Tara Brach - Stories that Imprison our Heart - Part 2 (2017-06-21)
Episode Date: June 23, 2017Stories that Imprison our Heart - Part 2 (2017-06-21) - 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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There's a story of a reporter interviewing a bank president and the interview went like this.
The question was, sir, what's the secret of your success?
And he says, two words.
And sir, what are they?
Right, decisions.
but how do you make right decisions?
One word.
And sir, what's that?
Experience.
And how do you get experience?
Two words.
And sir, what is, what's that?
Wrong decisions.
Said briefly, that's the message of its feedback, not failure,
when stuff doesn't go our way.
And the reason I bring it in is because,
how we frame what's going on, the story we create around what's going on, or the meaning we assign,
totally shapes our experience. There's been some very interesting research that Kelly McGonagall
reported about about four years ago on stress, and she described tracking 30,000 people over a period
of eight years, and the question she asked was, how much stress did you have last year,
Do you believe that stress is harmful for your health?
And then she basically noted who died over that period of time.
And here's what they found.
Those who experienced a lot of stress had 43% more risk of dying,
but it was only true for those that felt that stress was bad for them.
Those that felt that stress was not bad for them
had the lowest risk of dying, 30,000 people.
It's a really interesting study
that how we frame things really determines our experience.
As I say, it's not what's happening.
It's how you're relating to it.
And this goes, whether you're considering it,
you know, having a divorce
or getting a really bad diagnosis,
or having the stocks go up,
where the stocks go down. It's how you're relating will determine your experience.
So this is part two that we're doing in this class of the theme of how our stories can
imprison us. And the core understanding I kind of want to start right in the beginning
with is that our stories, our beliefs are a map of reality.
They're not reality itself.
As one teacher says, they're real but not true.
They're real thoughts, they're real soundbites in our mind,
but they're not the truth, the lay of the land itself.
They're a map, not the territory.
And some, like a roadmap, are useful.
They get us going in a certain way that can be helpful in our life.
And others are not.
And they actually cause enormous suffering.
That's the bottom line.
One way to think about it is that our stories are really good servants.
They have the potential to be and really terrible masters.
When they're the masters, they define us.
And this is the key to the whole exploration,
is that our stories can keep us trapped in a very small sense of self.
or they can remind us of important ways to pay attention and to be that actually wake us up
out of a confining sense of self.
So that's what we'll be exploring and one way that I think about it is that if you're suffering
you're believing a story that's not serving you.
Any kind of suffering.
You're believing a story that's not serving you.
It's dominating you.
It's defining you.
So the question is, you know, how do we know whether the stories in our mind are serving us?
Can we actually have that filter where we have enough mindfulness to step back and say,
hey, this is a story.
What's it doing to me?
And if we're hooked, how do we get unhooked?
That's kind of what we'll be looking at.
So in the last class I described how whether we're looking at our collective stories
or our individual stories because we have huge amount of collective stories that inform our
individual stories.
When we're looking at them the ones that cause suffering are fear-based.
They're driven by fear.
They're coming from our more primitive survival brain and that survival brain is kind of
overdoing it, it's out of control and it's creating a story that's not serving us.
And because we're, the biggest domain that matters to us is relationships.
You know, we are relational creatures and we live and die because of relationships.
That's the arena that our stories are most poignant about.
about, you know, who are we in relationship to other people?
And the core of a story that is causing suffering
is usually either, I'm bad, I'm wrong,
or you're bad, you're wrong.
That's kind of what it comes down to.
I know I'm being very simplistic,
but the reason I'm being simplistic
is that to begin to investigate your stories,
you need some flags.
So the flag of should be different.
I should be different or you should be different.
I am wrong.
I need to change.
You're wrong.
That's a sign that there's a story that's confining you.
So fear-based stories are often really proliferate in societies where there's a lot of fear.
And if you look at our contemporary society, well, what does fear come from?
It's when we feel separate.
We feel like we don't belong.
And we're in a society that does not nurture togetherness.
It does not nurture a sense of cooperation and collaboration.
There's more of an emphasis on competition and being the best and beating out other people.
and a lot of hierarchy that we buy into
that really makes it hard to trust a true belonging.
