Tara Brach - Stories that Imprison our Heart - Part 1 (2017-06-14)
Episode Date: June 17, 2017Stories that Imprison our Heart - Part 1 (2017-06-14) - Our suffering arises from fear-based stories that are often outside our awareness. These include stories of our deficiency or importance, of bei...ng a victim, of being unseen or unloved, of facing failure or rejection. This is true collectively too. We have shared stories of bad "others" that fuel wars, shared stories of the value of continued growth in consumption and production that destroy our earth, shared stories of our human right to enslave and violate other animals. We have the capacity to bring the stories that separate and imprison us into the light of awareness, and with great compassion, loosen their grip. These two talks look at the ways fear-based stories create suffering, and how awakening from them reveals the freedom of our true, and universal, belonging. Your support enables us to continue to offer these talks 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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We begin tonight with a story about the beloved Rabbi Schechter,
who was on his deathbed surrounded by people that loved him and wanted to hear his final
words of wisdom. And in a faltering voice, he uttered,
life is like a fountain.
And those circling around him passed the word out through the crowds
and word went down the long hall of people
and it was passed down the stairwells to the people thronging outside
and finally got to the outer edge of the crowd
and a little boy was told the rabbi's words.
And he said, what does that mean?
People didn't know.
So they passed the boy's question back up
through the crowds, up the stairs, through the hallway,
to those circling around, to the closest assistant.
So he whispers the question to the rabbi's ear,
and the rabbi responds,
so maybe it's not like a fountain.
We humans are very attached to having stories,
to creating some orientation in life
that gives us meaning to what's going on.
Stories about who we are, who others are,
what we have to do to be okay, what others should do to be okay, right, wrong, good, bad,
and what's going to happen down the road. It's all a part of our securing ourselves.
And we sometimes refer to this as the storytelling mind because we create the world with the storytelling mind.
And it's an intrinsic part of what's let us survive as a species.
I just finished a book that I suspect many of you have read called Sapiens by Yuval Harari.
Let me just out of curiosity.
How many of you have read Sapiens?
Handful.
Highly recommended.
And he talks, as many have, of the kind of time period.
He starts way back when 70,000 to 30,000 years ago, when our neural circuitry started lighting up.
and there was what's called the cognitive revolution.
There's in the frontal cortex it catapulted us
to being really a dominant species on Earth.
And the main features of that cognitive revolution
is this capacity for abstract thinking
that we can think about things that aren't right here.
We can imagine image in mental symbols
of the world that we hold in our minds.
And we have a language that supple
enough for us to be able to communicate immense amounts of information to each other.
And this is essential because in order for humans to collaborate the way we do and the
collaboration is what's allowed us to really dominate the earth, we have to be able to envision
things and communicate about them. And so we have collective stories that we just assume as
as realities, as truths that we've all agreed to that enables us to cooperate.
We have collective stories about how things work and what our role is and what rules are
that we go along with.
And so the greater the number of beings that are collaborating, the more power.
I mean, consider the internet.
It's like you can see that the more beings that are going along with the same rules and regs
and collaborate, the more they can be creative and productive and generative.
So, again, our collective stories aren't the real thing.
They're myths. Harari calls them fictions.
And religion.
It's not a real thing.
It's a set of ideas that different groups of people have a different set of ideas,
but they adhere to them.
And you can have millions of people that adhere to one set of ideas and values.
and even if they don't know each other, they'll group together to serve the hungry
or to fight a crusade or whatever it is, but they'll collaborate, which gives them power.
Does that make sense?
All because they're agreeing on the same set of symbols.
And similarly, we have some shared myths about science,
which is, again, it's an abstraction, principles of how things work
that allows amazing inventions and creations,
in the scientific world, breakthroughs in medicine and physics.
Most societies participate now in the capitalist economy,
which means you have to agree that there's going to be future growth,
continued consumption, continued taking resources from the earth,
continued generating new products and so on, to invest in a future.
That's the assumption that that is healthy and good.
That's one of the stories we agree on.
And laws, nation states, we agree that,
exist and go along with that.
Again, I'm not adding a right, wrong, good, bad.
I'm just saying we have some shared stories.
So we also do that in our personal life.
We have stories in our personal life that we don't challenge.
We just assume it's the way it is,
that govern our experience.
And those stories have who we are in relationship to others,
whether we're inferior or superior, our expectations for ourselves,
you know, what's good, what's bad, what behaviors we need to do to get what we want.
