I recently taught a class in creative contemplation that was
based on Lectio Divina, or divine reading.
It is a practice undertaken by contemplative Christians and monks in
which one completely surrenders to the voice of God as inspired by a line of
scripture. I have no real allegiance to
Christianity, other than my upbringing, and presented the practice in a
completely secular course. Much modern
meditative and contemplative forms are presented this way. Centuries old sacred traditions stripped of
theology and much underlying philosophy as a means of adapting each to a
stressful, material world. Sort of like
insisting that prayer without an object or spirit to pray to will bring about a
miracle. The act, not the deity, holds
the influence. In my busy life in the
city this means poses no problems. But I
spent the weekend at my parents’ house in the mountains, very quiet, and found
the entire secularization of sacred traditions troubling.
Faith in God fascinates me, even as I have little of my
own. On the few occasions I have felt
moved to prayer I have rejected the impulse as one born of weakness or
unreason. But I have studied Benedictine
and Zen traditions very carefully in the development of my meditation practice
and as a foundation for teaching methods inspired by these traditions. I aligned myself with the dogma, and then
rejected it. I’m not alone. At a teacher training with Jon Kabat Zinn, he
insisted on a full understanding of the dharmic principles that underlie
mindfulness as a prerequisite to teaching mindfulness-based stress reduction in
secular settings (while I may have rejected much of the dharma, Zinn hasn’t). Many teachers learn this stuff and then stash
it away as irrelevant or incendiary to their students’ searching. Yet I believe that every person who sits for a
moment in silence is searching for something.
Should we who call ourselves teachers reveal only the practical methods
and deny the spiritual? Yoga today is
often taught as a form of stretching, without its philosophical underpinnings. A step toward good health for the mind and
body while ignoring the soul. Meditation
is now making the leap into the same territory.
A conversation with a man named Scott who runs a UPS store
opened up for me how vacuous this approach can be. He was printing flyers for a class of mine
and revealed himself as a student of Zen.
He spoke of life, work, and relationships as inseparable from one’s
practice. He embodied the ideal that it
is not the time one spends on the cushion that makes a life, it is the living
that makes the life. When life is fully infused
with the dharma (or whatever underlying philosophy one’s method of practice
comes from), formal practice becomes unnecessary. The caution I heard, although it may not have
been intended, was that formal practice without the infusion of some ethical
construct is fraudulent.
This really screwed me up.
I stopped practicing formally and reconsidered my relationship with
mindfulness and meditation. Had
thousands of hours on the cushion been an escape? Had contemplation without catechism fostered
an inwardly motivated perspective that resulted in self-absorption? Had I been searching for answers that already
were presented a couple thousand years ago, or was I rejecting uncomfortable
questions about my relationship with others and the ideas I maintained were
truths? I felt like a fraud.
Then, finally, I truly began to notice. I raised my gaze from the floor in front of
me and saw truths I had been missing. My
relationship with my wife improved. I
took more joy in my daughter. I became
more serious at work and got a promotion.
I found something. Something that
carries a sense of the sacred, even if I refuse to acknowledge it as such. Mindfulness is noticing without
judgment. I’ve known that intellectually
for over a decade. Now I live it, most
of the time. The sacred is
slippery. It’s elusive and hard to hold
on to. But once experienced, it does
change you.
Just this week I started practicing formally again. It doesn’t really feel different, except that
it feels more like part of my day than a pause in my day. Perhaps, finally, I am always
practicing. I feel it would be both
simplistic and nebulous to say that something is with me, or that some thing
has moved me. I hope I can hold on to
this sense of openness to experience and ideas.
I’d gotten old and dodgy. I’d
completely rejected any notion of the sacred.
I thought I knew too much. Now
I’m noticing that I know just enough to be dangerous or inspiring. The motives I discover in my exploration of
the challenging ideas behind the methods I practice will determine which I
become.
Thank you. Such good news! Much love and Victory to the Light!
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Should we who call ourselves teachers reveal only the practical methods and deny the spiritual?
ReplyDeleteBy teaching the practical methods, the teacher may be helping the students to find out the spiritual truths for themselves. Kind of like that old saying about how if you give a man a fish you feed him for one day but if you teach a man to fish you feed him for a lifetime.
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