The effect is anxiety is rampant.
I mentioned in the last class, a New York Times article
that shows the shift from being the Society of Prozac
to the Society of Xenact,
we're really hooked on anxiety.
and the statistics are 38% of girls age 13 to 17 and 26% of boys are diagnosed with an anxiety disorder.
And that's not just talking about normal anxiety, anxiety disorder, that's really high.
So in our families, our caregivers have their anxieties about themselves, about the children doing well.
and so it often interferes with the kind of bonding and attunement
that makes for secure belonging.
So we all develop what I sometimes describe as these spacesuit selves,
these egos that underneath its insecurity
and the spacesuit self is navigating to try to feel better.
And it needs to be there to get through a difficult environment
where there's not an innate sense of belonging
and to cope with those unmet needs for feeling connected.
And the single greatest space suit activity that we engage in
are the stories that we generate.
Our fear-based stories are the major way this ego self is trying to cope.
So just to give you a sense of it,
in this New York Times article,
one woman writes about texting or first.
friend in Oregon about an impending visit and when there was no response right away, she
posted on Twitter to her 16,000 plus followers the following. She said, I don't hear from
my friend for a day. My thought, they don't want to be my friend anymore. And then she's
developed this hashtag called, this is what anxiety feels like and it just caught fire and people
started sending in all their experiences of anxiety and their story.
for what was anxiety like for them.
One said,
finding even the littlest changes
in people's behavior around you
and thinking they hate you.
Quickly, our story is
if you're acting grumpy or critical,
it's about me.
Always feeling you're a bad friend
although you did nothing wrong.
How many of us have a story
that we're always letting other people
down, you don't even have to raise your hand on that, you know?
So when fear-based stories dominate the map, it basically means, I mean, when we're living
in them, it means we're identified with the space suit, we're identified with our ego,
and we're forgetting the love that's here and the awareness that shines through, we're
forgetting who we are.
And when we're inside fear-based stories, we're perceiving other people.
as spacesuit cells. We're forgetting
their subjectivity and that the eyes that are looking
at you have the same deep longing to connect
the same sentience.
We forget when we're in those stories.
They contract our being.
So I've worked with a lot of people, including myself,
who are aware of the stories that we're telling ourselves
to some degree, and yet they're really hard
to let go of. They have a deep groove in the psyche. So I'd like to look at how come they're so tenacious.
How come these stories just persist and persist? And the way they keep going is that we are
continually looping thoughts and feelings. So we have a fear of thought and it creates a biochemistry
of fear that then generates more thoughts. So we can spend a lot of time lost in
thoughts that in some way are keeping an atmosphere going of anxiety.
We're just very repetitious.
One cartoon I've always loved has got this guy who's about to drive into a desert and says
you and your own tedious thoughts next 200 miles, you know.
This is Carlos Castagnata who wrote, this is, he's describing the teachings of a
shaman who says, you talk to yourself too much.
You talk to yourself too much.
You're not unique in that.
Every one of us does.
We maintain our world with our inner dialogue.
A man or woman of knowledge is aware that the world will change completely as soon as they stop talking to themselves.
This is one reason they're so tenacious is that we're just so habituated to thinking mind and believing our thoughts.
And so the beginning of training ourselves to be able to let go of the stories that hold
us is to just even be able to step out of the thinking and know the difference between thoughts
and this living reality right now.
The difference between any idea we have and this moment that is just vibrant, sensations,
sounds, awareness, to know the difference.
But instead we stay inside the thought forms and if you think about fake news which many of us
are thinking about, the more it's repeated the more believable it becomes and that's, you
know, that's more and more common information.
Just keep repeating it.
Doesn't matter how bizarre it might seem to some people.
If you keep repeating it, there's something about hearing it that the mind assumes it's true.
And it's interesting that mental corrections alone don't work.
What that means is if somebody puts out fake news and you correct it,
it actually amplifies the belief in it.
Interesting to me.
And it's kind of, as Einstein put it, you can't solve a problem on the same level it's created.
