the caption was positive mirroring and what the was going on in his earbuds was,
you're such a good doggy, you are such a good, oh you are such a good, good doggy, you are such a good doggy, you know.
So it's like it's not necessarily that we're at the level of telling ourselves affirmations like you're getting
getting smarter and prettier every day or whatever.
But it's being able to step out of limiting thoughts and regard ourselves with kindness, that's
one approach, that does gladden and open our heart and mind.
So that's what we'll be doing.
And then again we move from that because if we have a little more access to resourcefulness,
we can start very directly, courageously, contacting what's here. Does that make sense
these two parts that we're talking about? Another word on contacting what's here is in the
example a story with one man who is struggling with depression and anxiety, they often
go together and shame and so on. And his therapist encouraged meditation.
He said, you'll feel better.
So he encouraged him to go to classes and he said, go to retreat.
You know, you'll be better.
So he goes to this retreat and he comes back and he said it was really difficult.
You know, I got in touch with fear and I really was caught in.
And there was a huge amount of fear and then shame and then I felt sadness and there was self-aversion.
And you said I'd feel better.
You said, yes, you're feeling your shame better and you're feeling your sadness better
and you're feeling your self-aversion better.
And the truth is that when we begin to bring mindful presence of depression, we can feel
more strongly what's there.
And the way through is through.
But as I mentioned, for many people, if there's a really strong current,
of depression and we prematurely try to feel it, we can sink into it too much. Hence, this
is why we're starting tonight with gladdening the mind. Oh yeah, this cartoon, therapist is
saying to this very, very, very depressed person on a couch, and how does your crippling depression
make you feel? So that's the sinking in. Gladdening the mind has often been described in
positive psychology as a really key part of healing because, and we know this from kind of evolutionary
science, we have a negativity bias anyway. We move through the world and we spend a lot more time
thinking about what's going to go wrong and what's around the corner that's really going to nail
us, then we go around saying, how is today going to be the best day of my life? You know, we don't
do that as much.
And if we have 98 experiences that are really positive with a dog and twice a dog scares us,
what do we remember?
And this is the way our survival brain is designed,
is to keep on looking towards what went wrong to protect us.
And of course, with depression, it's even more so.
And we're entirely geared to look through that lens of what's wrong.
So just as physical exercise can shift our bodily state, attending differently can shift our mental
state.
And the first place I'd like to pay attention to in terms of gladdening the mind is the practice
of gratitude. There's been a lot of research in the last five years on gratitude and depression,
so it's particularly interesting to me that it does show that the practice, the intentional
practice of gratitude relieves depression and in addition it increases happiness and for
those with illness it creates more optimism and hopefulness. And you can see the shift in
brain, that when you practice, gratitude practice, there's an activation of the left frontal
cortex which correlates with positive emotion and a kind of quieting of the limbic system.
This is Father Gregory Boyle, he says, in a much more, if we shift from science to spirituality,
he says, he's describing the block to divine love.
He says, our marriage to the pain we carry and the lament that accompanies it, that's the
block.
He says, with grace we come to know that lament can't get a foothold if gratitude gets there
first.
So gratitude.
In training in gratitude, the trick is to get a state of gratitude to become more of an
ongoing trait. Because we all know we're happiest when we're feeling appreciation, but
then that negativity bias takes over again. So, the skillful way about it is that when you do
have some tinge of appreciation to get the knack of pausing, let's see something beautiful
and you go, wow, that's really pretty. Or there's an actual sense of wonder.
Or you sense somebody that you care about and sense their goodness.
Just get a kind of feeling about it.
When you touch by something, stop, pause and for 15 to 30 seconds actually pay attention
to what it feels like in your body, kind of marinate in it.
And the reason is that when we have negative experiences, they go really, you know,
right into the implicit memory. In other words, they're stored and they keep coming back.
When we have positive experiences, they don't. We just kind of skim through them. And so in
order to have it enter the implicit memory, you have to pause for 15 to 20 seconds and
really feel it in your body. And there's more and more really good neuroscience on this.
So what are the ways that we begin to rev up the gratefulness muscle?
Well for some people, and this is the researches looked at the strategy of simply journaling,
like it can even be as little as once a week journaling five things that you're grateful
for and that can make a difference, a sentence each.