The bottom line is, both collectively and individually,
some of the stories can be very helpful.
You know, science with its medical breakthroughs
or the shared values that have us work together for those in need.
and in our personal life
some of our stories can energize us
towards self-discovery
and towards savoring life and waking up
and some of our stories are simply developmental
they're part of our growth
and we believe in them and then let them go
example one woman describes
her daughter saying
are you the tooth fairy
she's seven years old
Okay, so there's a story because one of her teeth had fell out.
And this woman says, I wasn't sure whether or not to end this magical part of her childhood.
But since she asked, I thought, yes, she must be ready.
It's time.
So I let her know, yes, dear, I am the tooth fairy.
And she seemed to absorb the information very thoughtfully.
And several hours later, the little girl came up to her mother and took her hands and hers
and looked in her eyes and said,
so what I want to know is how do you get into the other kids' houses?
Okay, so the storytelling mind can be a benefit
and it can also be a potential prison of suffering
for individuals and societies.
And if the stories are rooted in grasping our fear,
if that's their driver,
then they generate wars,
and they generate activities that destroy the earth, wars against ourselves.
So this week, this class and next class, what I'd like to do is explore how we can relate wisely to the storytelling mind
in a way that really allows us to spiritually evolve.
The basic premise is that it's natural that we generate stories and that we believe them.
and that our continued evolution in consciousness
requires that we go meta to the stories.
In other words, we view the stories from a greater vantage point of awareness
so we can discern which are serving.
So we can discern which ones that have been unconscious
are actually keeping us in prison
and by shining the light of awareness find some freedom.
So meta, going meta, is a capacity we have.
I mean, part of the, and it's correlated to the parts of the brain that are related to mindfulness.
It's called metacognition.
It's a part of us that gets it that we're lost in thought and the thoughts aren't helping.
Best example that I know is, again, a parent-child thing where a little boy says to his mom,
Imagine you're surrounded by 10 hungry, ferocious tigers.
What would you do?
And the mother says, thinks about it.
I don't know, what would I do?
And he said, stop imagining.
Just as our capacity for storytelling and communicating our stories catapulted us to the top of the food chain,
our capacity to become mindful of the whole.
process of storytelling is what will allow us to evolve in the direction of true wisdom and
compassion. So the stories that imprison us, they have two qualities. One of them is that, as I
mentioned, they're fear-based, fear-grasping, and the other is that they're largely unconscious.
And a huge amount of our stories are fear-based, and it's natural. You know, we spend a lot of
time in the middle of the food chain. In fact, let me see, we were in the middle of the food chain
for millions of years and it was only in the last hundred thousand that we jumped up to the top.
Okay, so just think of that. For millions of years, our whole nervous system was designed around
anticipating, you know, major threats from other creatures, bigger than us. So it was definitely
life or death. Here's something that I found really interesting from Harari's book. He said he was
talking about the consequences of our very, very rapid jump to the top of the chain. I hadn't quite
thought of it this way. He says that other animals that are at the top, that have been at the top,
like lions and like sharks, had millions of years to get there. And what that meant is
other parts of the ecosystem had millions of years to adapt to their dominance and find other
strategies. Gazelles could run faster, other creatures could camouflage better. So there was a balance
that prevented too much of a reeking of havoc from those on top. Now take humans. We jumped up
on top. Not only that, he describes how lions and sharks had time to adjust themselves. So they
have a certain kind of a dignity or grace or an ease in their role. And he says, here's what
he describes about us. He says, most top predators are majestic creatures. Millions of years of
dominion gives them a certain kind of confidence. But for humans, we're like banana republic
dictators. Having so recently been one of the underdogs of the savannah, we are full of fears
and anxieties over our position, which makes us doubly cruel and dangerous.
many historical calamities from deadly wars to ecological catastrophes
have resulted from this over-hasty jump
so that really resonated for me
because we go around with the kind of fears
as if we're really around the corner going to be
you know jump by a lion
and yet most of the things for many of
are really psychological fears
of where we're going to be rejected
or in some way severed belonging,
although many people walking the earth
are dealing with very physical fears, as we will describe.
But the survival brain is still very much in action
from being in the middle of the food chain,
and Joseph Campbell describes it this way,
because our stories come out of that.
He says, most religions begin with the word help.
There are a response to this existential fear
of being decimated.