You can't respond to an untrue story with another story that's trying to correct it,
which is why affirmations generally don't work that well,
because the stories in our body by that point,
our body is feeling and believing it in a visceral way.
So one reason the stories that limit us are so tenacious,
we keep repeating them, deep grooves in the brain.
The second is that we avoid,
opening to the vulnerability underneath them. Consider this. If our story is something like
I believe anyone I meet if they get to know me will reject me. And then we're saying, well, stop
staying in the idea and come into your body. Well, what do you think is in your body at that
moment? Fear, shame. It's the last place you want to go is into the body and feel what's there,
even though if we learn to do it,
we'd actually discover a presence that gave us a lot more wisdom and space and reality.
But you have to go through the energy and the body.
So we avoid the vulnerability there.
Another reason the stories survive so well
is that the stories that really keep us hitched,
the ones that have a lot of vulnerability around them,
we don't share with others.
We don't bring into a wider container to let them ventilate
and have the benefit of more awareness.
We keep them to ourselves,
which means we get more identified with them.
You know, I've seen when, especially when I was working a lot
as a clinical psychologist,
that when a person was able to name something
they felt really, really ashamed about,
something where they had a story of just how deeply bad they were,
that actually was a sign to me they're beginning to not be so identified with the story.
Does that make sense to you?
Okay, so naming out loud and we're not inclined to do that for the stories that really have us hooked.
And the last piece I'll say on why they're so tenacious,
we hold on to them because they give us a sense of control.
We'd rather feel like we have a map than no map.
We'd rather feel like we know the bad news.
and are ready for something and maybe can do something,
then not being sure.
We don't want uncertainty.
So it gives a false illusion of control to keep running these stories.
So what motivates us, you know, why would we be spending time right now on this?
What motivates us is that as we begin to deepen our attention,
we start sensing just how much suffering there is
being identified as a deficient, unlovable self.
We see the condition to perpetuate, but we get,
we start getting, as it said, that we're loyal to our suffering,
that we keep rerunning the stories,
that we're being really loyal to our suffering,
but there's some sense of another possibility.
So I'm naming this because it takes a lot of motivation
to begin to really shine a light on our stories
and to be able to start opening to what's underneath them.
It takes courage.
I like the language of Mark Nippo,
the poet who's described it as an exquisite risk.
To become more intimate with truth
means we take the exquisite risk of going underneath the stories.
So the first step,
to become aware
that we're telling ourselves a fear-based story,
that we've framed life as a problem,
we've framed ourselves as a problem,
and the effect it's happening.
And if this is moat-invading you,
if you're feeling like,
yeah, I'd actually like to catch on
to the stories that really have me hooked,
start with ones that aren't so charged
just to get the knack of going,
okay, here's a story that I'm believing
that's making me feel more contracted.
As you can imagine, those of you that have been with me before,
I will be asking you to do something like that soon.
Okay, so we become aware.
So I'll give you an example for myself
because I'm actually really fascinated by watching my mind
and watching how often there is some background of a story
that I wasn't conscious of
that's affecting my sense of things.
So Monday morning, as I've described often in my talks,
I have a ritual of going right down
and walking, hiking by the river, the Potomac River.
And then I often will do a standing meditation by the river,
sit on some rocks.
And I got still, and I encountered this huge wave of fatigue.
and it had been, it's been really chronic.
I've had, you know, for several weeks now,
I've just been aware of consistent fatigue
at a more intense and oppressive level than usual.
So my mind started circling around with the typical, you know,
what's causing this, you know, how come it's happening,
and what do I need to do about it and so on.
And then I watched that and because I was officially meditating,
I was standing there trying to meditate,
I went, okay, I'm talking to myself.
here. And what's the story? And what's the real assumption here in the story? And the assumption
was that I'm caught in something bad right now, something bad is happening. And it shouldn't be
happening. It's like a bad thing to be happening. And I'm in some way complicit, like I caused it in some
way. So just a comment that again these fear-based thinking has as an under-curricular.
of no, this shouldn't be happening. No, this is wrong, no, I'm wrong. This is bad, it shouldn't
be. Okay, so there I am and underneath, so I say okay a story and there's a lot of
nose around it, it shouldn't be happening. What's actually going on? Got into my body
and it was feeling that weighty, achy, you know, I feel when I'm really fatigued, kind
of like a pain or pressure in my heart, it's just real weighty. My mind's fuzzy, it's unpleasant.