A lot of people I know like having a gratitude buddy and you just do an email every day at the
end of the day and just say something you're grateful for. You don't have to say anything
else. You don't have to acknowledge their email, nothing. But you just do it and now and
then you check in. Another one is, it's described as a gratitude visit and I'll read it to
you. Write a 300-word letter to someone who changed your life for the better. Be specific
about what the person did and how it affected you. Delivered in person, preferably without
telling the person in advance what the visit is about. When you get, read the whole thing slowly
to your benefactor, you'll be happier and less depressed one month from doing that. There's
some powerful rearranging. This is Seligman who describes this and flourish his book.
When I lead day-long and weekend workshops, there's one meditation I try to do every time.
time, if I have time.
And it's with people in pairs asking each other the question, please tell me what do you
love and then asking it again and again and again.
And I watch the group in pairs doing this and I watch the faces and I feel like I'm the
one that gets the best treat from it.
because to watch faces start to light up with what they love,
I think is the most touching thing in the world.
It's just beautiful.
I can feel my oxytocin and my endorphins, you know, all that go in.
My own practice is I'll sometimes do gratitude walks
where I'll go out in nature and when I'm, you know,
some mornings I get up and I'm feeling kind of grim
because my body doesn't feel good and I have a lot to do.
And so I'll just dedicate the walk to gratitude walk.
And anything that comes to mind, I'll kind of mentally whispered and say thank you.
Like anything I can come up with.
Thank you for my dog keeping me company and thank you for the feeling of the wind
and thank you for this stick that's helping me to break the, there's webs everywhere
and I'm sorry spiders, but they get all over me.
so I, you know, so I'll just, and thank you for baby Mia, my granddaughter, and thank you for
Jonathan, my beloved. I'll just keep doing it, you know. And a lot of the times I'm just saying
thank you because I woke up out of thoughts and I'll thank you, I'm back again. You know,
it always works. It just does. It works. I'm not in the same state. The deal is no matter how
forced gratitude is, deep down our heart does feel appreciation and love for life and it gets us
down to that place. So we'll pause here. We'll do a little touch of gladdening our minds
with gratitude. You might sit up however you're comfortable and close your eyes and we'll do
just a gratitude sit or just to bring to mind and I invite you to whisper and don't worry
about other people nearby, they're not going to be able to hear you but just whisper and
whisper what you're grateful for and say thank you and you might whisper a person's name and
say thank you and see what happens.
Names of people, things you're grateful for in your life.
You might start with the words I'm grateful for once you're off and running, just naming
the things you're grateful for and then see how sincere your thank you can get.
You might ask yourself, what am I most grateful for really?
And sense the innocence in your heart when you say thank you.
And then just let your attention go to the quality of presence when you're grateful,
what it feels like in your body and your heart.
you might even sense, who am I when there's a heart full of gratitude right here?
Gratitude researcher says that the, if you're going to sleep and you want a good night's sleep,
instead of counting sheep, count your blessings.
Now, similar to gratitude, another way to gladden the mind is practicing loving-kindness.
and the traditional practice is to offer blessings to myself.
May I be happy?
May I be healthy?
May I feel safe?
May I feel filled with love?
Whatever the blessings are and then to offer to other people that you know, people you don't know.
And again, even if it's mechanical, deep down we care about caring and so,
so it starts to access that care.
And what we're doing is shifting the patterns of thinking and feeling and we're expanding ourselves,
removing logs in that way.
So that's one way to do it and you can just right now, again, close your eyes for a moment
and just offer the words, please may I feel happy and say it a few times and know that
Notice what happens when you say it and you're really sincere, like you're offering it
in a way that comes with real caring.
Please, may I feel happy?
You might sense that when the sincerity is there, there's a softening, the armoring starts
to dissolve.
So there's many resources to support you in the loving-kindness practice and that one's quite
beautiful, but you can also do it with other people. And this is where we can do meditation
practices with others and get the benefit of the relational field too. There's a story in one African
tribe that when somebody behaves in a way that creates separation from others and they're
troubled and they're breaking rules or customs. They call together all the members of the tribe
and they form a great circle, and that person's in the middle.
And everyone in the tribe tells that person what's good about them.
They tell a story about kind and generous things that person's done in their life.
And so this ritual recitation can last for several days.
And when it's over, the circle's broken.
Everyone celebrates as the person feels their welcome, their belonging again.
And I don't know whether this is true or not.
It's a really beautiful story, but it speaks to a truth, which is that when we're depressed
they're severed belonging, we do not feel like we belong.
And when others in some way let us know they offer their metta, they let us know our goodness,
it reconnects.
I've shared here before that in the Buddhist tradition we have spiritual friends groups.