And so it is with our personal cosmologies,
how we make sense of the world,
that there's a lot of fear in our system.
So we have a feeling of danger around the corner,
how others will hurt us or how we'll fail in some way.
And so we're using our stories to keep us alert
to protect us from harm and danger.
Now, a percentage of our fear stories, of course,
and this is what makes it dicey, are useful alerts.
So then the question is, well, how do I know what's useful fear
and what's just habitual fear?
But you can actually use metacognition
to begin to bring awareness to the fears and sense
where it's a biological habit versus,
hey, this is what's going on in my life.
Most of the time it's an overactive survival brain,
and it keeps us distant from other people
and it limits our continued evolution really.
One story of a woman who's returning from retreat
and she is at the airport and has had a switch planes
and she stops and she buys a cup of coffee
in a small package of cookies and she sits down at an unoccupied table.
She's reading the morning newspaper
when she comes aware of somebody else sat down at her table
and she's flabbergasted to see this nicely dressed young man
helping himself to a cookie.
So she didn't want to make a scene,
so she leans across and takes another cookie herself,
and a minute or so passes more rustling,
he's helping himself to another cookie.
Okay, so by the time they're down to the last cookie in the packet,
she's really angry, but she can't bring herself to say anything.
And then the young man breaks the last cookie in two,
pushes half to her,
ate the other half, and leaves.
Some time later, when she's up at boarding
and pulling out her ticket,
imagine how she feels when she's confronted
with her own unopened package of cookies, right?
She had been eating his.
We go around with an idea
of how other people are going to treat us
and whether it's being the victim
or our stories of how we're going to fall short,
we live in that.
When we're doing that, it keeps us locked in.
And similarly, when a culture is shaped.
by the stories of bad other,
on a culture shaped by valuing acquisition
and consumption that destroys the earth body.
We're locked in. We're kind of in developmental arrest, really.
So the second part of what makes a story a prison
is we're usually not aware of it.
I've often described, you know, this is again,
Joseph Campbell describes a circle of awareness
and a line going through it,
and that everything below the line,
is outside of our awareness and above the line is what we're aware of.
And that mindfulness or metacognition or witnessing, whatever we want to call it, helps
to move the line so more becomes in awareness.
Well when we're not aware of the story, it totally drives us and we are, you know, we're
imprisoned.
And so it's easier to see, let's say on a collective level, the stories that we, we
once bought into and no longer do than it is when you look currently because so many are out
of our awareness. So think of it historically that in the 1800s most of the dominant culture
in the United States thought that Africans were inferior and that it was part of the natural
order for us to kidnap and enslave these people, have dominion over. Currently,
there's a huge amount of unseen bias that continues violence and oppression.
But this particular dimension, slavery, the right of the dominant cultures no longer holds
for most, I would imagine. Now, in contrast, let's take a current story.
And the current collective stories are relationship with other animals.
Okay?
Most people believe that human animals are special, superior of another kind altogether
and more important to the world,
and that we're entitled to enslave and violate other animals cruelly for our purposes,
whether it's through research or with agra of industrial farming.
That's a story that most people believe.
It allows us to participate by eating animals.
many of which have spent their whole of their very shortened life in a stall only barely larger than their body
and shot through with hormones to speed their growth.
And I often think, and I'm not the only one that's thought about this,
that if it was another planet, you know, and we saw some super beings enslaving and treating humans that way,
how horrified we be.
It's kind of like the planet of the apes, and there's a bunch of little novels like that.
but here we are. And that's a story that most people just assume is how it is. It's the natural order.
Humans have a right to do that to other creatures. So our evolutionary direction is towards waking up out of the stories that creates separation
and moving towards less violence and more empathy. That's my belief.
I've seen many evolutionary psychologists and others that feel that way, but I'm just putting that out as, that's my hopeful belief.
And that it's a widening sense of who we are.