So I just say, okay, I'm pleasant.
And there's a little more quiet and a little more kind of opening into a witnessing
versus the oppressed, beleaguered, fatigue self.
That's the beginning of a shift.
But then thinking again, and the thinking went,
yeah, but if I don't pay attention to this, I won't take the steps to fix it.
And so I really have to pay attention in order to fix it.
And then there's another part of me that goes,
you can spend time thinking about it and fixing it,
but you're way, way overdoing that.
you know, because we go way beyond the need.
So, okay, then quieting again.
And just sensing, okay, it feels oppressive, it feels unpleasant,
and more and more the who I was was the awareness witnessing
and just sensing, oh, this is hard.
This being, this organism is struggling right now.
So with that witnessing there was kindness, just a bit of compassion.
The question comes up, if nothing's wrong, if there's no story of something being wrong,
then what's here?
And you can ask yourself that.
You can ask yourself that right now because it's really right at the heart of what we're looking at.
If we step out of any story that something's wrong with how things are,
They should be different, then what's here?
What we find is it might be unpleasant, it might be intense,
but the identification with it dissolves and there's a sense that we're resting
and an awareness that can include what's here in this moment.
That's the freedom.
The clear revelation for me on Monday morning was that as long as there was any undercurrent of a story
that I shouldn't be feeling this, there was no way to have compassion.
If you're making something wrong, there's no space for that tenderness to arise.
So in Western psychology, one practice comes out of narrative psychology,
and it describes just the power of the narratives we have about our life,
where I came from, where I'm going, what's happening now.
And again, these narratives we have, they can be useful, they can be an interesting map,
they can be a map that inspires us.
But so often the narrative is something we're either grasping onto because underneath we're sensing something's something's wrong,
it's a narrative that takes away our sense of possibility and openness.
My husband Jonathan has a resume and it's on his website and elsewhere and up until a couple of years ago
it just was there.
It says his name, M.A.
C.S.A.
And then a couple of years ago somebody finally asked him, okay, well what's CSA?
I get the M.A.
And with great dignity he explained it was the Copscouts of America.
I have to tell you, under his past employment, hit a long list.
The final one was certified pesticide applicator for the state of Illinois, expired.
So we latch on to our narratives and again they can either be to cover up or they can be in some way so narrow they keep us down.
The most toxic stories are the ones that have a real negative
narrative about our whole trajectory.
It's the conclusions we've made of what's possible.
And it's when we've seen our patterns repeat and we lose hope and think this is it,
I'm doomed to always be like this, etc.
One woman I worked with some time ago had gone through a lot of changes in a very short
time over a couple of years really brought a lot of this practice of mindfulness
and compassion to trauma, so a lot of dramatic changes.
But periodically she'd get this wave of depression,
and with that depression we'd come flooding the old stories
that were really negative and a lot of self-destructive thoughts,
even some suicidal thoughts, a lot of darkness.
And then the story she'd wrap around all of that would be,
this shouldn't be happening if I was really getting better,
this wouldn't be happening,
this means something's basically broken, I'll never heal, I'll never be happy, and then defeated.
Okay? It's kind of a despair. That was the pattern. It's back. You know, the demons are back and this is a downward spiral.
If I thought I was doing better, I was deluding myself, that kind of thing.
So I'm giving this example because I want to give you an example of how the narrative can absolutely,
and trap us when we have that stretch.
So we work together and as I described, you know,
I'm working with myself the first step is, okay, this is a story.
Just notice there's a story and it's having a major effect on you.
And then you have to start investigating, well, what's under that story right now?
And this is the courageous part, okay?
because when there's a story, a fear story, there's fear.
And for her, when she started investigating it was a dark, hollow place of ache and fear and shame.
And kind of being with that and when she sensed what did that very young, desperate place need,
it really needed the message that the fact that this is re-arizing, what happens is not your fault.
It's that kind of sense, just like the outer weather's not our fault.