They're called Kalyana Meta.
And some of them meet every week, some every other week that's more common and they meditate
and they share what's going on.
And in one of them, one of the people in the group and so the story was shared with me was
very depressed, a lot of self-castigating.
So the group went around and at one point that one of them had the idea, we're going to
give you a little bit of a reality test, we're going to say what we see in you.
And so one of them said, oh, you've got a lot of insight.
You really are tuned to what's going on for other people.
Somebody else said, you are honest, you will cut through, you're courageous with what you
said.
And somebody else said, yeah, you're really for real, you say what you feel, you don't
hold back.
And others said, your humor slays me.
And you know, it just kind of went like this.
One person said, I love the way you hug.
I feel safe in your arms.
Well, this person wrote them down because, as happens, they just were bouncing off.
She could not take anything in, but she wrote them down.
And she didn't tell the group members but over the next month or two, she read them all
the time.
I mean, that was her meta.
In other words, she took them and she offered that kind of seeing the goodness meta to herself
and came back to them and said, you know, I'm more than the flaw itself, my flaw itself,
but it was hearing it from you that helped me get in touch with it.
In fact, she, on Valentine's Day, you know, those, what we did when we were in second grade,
those little cards we gave, they all gave cards with all these little messages of the goodness in each other.
But it reminded me of one of my favorite quotes from Arn Garborg.
He says,
To love someone is to learn the song in their heart
and sing it to them when they have forgotten.
So love and kindness practice we can do it for ourselves to glad in our mind
and we can do it with each other.
My Great Hope writes Maya Angelou,
is to laugh as much as I cry,
to get my work done and try to love somebody and have the courage to accept the love in return.
This is the field that we can gladden our hearts.
So I want to move from gladdening the hearts to how do we be with,
how do we stop controlling and be with?
And we're going to be using the reign of compassion as a way to be with depression.
and the value of it, like why do we want to be with this suffering?
Some of you might remember the story of wise sage that lived far in the wilderness
and people would have to trek through forests and over mountains and so on to see them
and when they'd come to his hut, he'd swear them to silence and he'd give them a question
and that is, what are you unwilling to feel?
What are you unwilling to feel?
That as the liberating question.
Because when we're depressed, we don't just try to bury the pain.
We also bury our aliveness.
And it's not until we're willing to touch the layers of pain
that are there under the depression, the grief, the hurt, the fear, the shame, that we can
reconnect with the aliveness. It's the pathway back to aliveness to contact what's there.
But it requires a lot of compassion, a lot of presence. So I'm going to give you an example
of one woman who worked with Rain
to begin to tap into those layers
underneath the depression and find some healing.
And she was young.
Actually, when I met her,
she was a sophomore year of college
and she had to leave college
because she had plunged into a really big depression.
And before she left, she was studying child psychology.
she had tutored disadvantaged young people
when she was back in high school
and now she was working in a clinic teaching emotional resilience,
really cool stuff, and that's when she felt most alive.
But right at the beginning of the new year,
she crashed because her high school boyfriend,
who was still her boyfriend in college, broke up with her.
And she just completely crashed.
And she lived at home and for three months,
she came back home.
For three months, she just basically ate
and slept and wandered around the house
when her parents were at work.
That was it.
And finally, she started working with a good therapist,
started going for some walks in Rock Creek, you know,
and started meeting a couple now and then
with some friends from high school.
So she was climbing out, the point I met her,
she was climbing out, but she was in a major depression.
This is major depression.
And when she told me her history, it was not her first round of major depression, which
is often the case because it's recurrent.
And one of the big questions with recurrent depression is, let's say you climb out,
what's the way of being with your life that can prevent going down again?
So this is what we were looking at because she was just beginning to climb out.
So she had had a major depression back in early high school, similar things, several months
where she just couldn't keep going.
She was really afraid about going back to college because even though she was depressed, she
wasn't in the deepest slump.
She had this critical voice that would go on a rampage and just drive her into depression.
And she said all it's going to take is I'll start thinking about Zach again, our boyfriend.
said she'll start thinking about why he left, you know, and her critical voice would say,
you know, you're too insecure, you're needy, no one else is going to want to be with you,
or else, you know, she'd try on a pair of jeans that were too small and all of a sudden
her body undesirable or she'd, you know, missed some questions in a quiz, but this voice
would get her and just really bring her down. So she needed something.
She needed a way to work with herself so that she didn't, she wasn't at the mercy
of those voices and she could start getting at what was under the depression.