And I think many of you are here because you've sensed in your own life that by deepening your attention with mindfulness,
with self-compassion, with compassion towards others, that you're not.
actually feel a more inclusive quality of heart. So my sense is that's what's possible
and that's what can keep going and what we're exploring right now is how to facilitate that
by really shining a light on the stories that keep us small in our individual life and us
small as a society because we have a responsibility to do both. So the compelling personal
stories that really creates suffering are driven by survival fears. They're shaped by the standards
of our culture and the values of our culture and delivered through our parents. Then they interact
with our personal biography and experience to get hardened. That's kind of the way it goes. And
they tell us, you know, what's wrong or what's going to go wrong, what to expect, how to
behave, how to find safety, how to make things work out with other people. I heard a story
about a woman who kept a shoe box, her husband, had never dared to open it. And 60 years
later she asked him to open the box and husband couldn't cope with his emotions. Okay, so they've
been married 60 years and to stay together that long you have to be really honest with your
partner. So the husband and wife were very open and they shared everything. They didn't have any
secrets except for the shoebox. And she said, don't open it or don't ask about it.
So he didn't think about it for 60 years until the day his wife got very sick. And the
doctor said she wouldn't make it. And so while trying to sort out their affairs, the husband
took the shoebox to his wife's bedside and she agreed it was time to see what was inside.
The man's eyes widened as he discovered $95,000 in two crocheted dolls in the box.
When we were married, the old lady explained,
my grandmother told me the secret of a happy marriage
was to never argue.
Okay, this is the culture coming in.
She told me that if I ever got angry with you,
I should just keep quiet and crochet a doll.
The husband was deeply touched two dolls,
meant she was only angry with them twice in 60 years.
Honey, he said, overcome with emotions.
That explains the doll, but what about all the money?
Where did that come from?
Oh, that, the wife said,
that's the money I made from selling the doll.
So our behaviors are very much shaped by the messages of our culture, and I realize that was a silly
example but I couldn't resist.
It was fun.
So we shine the light on stories to bring them above the line and how do we do that?
One way is to begin to look at our caregivers.
It gives us a little bit of distance and you can find out a whole lot about your stories if you
look at your caregiver's stories.
what were their fear-based stories?
What was their relationship with the world?
Did they feel like a victim?
How did they look at hierarchy?
Like who did they feel better then?
Who did they feel worse than?
What kind of people do they think were good people or bad people?
Most interestingly, how did they regard you?
because how our parents see us, we internalize to a good degree.
One of the stories that most touched me, I think I wrote about it in radical acceptance,
I had a family that was at a going out for dinner, parents and young daughter,
and parents ordered their food when the waitress came over,
and then the little girl said, I want a hot dog and French fries,
a Coke. And the father said, oh no, no, no, no. She's having meatloaf and mashed potatoes and milk
or whatever he said. And the waitress looked at the little girl and said, so what is that you
want on your hot dog, hon? Parents were kind of frozen. And they left and she, the little girl
looked at her parents and said, you know, she thinks I'm real. So one of the ways that we
begin to sense, you know, our stories about ourselves is, you know, how much did our parents
really listen? Did they value what we said? Do we feel like we were seen? Because one story
might be, people don't understand me. I'm invisible to other people. It's just an example.
Rather than me giving you examples, let's reflect together a little, just try this one out.
And this, of course, takes more time. So do it on your own if you get interested. Take a moment
to feel yourself sitting here and breathing.
Allow your attention to go back in time
to when you're a young child.
Maybe five, six, seven, eight.
Go to a place that you might have spent a lot of time
with caregivers, parents,
significant people in your life.
It might be the dining room,
porch or TV room or living room.
Imagine as well as you can visually the details of the place
and where you might have been standing and sitting
and where your parents, if you had two parents
or if you had one parent, your parent,
or if not a parent, then a caregiver of some sort might have been.
And imagine that you're in some way engaged
and you can see that their eyes,
looking at you and sense what the message is coming through those eyes how are
they seeing you what are they like what don't they like what are their
expectations who do they want you to be what are their fears for you and without
analyzing just let this kind of inquiry just open to whatever you're
perceiving and sense that as you continue on your own
own, you can begin to shine more and more awareness on perhaps some of the messages and
stories that just became an assumed part of yourself story. Now when there's a lot of trauma
in a family, there's trauma in a society, the stories of course get deeply infused with fear.
In fact, there's a lot of research now that shows whether it's generational abuse or addiction
or something like the Holocaust, racial oppression, the genocide of indigenous peoples,
that it's three generations down that you can detect in a genetic way the effects of trauma.
So that means that stories and the energy behind the stories can be passed down and passed down.
And I say this because the point is that they're really not our stories.
There are stories that come out of the culture that were embedded in,
that are transmitted through whoever were our caregivers,
that solidified through life experience.
But there's stories that profoundly impact the way we experience our life.
So the invitations to bring them above the line.