The fact that we go through cycles, it's not your fault.
It's not your fault.
And needed that.
So as soon as she even recognized that's what she needed,
there was some sense of some compassionate place offering that inward.
And she touched into the grief that she had been covering over,
just the enormous sense of the loss.
of her life and a real deep tenderness.
And she had this start sensing that that young part of her
could then begin to relax into something larger,
bigger than the storyline, okay?
But then, and this happens, we get a hitch.
She started to relax a little into a larger sense of being
and then some place in her went fear, contract.
And another story came up,
if I relax, something bad will happen.
If I let myself trust, something bad will happen.
Very old place, it had been abused.
And often with abuse, it comes unexpectedly just as you start relaxing.
You get in some way some violation and that was the case for her.
So, again, she was being loyal to her suffering.
Stay vigilant.
It's not okay to relax.
and to notice that story.
The reason I'm bringing this up is it's not a one-shot.
It's like our minds will keep on wrapping meaning around things, okay?
Okay, so there's that story of if I relax and trust,
something terrible will happen.
Just notice that it's a story and feel underneath that
and underneath that was a place in her that was really afraid
and trying to protect her
and just to bear witness what she needed,
was just acknowledgement, okay, you're trying to protect me. And that again, in the moments of
seeing the story and feeling what's going on, there's an enlargement of identity. And again,
for her, there was a sense of opening and being that compassionate witness. And when she wrote
me an email the next morning, she said, I'm resting in a larger space with the compassionate
witness and it's more the truth of who I am than the small self and the story.
And she used the language, I don't need to be so loyal to my suffering.
So the stories perpetuate the suffering and the pathways opening to the body.
And I want to say also that often in this process with myself and others, that opening
includes a movement from feeling the fear to,
to the grieving place that we've been blocking.
And the grieving is actually, the sadness and grief is actually a sign of dissolving and opening.
It's a sign that we're no longer resisting and saying no.
Now often there's this invitation to sense that we've got these stories and we're clinging
to a story of wrongness and badness but then there's the question,
Don't we need a story of something's wrong to protect against a violent world?
And I want to address that because some of you might be wondering that.
There's a lot that happens that endangers our being.
Don't we need a story that something's wrong so we'll stay alert to it?
And many of you, I know are familiar with Tama Heccey Coates,
who wrote between the world and May,
and he brings a powerful attention to the fear that lives in the body of an African-American
because of the very real ongoing threat of physical violence.
And I'll just read you a quote.
He said, it is not necessary that you believe the officer who choked Eric Garner
set out that day to destroy a body.
All you need to understand is that the officer
carries with them the power of the American state and the weight of an American legacy
and they necessitate that of the bodies destroyed every year, some wild and disproportionate
number of them will be black. So if you're in a black body, way, way more endangered.
Now I share this on the same day that yet another police, maybe it was yesterday, another
police officer was acquitted in shooting and killing a person of color. It's a big series
of acquittals. And the reality is we need to have the stories that remind us that we have to
take care as individuals and take care collectively to change a system that destroys life
that's oppressive and violent. Yet those are stories that serve. But as Taunahisi
Coates says, if the story becomes a master, in other words, if a person of color goes around and
the story of I'm endangered takes over, it disconnects from life. It takes over life in a way
that's incredibly painful. And I want to share with you his example of that because I found
it so compelling. He writes in the book about an experience.
in Paris he had. By the way, the whole book is him sharing with his son the way people
of color lived with fear for bodily self. But this is the first time out of the country
for him and he described how hard it was for him to shake that fear and mistrust. He says a few
weeks into the trip he made a friend who wanted to improve English and he wanted to improve
French. So he describes at one point meeting up with this man and going to an outdoor cafe
and the friend orders some wine and a heaping platter of meats and bread and cheese and then pays.
And all the time he's thinking, hey, this is some elaborate ritual to get an angle on me.
His friend wanted to show him the architecture of a building so he guides him down the street.
They take a walk together.
Meanwhile, he's waiting for the guy to slip into an alley where some dudes would be waiting to attack.
This is what he brought with him.
He said, but my new friend simply showed me the building, shook my hand.
and gave a fine bonsoire and walked off into the wide open night.