So I agreed to teach her rain and this is what she worked on.
So here's how rain works and for those of you that aren't familiar, recognize, it's an acronym,
recognize, allow, investigate, and nurture.
It's really how to bring mindfulness and compassion to the moment.
Recognize and allow, investigate and nurture.
So for her critical thoughts, that was her cue and she'd recognize, okay, critical thoughts
are going on and allowing doesn't mean you're going to let yourself be swamped by them
and believe in them.
Allowing means that you've recognized them and you're going to pause and just let everything
be for a moment.
because we can't interrupt and change the logjam, the patterning, if we're continuing to react.
You have to pause.
This is radical.
So, recognize and allow she would pause.
And then that allows her, when you do that, you can then make what I call the U-turn, you can
then start turning the attention like this from the thoughts to, okay, what's really going.
on under the thoughts? That's the question. So that's what I asked her. I said, okay, under
those critical thoughts, what's going on? Check your body, check your throat, your chest, your belly.
What are you aware of? And she said, well, it's dark, heavy, and closed down. Okay? And I asked
her, well, where is that happening? She goes right here and I said, okay, keep your hand there,
I'm going to keep exploring that area.
And I said if this dark, heavy, closed-down place could communicate, could express itself,
what would it do?
What would you notice?
She said, well, I see myself in it.
I see a little child crouched inside the darkness.
So I said, well, how come she's in the dark?
And she says, well, she doesn't want anyone to see her.
I said, what does she believe what happened if others saw her?
and her response was, they'd see something's wrong with me that I'm in some way completely
flawed or broken and they wouldn't want to be around her.
How does that make the little girl feel?
This is when she started filling up with tears.
She said, well, it makes her want to stay in the dark so nobody will see her because
it hurts too much for people not to love her.
It's like dying.
So I asked her, so what is it like, Jody?
is her name, to sense this younger part of you who feels unlovable. And she was weeping then
and she said, she's just a child, she didn't do anything wrong, it's so sad to see her.
I asked, what does she most need from you? And she said she wants me to see her and know she's there.
She wants to know I care. So now that's the investigating, you know, she's investigating,
She's feeling these feelings, she's sensing a child in the dark, a child that feels unlovable,
and the child needs her care.
Okay?
Now we're going to shift to nurturing.
And I said, you know, in some way call on the wisest part of yourself right now for this.
And I told her about future self.
I said, for you it might seem like your wise self or your high self or your Buddha nature.
Could be your future self, who you sense you're becoming that's really...
it's the most awake part of you.
And she liked the future self.
So she said, okay, now just inhabit that future self and her hand was still here and
I said and just offer what the child needs.
And so she started whispering, I'm here, I want to be with you.
I'm sorry it's so hard I care.
And she did that and let her do that for a while because that's nurturing and often it
involves a hand on our heart and a message. And after she had done that for a while,
I just said, now, just, you don't have to do anything more. Just sense the presence of
your future self and just relax. Just rest in that awareness, get to know it. Nothing to do.
This is what I call after the rain. After you've done all the recognizing and the allowing
and the investigating and the nurturing, this is a key, key part of you.
healing. You just rest in the awareness that's here. Don't reach past it. Just rest. Get to know
it because that formless, kind presence is more the truth of who you are than any story
of a depressed self or an anxious self. And the more you get to know that, the more freedom
there is. That's what she did. And before leaving,
she told me, I want to share this part with you, she said, I wish my future self could enroll
in my place, which made a lot of sense.
But then I shared with her that really the more you do rain, the more you're actually
inhabiting and living from your full potential, which was motivation for her.
Depression is a trance.
If you're depressed right now and you're listening, it's a trance state.
It's a trance because it's a kind of stuck place that's looping and smaller than the whole
of your being.
So the question is how do we bring a presence to what's here in a way that can help us
to reconnect with that wholeness?
And it has to be kind.
It won't work unless it's kind.
One of the challenges with depression is that all of us go through losses, whether it's
the pain and loss of love, feeling that we didn't have the love we need and we were very
young, are the loss of a relationship that's really, really important to us as we're
adults, are the loss of our health, we all go through losses.
And if we don't grieve the losses, like open to the
the rawness of that pain, it becomes depression.
If we don't open to our fears, it can become depression.
If we don't open to the sorrows, it becomes depression.
So the teaching is, whether it's on our own with rain or with others with some similar process
of presencing, we need to
commit ourselves to being with the wrongness of our experience so it doesn't get covered
over in trance.
