The first in a series of interviews with famous people who have surrendered.

The Spiritual Times correspondent: You have one of the most iconic moments around surrender of anyone—a moment that exists in the mind of almost every American. So, I’m curious, what does surrender mean to you?
Dorothy: Well, what surrender means has changed depending on where I’ve been on the path.
As a teenager and young woman, surrender meant giving in to what others wanted me to do and to be. It meant giving in to what my family, friends, school, community, government, and really all of society thought I should do. In particular, it meant giving in to what Auntie Em and Uncle Henry dreamt of for me. And while I was so grateful for them taking me in lovingly after my parents died, I did not want their life. It was too small. I wanted something bigger, brighter, more dramatic, more special.
So when I ran away and went to the fortune teller, I was looking for this something more. Some would say he was such an obvious fraud, and sure, he wasn’t an actual fortune teller, but he definitely was an ally who helped me get on the path. I felt the Universe at work in our meeting, and hold him and our moment together pristinely.
Then, once on the path (aka the yellow brick road), the meaning of surrender evolved. It became about not surrendering to the forces that can take you off the path. Those forces are internal and external. The internal forces are the voices inside that say you’re not smart enough to do this (the scarecrow), that you don’t have the love and devotion to make it (the tin man), or you don’t have the fearlessness and nerve to power through the obstacles of the path (the lion). Of course, there are other internal voices, but those were my main ones.
Then, the other forces are external forces. There are actual forces that want to knock you off the path, that want to keep you from reaching your destination, from becoming enlightened. They are just a stage on the path that you can get past, but if you don’t take them seriously, they can take you out. So again, surrender at that point, meant not surrendering to either my internal demons, or to external demons, such as the Wicked Witch of the West!
By the time the Wicked Witch wrote “SURRENDER, DOROTHY” across the sky, surrender became something else altogether! Of course, she meant for me to surrender to her. But in that moment, with it writ so large across the sky, my mind finally collapsed, and I surrendered entirely to Consciousness. In surrendering to That, I gave up my mind and ego, and saw that what I’d been searching for had always been there. I had always been “home.” I didn’t even need to click my heels three times and say, “There’s no place like home”! The activity of the mind, and all the strategies of the path, had covered the Consciousness that I am. With the silence of my mind, I saw that I am what I’d been searching for. By “I am” I don’t mean my mind, my body, or my personality. I mean the Consciousness that makes up everyone and everything. When I looked up in the sky and saw that message to surrender, I finally surrendered in the most powerful way to that which was calling me home.
So, to finally answer your question, surrender now means to me, surrendering to the Dharma. I no longer have my own agenda or ideas for my life. I really am just a vessel of the Dharma and completely open to whatever that brings. The people and forces I feared before can try to manipulate me now, and it’s possible I might go along with them, but if I do, it’s only because it’s the Dharma to do so, not because I am surrendering to their manipulation.
TST: Where you annoyed at how much time you’d spent on the yellow brick road trying to get “home”, only to realize you’d always been home?
Dorothy: Not at all. If the fortune teller in Kansas had told me that I wasn’t my body and I wasn’t my mind, but rather Consciousness itself, I wouldn’t have understood that at all! The journey down the yellow brick road helped dissolve my ego and give me experiences of no mind, and remembrances of other bodies, all of which made me ripe for realizing that I’m not my mind and I’m not my body. So really, I’m very grateful for all that came before!
TST: Dorothy, thank you so much for your time!
Dorothy: My pleasure!
Join us next month for our next Surrender interview with Joe, who famously surrendered his life to the Volcano, only to find himself spit out by it! Was surrendering his life really just a metaphor for surrendering the ego, and on the other side of that surrender lay an uncommonly fine life?