Now if you'd like to open your eyes, I see some of you still have your eyes closed,
you're fine to do that.
So how do we bring it above the line?
One way is again, you know, just sensing where we got messages from caregivers.
Another is to begin to name what we're aware of in terms of our stories with each other.
I know for myself that when I became...
when I became really aware in my 20s of how many stories I had about who I should be
and how I has fallen short, one of the ways that I found was most important to work with
it was to name it out loud, to talk with others.
And of course, I named it quite publicly by writing about it.
And then much later on in my 40s or 50s when I realized the stories about special
person feeling inflated. You know, it's not just deflation we feel. We also can go around
feeling quite important like we're the center of the universe and in some way no more than others.
I watched inflation, deflation, and it was one of the hardest things to name out loud.
It was way harder to name inflation than deflation because underneath inflation is a sense
of really being bad. Do you know what I mean? It's really embarrassing. It's really embarrassing.
to seem vain or whatever. And yet it's by naming our stories in a field where you feel,
you know, you can do that, that actually starts to diminish their power. You know,
the shaman say if you can name a fear, it starts losing its power. If you can name your fear
stories with trusted others, you actually begin to sense that it's not my story, it's just
our stories. And you can hold it more as a kind witness with that metacognition than as the
victim of a story. So we begin to sense the stories in our life and where they're really
snagging us. Now some of you might, I'll just read to you some of the stories that are most
core that many people get hooked on and see if any of them, how they sit with you.
you. One is I need to work hard for approval or love. I won't be loved just as I am.
I'm not worthy of being loved or I don't deserve to be happy. Anyone I get close to will
hurt me. I will hurt anyone I love. I need to protect myself or I will get hurt. I need to
be different, more attractive or intelligent or confident.
if I am to be loved or happy are at peace.
Other people don't understand or appreciate me.
I'm special, smarter, better than others.
It's dangerous to appear weak or needy.
And the list goes on.
It's a powerful inquiry.
There's an article I saw in the New York Times just recently
describes how the Prozac Nations now the United States of Xanax,
Some of you might have seen that.
And it's interesting how it's really just how much our core survival fears are right on the surface now.
There's so much anxiety and uncertainty in the world.
And one of the quotes, I read a little bit,
only a few beats from ambition.
Anxiety is in part what made Mr. Trump a businessman.
In Trump's book, The Art of the Debt.
Beal, Ghostwriter Tony Schwartz, might have written this to. He says, in his real estate career,
enough was never enough. He called it controlled neurosis and considered the characteristic of the most
highly successful entrepreneurs. Trump writes, I don't say that this trait leads to a happier life or a
better life, but it's great when it comes to getting what you want. The United States of Xanax is really
pointing to how many of our fears are really creating the stories we're buying into.
If we wonder how come things are the way they are,
a lot of people are believing in stories that are based on fear.
And that's very oversimplistic.
So forgive that portion of it.
But the point is that when we have fear stories,
when you have a fear thought,
What happens is it stimulates in the body of biochemistry of fear that then generates more anxious
thoughts and we get caught in a looping and it just holds us in that place.
I always think of how Gandhi describes it, he says, our thoughts and beliefs, you know, end up
generating our actions and our actions generate our character and he says our character
creates our destiny.
Our theme in this class really is how we can get imprisoned in our stories.
They can create our destiny unless we take a look, unless we really investigate them.
Now we've looked at a little bit of the genesis and the power of fear stories.
The last piece I want to explore with you is to begin to look at what frees us,
and then we'll continue that next week.
some of you might have been here when frank ossefsky was visiting a few about a month ago or two months ago
I'd like to share a story that's in his book that I think really shines a light on our theme for right now
Frank works with the dying and he works with he's done this for many many years and he describes
accompanying a young man named Matthew who's dying of age
Matthew's gay and he's been a long-time Brutus practitioner.
So he's suffering from high fevers and pneumonia and also from deep fear.
He was raised in a fundamentalist Christian family
and the commandments of a punishing God had literally been beaten into him
by fire and brimstone preacher man of a father.
So that's the story he's living with.
He believes, as he's closing into his death, that God will condemn him for eternity to hell
due to his sexual orientation.
That's the story that's tormenting him.
It's not surprising for long-buried cultural mores in early religious training to suddenly
resurface at the time of death, even if the person has deliberately tried to leave those beliefs far behind.
So the story is you're intrinsically back.
you're going to be punished.