Does that make sense?
The importance of it?
Now sometimes we have to glad in our minds first, sometimes we don't have the opportunity,
but the key is that we have to be true to the feelings that are here.
So I'm going to share with you.
as part of closing now, a story that I read in Franco Susseskes-Seky's book, The Five Invitations,
that I think really describes beautifully the power of not short-changing the real feelings.
He describes, he got a call and he was asked to come over to the home of a family where a young,
a young boy had just died.
And this is Frank's work, working with death and dying.
So he goes to the house and he says I arrived at the house a short while after the call.
The disparated parents greeted me and they showed me to the boy's room.
And walking in I followed my natural inclination.
I went over to Jamie's bed, leaned down and kissed him on the forehead to say hello.
His parents broke into tears because while they had cared for him with great love,
and attention, nobody had touched the boy since he died.
It wasn't their fear of his corpse that kept him away.
It was a fear of the grief that touching him might unleash.
So I want to keep reading.
I suggested the parents begin washing the boy's body.
They gathered sage, rosemary, lavender, sweet rose, petals from the garden, they move
slowly, sleep with the herbs and warm water, collected towels and washed claws.
After a few moments of silence, the mother and father began to wash their little boy.
They start at the back of Jamie's head and moved down his back.
Sometimes they would stop and tell one another's story about their son.
At other times, it became too much of the father and he'd go and stare out the window to
gather himself.
The grief filling the room felt enormous, like an entire ocean crashing upon a single shore.
The mother examined and lovingly cared for each little scratch her bruise on her son's body.
When she got to Jamie's toes, she counted them as she had done on the day he was born.
It was both gut-wrenching and extraordinarily beautiful to watch.
From time to time she would look it over at me as I sat quietly in the corner of the room,
a beseeching question filling her eyes,
will I be able to survive? Can I do this?
Can any mother live through such a loss?
I would nod and encourage for her to continue at her own pace
and hand her another washcloth trusting the process.
I felt confident that she would find healing by allowing herself
to be in the midst of her suffering.
It took hours for the parents to wash their son.
When the mother finally got to the face of her child,
which she'd say for last,
she embraced him with incredible tenderness,
her eyes, pure reflections of her love and sorrow.
She had not only turned toward her suffering,
she had entered into it completely.
As she did, the fierce fire of her love
began to melt the contraction of fear around her heart.
So this is Frank's comment.
He says, can you imagine yourself living through what these parents did?
no many of you will say I cannot.
Losing a child is most people's worst nightmare.
I couldn't endure it, I couldn't bear it, you may think.
But the hard truth is, terrible things happen in life that we can't control
and somehow we do bear them.
We bear witness to them.
When we do so with the fullness of our bodies, minds, and hearts,
often a loving action emerges.
Our presence awakens the fullness of loving.
I wanted to share with you this story because under depression is pain we've pulled away
with because it, from because it felt like too much.
And the healing, this is the kind of the heart of the Buddhist teaching, is that our suffering
comes because we pull away, we push away, we contract, we go.
grasp onto something different. We try to control. But it's only when ultimately we stop
the controlling and really opened as life as it is with our whole presence, our whole heart,
as that mom did washing her baby's body, really touching all the parts of our own psyche with
that tenderness, that something very radical happens. And we shift from the self-
that was entrance, anxious and depressed, to a space of love that is timeless.
That is the shift that liberates us.
Let me close your eyes for a moment.
Close together.
Poet David White writes,
Those who will not slip beneath the still surface on the will of grief,
turning downward through its black water to the place we cannot breathe.
We'll never know the source from which we drink.
The secret water cold and clear,
nor find in the darkness glimmering,
the small round coins thrown by those who wished for something else.
We've explored together how depression is,
is an expression of being cut off and that we can deepen our attention in ways that help us
come home again. And it begins with intention, knowing it matters to us to live from our
fullness. It's supported as we learn to wake up out of the thoughts and say, these are
just thoughts. I don't have to believe them. It's supported as we learned to wake up out of the thoughts and say,
It's supported as we learn to gladden our minds, not to manipulate but to reconnect with
our own potential for joy, for humor, for perspective, for gratitude, for love.
And in the most profound way, depression becomes a portal to freedom when we sense what
we're unwilling to feel and bring our full kindness and presence to that.
Namaste and thank you for your attention.
For more talks and meditations and to learn about my schedule or join my email list,
please visit tarabrock.com.