And watching him walk away, I felt that I had missed part of the experience
because my eyes, because my eyes were made in Baltimore,
because my eyes were blindfolded by fear.
What I wanted was to put as much distance between you
and that blinding fear as possible.
So I share this story on purpose because, yes,
stories that let us know of very real danger, absolutely we need to have them.
When they take over, they separate us from our hearts and our awareness and each other.
So we're exploring this process of how do we identify the stories that are not serving our hearts and awareness?
How do we come into the lived experience so we can bear witness?
and we can recognize who we are is that witnessing compassionate presence
and not be so identified, not be imprisoned.
How do we loosen the grip of the story?
As I mentioned, when we're living in the spacesuit self
and we're in our stories,
all we can see is other people's spacesuits
and we're not able to recognize their goodness,
we're not able to recognize their vulnerability,
and we can't sense what's meaningful to them.
You know, one of my favorite reflections
when I'm leading groups often is,
please tell me what you love.
Please tell me what brings you happiness.
Please tell me what you feel devoted to, you know,
that kind of inquiry.
Well, when we're in a space suit self
and we're living in our stories,
we are unable to connect with what is really important to others.
so we don't have an authentic respect and care for what matters for other people.
We're just not in touch.
Again, by example, during the early weeks of the Iraq War,
this happened then.
The army and the Marines were closing in on Baghdad,
and one soldier describes what happened
that a small unit of American soldiers was walking along a street in Najav,
and I'm not pronouncing it right.
but when hundreds of Iraqis
poured out of the building on either side
so there they are the small unit of Americans
and the Iraqis were really really enraged
the fists waving, throats taught
and they pressed in on the Americans
who glanced around each other
and they're in terror
and so this guy says
he turned on the sound on the remote
and they were shrieking frantic with rage
and
the lens was lurching
the cameraman seemed as frightened as the soldiers when he looked at the images.
And this guy was sure that there would be a shot that fired from somewhere,
that the Americans would then open fire and the world would witness a massacre.
Okay?
That was the fear.
So here's what happened.
At that moment, an American officer stepped through the crowd holding a rifle, his rifle,
high over his head with the barrel pointed to the ground.
against the backdrop of the seething crowd.
It was a striking gesture.
It was almost biblical.
Then he said, take a knee.
That means that go down on your knees.
The soldiers looked at him like he was completely crazy.
And then one after another,
this is with their bulky armor, body armor and so on in gear,
they knelt before this boiling crowd
and pointed their guns at the ground.
Their Iraqis fell silent and their anger subsided.
The officer ordered his men to withdraw.
If we're going to have peace on this earth, we need to get to know others and what matters
to them and respect it.
And that means getting outside of our own fear-based story which might lead us to say, that
person's threatening and the way to go at it is to shoot, which is the mental
often of those top of the hierarchy.
When we start to live outside the confines of our story,
we're open to new information and we can grow
and we can experience a deeper reality.
Not just with ourselves, we can end up connecting.
We can't really connect with others
if we're living inside our story of what's wrong.
It doesn't matter if we're not officially blaming them.
If it's what's wrong with me, we're still afraid to be vulnerable and real
because somebody else will end up rejecting us.
My final story for you tonight is an illustration again of the possibility of
and what happens when we're starting to step out of our stories.
And this is, I found this in Crapalachio, which is by Scott McClure.
Planohan. He says one time a man, I'm paraphrasing part of it, left home. He had argued with his mother and father the day before he left. They spoke horrible words to one another and he left without saying goodbye. He had been gone many years, even spent time in jail. Years later, when he finally got out of jail, he wondered if his mother and father were even alive and how they were holding what had been said and how they were relating to where he had wound up.
Were they ashamed?
Were they enraged?
He wrote to them and told them
he'd be coming home on a specific day
following week.
He said if they wanted to see him
and were not angry,
not blaming them anymore,
not ashamed,
they should put a blanket on the clothesline
and he would know to come inside.
If the blanket was missing,
he would know that he was not welcome.
He would know to turn back.
And he told them he hoped they were in good health.
The man arrived by rail the next week.