So Frank tried to support him.
He tried to orient him towards mindfulness and compassion practices
that Matthew had been studying and loved.
And he created an altar by his bedside
with a Buddhist statue and a healing tanko,
which is a traditional Tibetan painting.
And when that didn't calm Matthew,
he held his hands and massaged his feet
and played his favorite chanting music.
No change at all.
Matthew is deeply, deeply disturbed.
So finally, the doctor orders a sedative, and even that didn't work.
Matthews spinning in a world to confusion, shame, and dread.
Frank writes,
By two in the morning I was exhausted and feeling ineffective and powerless.
Chose to go home and get some sleep.
On the drive there for some unknown reason,
I thought of my own first Holy Communion,
the Catholic ritual that ushers young innocence into the loving lap of God.
When I got home, I searched through my storage closet to find my memory box,
a small collection of mementos I hold dear.
Here I located a five-inch plastic figurine of Jesus
surrounded by lambs and little children.
Instead of going to bed, I drove straight back to the hospital.
As Matthew continued to moan, shout, toss, and turned in agony,
I took down the Thanka and replaced the Buddha statue with this small plastic.
Jesus. Just as I was smoothing the altar cloth, a cleaning woman named Dina came into the room and
spotted the figurine. Setting her mop to one side, she said with great enthusiasm, merciful Jesus,
when His kindness is with us, everything is all right. At once, Matthew's eyes locked into Dina's.
An angelic smile spread across his face as he pivoted toward the altar to gaze at the plastic Jesus statue
and then back in Dina's direction.
His entire body relaxed.
In that moment, the punishing God of Matthew's childhood,
the one whose wrath he had been taught to fear
and whose judgment had made him feel like a terrible person
was transformed into the merciful God he also knew and loved,
the one who adored all his children,
no matter their so-called faults and flaws,
a kind and forgiving, all-accepting and benevolent God.
Dina's faith in God's love was so secure
that it lent Matthew exactly the strength he needed
to defeat those stories that were tormenting him.
I left them together there.
They didn't need me.
So Matthew was imprisoned by a story
that was passed down from the culture
through his parents, or a portion of the culture.
And he was able to release it
and what made it possible
it's a healing power of love.
He was reminded of and invited into love.
And so it is that when we can connect in some way
to the living field of loving,
the stories that we're holding lose their power.
Now, often we talk about the two wings of awareness that free us
and one is the wing of mindfulness.
clear seeing, that metacognition or witnessing that sees, oh, that's a story.
And the other is the wing of love.
And the final story I'd like to give you is how they come together
because in our lives we don't want to wait till the end to have the story
that's actually been holding us back all of a sudden break loose.
We want to be able to day by day be shining the light of awareness,
that loving witness onto those stories.
so they can begin to dissolve.
So the final story I'll share.
Seems like both of my stories have some religious overtones.
This is a minister.
And he's at an impasse in his marriage,
and his wife is very, very dissatisfied.
She wants him to be more intimate and vulnerable
and not so spiritually detached.
She wants him to say, I love you,
and to look into her eyes.
and he's very blocked and stuck and very defended, very insulted when she makes what he considers demands.
But it was creating a lot of suffering in their marriage, so we explored it together,
and under the block and under his being defensive was a real sense of deficiency.
He had a very harsh critic, and his harsh critic was basically saying,
you're a hypocrite, you're an imposter, you preach about love,
you invite everybody into the kingdom of God and a loving kingdom, but you don't embody it.
And the part of him that's calling apostors is you're ambitious, your ego's in control,
and you're not really walking your talk, basically.
And in reality, he could comfort and guide other people to some degree,
but he didn't have close friends and he wasn't able to let people in
And in fact all his life he never felt closer, close to anyone, really.
Yet he would preach about community and opening our hearts to each other.
Okay, you get the idea.
So when we started investigating with these two wings and looking into it,
he could feel that underneath the storyline of you're a hypocrite,
you're not walking your talk was a real deep sense of self-aversion and shame.
So he's named the story
and then he's getting in touch with the feelings underneath it
which was really a sinking, hollow, empty kind of sense in his heart
and he could feel the suffering
that he had been walking around with that deeply isolating feeling
for many, many years.