He was nervous when he stepped off the train.
There was no one there to meet him.
He walked up the worn path towards the home place
and thought about the past.
He thought about his time in jail.
He thought about how angry or ashamed his parents must have been.
He thought about the horrible words they spoke.
He was just about to turn around and go back
to where he came from when he saw a blanket in a tree.
He kept walking.
He saw another blanket.
He kept walking he saw another blanket.
Then he turned towards home and the house was covered with blankets.
The yard was covered in blankets.
The clothes line was covered in blankets.
The path to the door was covered in blankets.
His parents were standing there and they were welcoming inside.
I think part of what touches me about that so much is we're so inclined
to believe our stories of separation.
separation, when deep down we all want to connect. Deep down, we may be too afraid to make the gesture
and put out the blanket, but that's what we long for. It takes a dedicated practice to challenge the
stories. Mostly we're in such a trance. We don't notice they're there. And then when we start to notice,
it takes a real willingness to say, oh, look, this in some ways me making
myself wrong or somebody else wrong. This is the shouldn't be happening story. It takes dedicated
practice to get the knack of really being in our bodies and breathing with what's there until we
start sensing the space of that witness, that larger presence. But it's possible because that space
does open up. This is Henri Nuon who says the real work of prayer is to become silent and listen to
voice that says good things about me. To gently push aside and silence the many voices
that question my goodness and to trust that I will hear the voice of blessing. To gently
push aside and silence the many voices that question my goodness and to trust that I will
hear the voice of blessing, that demands real effort. So we make that effort. Really, may we
do this as individuals? May we quiet?
at the stories of fear and just hear that the voice of blessing which is beyond all stories
that just is the realization of our goodness and our belonging.
And may we do it collectively, that we open beyond the stories that separate us
to that loving awareness that's really our source.
So let's practice together for a few minutes.
Let's explore this.
Just do it in a simple way.
You might bring to mind some recurrent situation in your life where you end up feeling difficult emotions,
feeling afraid, angry, hurt, some situation that triggers you.
And ask yourself, what's the story I'm telling around this?
See if you can find the no, that this basic assumption this shouldn't be happening.
This is a bad situation.
It's my fault. It's someone else's fault.
What's the no? This is wrong.
You might explore for a few moments if you could step out of the story of something's wrong with this
and just feel directly in your body what the situation brings up.
with the simple intention of being with and breathing with kindly,
whatever's there.
Very simple right now.
You feel it's bringing up fear underneath or shame or hurt.
If it helps you to put your hand on your heart to keep company with what's here,
breathe with it and feel it.
And sense that you're contacting what's under the story
and regarding it with a very,
kind witnessing.
Okay, so this is what's here.
It might be very, very unpleasant,
but the witness, the kindness can include it.
Okay, this is what's happening.
So this is the movement from the story,
believing the story,
to witnessing and holding the feelings underneath them
with kindness.
It doesn't give you an answer on how to move through your life.
But what it does is give you a little
a larger sense of who you are in the moment, which leads you to embodying more compassion and
intelligence. A simple presence with what's here. Notice who you are when you're witnessing
kindly the experience inside you. Sense the goodness that's inherent in witnessing kindly.
you might ask yourself, if nothing's wrong, if I'm not believing in a story that something's wrong,
then what is here?
Then just let go and trust yourself to that hereness.
And as you move through the days and weeks to come and you find yourself stuck,
you can ask that question, well, what am I telling myself?
What story?
How am I making myself or life or others wrong?
Can I just bring that kind witnessing to the life that's really here?
Come back home to the intrinsic goodness of your more true self.
Hafeus puts it this way, the poet Hafeus,
you don't have to act crazy anymore.
We all know you were good at that.
Now retire, my dear, from all that hard work you do
of bringing pain to your sweet eyes and heart.
Look in a clear mountain mirror.
See the beautiful ancient warrior
and the divine elements you always carry inside.
Look in a clear mountain mirror.
See the beautiful ancient warrior
and the divine elements you always carry inside.
Thank you for your attention and namaste.
For more talks and meditations, and to learn about my schedule or join my email list, please visit tarabrock.com.