I asked the key question I asked which awakens the wing of love
which is what does that hurting part in you most?
need. Just as if, you know, if you saw Matthew and he's there and he's tormented, what
is Matthew need? He needs to be reminded that a loving God is here, that there's salvation,
that he can be embraced by, in God's heart. Well, what is that painful place need? And for this,
for this minister, it needs, the place needed forgiveness and needed to feel loved. He's kept saying,
I'm scared, I'm trying, I can't help it.
and he needed to feel forgiven and love.
So that was, that final part was,
and we call this the kind of self-compassion,
where he'd asked for forgiveness
and he also offered it to himself.
And for him he just called on God's love,
felt it pouring into him,
just really surrendered into it and felt forgiven.
After we do these kind of processes,
I often get people just to sit and sense
so what's it like now? You know, you're, who are you if you're no longer living in that story?
Who are you? And for him it was a spacious vibrating presence. And he felt really at home.
And I say this because I don't want this to sound like a fairy story. He had many rounds
where he would be trying to get more real with his wife and feel blocked and tight and feel down on
himself and each time he had to shine the light again, bring those two wings and say,
okay, what's happening? Okay, the story. What's underneath it? Oh, shame. Okay, forgiven,
forgiven. Calling on forgiveness, offering it to himself. But here's how our body, minds work.
It's, the phrase is neurons that fire together, wire together. And the more we practice
something, the more that becomes the neuropathways that actually change our experience.
So he was practicing in a way that undid the story. He was practicing loving presence
that undermines that story of you're a hypocrite, you're bad, you're not walking your talk.
Months later, he wrote to me, he said, for the first time in 26 years, we're feeling at home
with each other. We're feeling each other's hearts. So when there's suffering, and this is
basically the pathway in your life, and we're going to broaden it to the society as we move on,
but when they're suffering, there's an inquiry. What story are we believing in? As individuals
and as a culture, what stories are we believing? And then to look through the eyes of the
loving witness, to begin to unravel it. So we'll do a very brief version of that now.
is the close to this talk and then we'll continue next round.
You might scan your life and choose some situation where you find you're
repeatedly getting stuck and reactive in a way, caught in a difficult emotion.
Anger, hurt, fear.
Could be a situation with your family or partner at work.
It could be something to do with an addictive behavior.
See if you can go right to the situation that exemplifies where you get stuck.
And you might ask yourself, you know, when I'm caught in this, what story am I living
in?
Am I believing I'm a victim or that I'm unworthy, that I'm unlovable, that I'm failing,
that others, that another person doesn't care about me or love me, are receiving, or
respect me. What am I believing? And when I'm believing this, how does it feel? How does it feel
my body? See if you can sense the real vulnerability underneath these stories. It's where we feel
most separate, where we're most caught in a small self. Underneath the stories, the identity
is locked in a very small and separate self. See if you can feel the vulnerability of that
self. And sense from that vulnerability, what way of offering care might most be healing and comforting?
Is there some message that the wise, awake part of you can offer to that vulnerable place right now?
And if it helps you just to gently touch your heart, I often do this to set up a relationship.
so you're actually connecting with the vulnerability, going underneath the story and bringing some
healing energy right to where the vulnerability is.
Sometimes you can just say, I'm listening and I care, I'm here, I'm sorry, and I love you.
Or just simply it's okay, it's okay.
But just the energy of care.
Feel yourself as that caring witness to what's living under the story.
And see if you can imagine, what would your life be like without this story if you didn't buy in?
Who would you be if you weren't living in this story?
The stories keep us bound in a small self.
Beyond the stories is a field of belonging.
that we can begin to taste and feel and intuit with our whole being.
And this is the blessing of the path.
This is the hope for Homo sapiens and the earth.
Touching this field of belonging that's beyond any story.
This is how Rumi puts it.
I am water.
I am the thorn that catches someone's clothing.
There's nothing to believe.
Only when I quit being.
believing in myself that I come into this beauty.
Day and night I guarded the pearl of my soul.
Now, in this ocean of pearling currents,
I've lost track of which was mine.
So as we close this meditation, this class,
you might sense the invitation to continue
to shine the light of love and awareness.
on any story that might be keeping you from this larger field of belonging.
And let our shared prayer be that all beings are blessed to awaken in this way,
to realize the truth of their connectedness,
to wake up out of the stories that keep us separate and small and afraid,
and to live from that field of love and presence that is our true nature.
Namaste and thank you.
For more talks and meditations,
and to learn about my schedule or join my email list,
please visit tarabrock.com.
