Feelings

Fun fact: The first time I approached my teacher in this life, my mind was a cyclone of emotions. When he saw my state, he folded his arms across his chest and sternly said, “Push down your emotions.” And with that, I dropped my mind, and from a clear space, began to ask him my question.

Feeling insecure,
feeling afraid,
feeling confident,
feeling mediocre,
feeling stupid,
feeling smart,
feeling awkward, ugly, beautiful,
feeling, feeling, feeling.

We’re taught to honor our feelings.
To trust them,
cherish them,
work them out.
But this is a LIE!
Feelings are not valuable,
on the path to Enlightenment.

Instead, ignore your feelings.
Ignoring feelings is called Mindfulness.
Feelings are manufactured
by the body and the mind.
But you are not your body,
or your mind,
so do not listen to their products.

When the feeling that something is wrong
creeps in, seeps in,
do not listen to it.
When fear arises,
do not welcome it like an old friend.
Instead let it flow through the mind untouched.
Don’t consider it, engage it,
or try to figure it out.
It does not need your attention!

Instead, trust the greater Self—
which you can finally hear
when feelings are ignored.
Trust me that the greater Self
is smarter, more beautiful and more magical
than your mind and its feelings.

Trade in the Ford Pinto of your mind,
for the luxury vehicle of no mind.

The Real Prince Charming

In the dream I’m standing on a cliff, looking out at the ocean shimmering white in the sun and seeming to stretch on forever. I want to go down to the ocean, but the steps leading to the water are blocked by a heavy iron door that is locked.

You. You pull alongside the steps in a sleek boat, dissolve the door and whisk me into the craft. I stand close by your side, you tall and handsome in your white uniform. You take the wheel in your hands and speed us out into the ocean—far, far—until we disappear.

The metaphor is so obvious now, but still, it took many years to see.

I was energized by my newly planned rebellion. The plan was to go to the ball despite being explicitly forbidden to do so. My stepmother had been gradually stripping away my money, space and freedoms—and I was finally getting fed up!

I, like the proverbial frog who doesn’t jump out of a pot being slowly brought to boil, had been quietly accepting the erosion of my power. First, after my father died, my stepmother moved me to the attic. I went along with it because, in truth, I was happy to get away from her and her two daughters, and have some space away from them—even if it was cramped, dusty and infested with mice. I pretended not to notice the water getting hotter when I was then assigned all the housekeeping duties—this after she fired the housekeeper to save some of our ever-dwindling money. (The estate my father left us would have lasted me several lifetimes, but she’d blown through most of it in just seven years.) Again, I didn’t really mind, because the extra work kept me busy and away from them—God knows, they stayed as far away as they could from any mop, bucket or rag. But when she said I couldn’t go to the ball because I wasn’t good enough and didn’t deserve to be in such company, well, that was when the water finally felt too hot, and I began to concoct my plan.

I was going to go to the ball no matter what it took. I’d make my own dress and sneak there one way or the other. And I was gleeful knowing that I’d still outshine them. Her daughters would be wearing the most expensive and luxurious dresses that money can buy, but I knew I’d still be the one who’d shine, the bright one who’d capture the heart of the prince. It had always been that way—just being happy, bright, quick to laugh, and well, very pretty, had always made it easy to be the favorite. So I was gleeful at the idea that I’d still outdo them, despite all of their attempts to hold me down.

But then another dream. In it, he walked towards me. The same man, the man from the boat. He was tall and lean, elegantly dressed. We were at the ball, and it was as beautiful as I imagined. Crystal chandeliers splashed light around the room, elegantly dressed couples waltzed around the polished dance floor, and a long table was laden with all kinds of delicious food and drink. I was sitting at a table, chatting away with a girlfriend, when I saw him walking towards me. Then just as he reached the table, he turned and addressed a young man sitting with us. I hadn’t even noticed him sitting there, quietly uncomfortable in his fancy attire. The tall man made a quick nod towards us and said to him, “If it seems like they’ve been doing this for forever, it’s because they have.”

When I woke up the excitement around attending the ball had totally evaporated. Any energy around getting some petty revenge on my stepmother and stepsisters had completely disappeared. Now, the idea of the ball felt boring, boring—as if I’d been to hundreds, if not thousands, of dances, as if I’d won the hearts of a million Prince Charmings. Like he said in the dream, it was if I’d been doing it forever and now it held no excitement. Instead, I clearly saw that I needed to get out of my situation, away from this lady who was trying to crush my spirit. Rebelling against her by going to a dance was too small. I really just needed to get away from them entirely, and leave this story behind.

Until that moment, it hadn’t occurred to me to leave. This home was my birthright, my inheritance, and felt like the last link to my father. But that’s crazy. My link to my father isn’t through a house of stone, and leaving it won’t diminish my connection to him. I may be leaving my material birthright, but my spiritual birthright is to be happy, and that will never happen here. I have to close the door on these folks.

It was my first big crossroad—to leave a material birthright behind in favor of a spiritual one—but once I understood the pettiness of that life, it was easy. Those people weren’t my tribe. So on the night of the ball, when everyone was away, I slipped out with my small bundle of things and took the stagecoach to Paris. My uncle, who was the black sheep of the family, welcomed me to stay with him, recognizing in me a kindred spirit.

I know now that the man in the boat, my teacher, was reeling me in to him, a huge magnet drawing me in. I would soon meet him and discover that he was my real Prince Charming. He truly saved me. Instead of sweeping me off my feet, marrying me and making me his princess, he delivered me to the ocean of bliss. That journey was quite a bit more complicated than the boat ride in the dream (you can read all about that elsewhere), but he helped me dissolve all identity, all individuation, until all that remained was Light itself. Umm. Om.

Attitude

Started something beautiful,
began to get bright.
You came to me in a dream,
a romantic figure
in the night.
You held me closely,
pulled me in tight.
When I woke the next day,
all hopes and dreams
were gone away.

And yet NOT—
I know this play.

So I—
ignore the mind and,
eat something delicious,
watch something light,
workout, meditate,
get back to alright.

Then I—
continue something beautiful,
begin to get bright,
continue the journey
because I love the light.

Lazy

Too lazy,
to not become enlightened.
Too much work,
to create plans and dreams.
Too much effort,
to worry about pleasing people.
Too much strain,
to determine if this apt./job/person is right or wrong.

Simpler,
to let the Dharma take the wheel.
Then no mental effort is required.

If it’s the Dharma to go here,
we go.
If it’s the Dharma to stay,
we stay.
Moving easily without mind,
being in perfection.

Left in the dust—
the lame plans, dreams and worries
of the mind.

Loyalty #2

Wandering here
and there,
staying put.

Having no agenda,
no idea,
for the life.

All my loyalty to the Dharma—
none to anything else.
All my loyalty to the Dharma,
being Dharma itself.

Ice Cream Sundae

Vanilla
“Anything or anyone who stands in the way of your spiritual progress should be ruthlessly abandoned. Simply take your foot and kick them out of your way!”—Anandamayi Ma

Chocolate
One of the greatest mistakes of this incarnation is to take any task within Samsara so seriously,
that you never realize Samsara is Nirvana.

Strawberry
You haven’t come this far,
to only come this far.

Loyalty

“That’s just like what’s happening with us…. The movie never changes. It can’t change. But every time you see it, it seems different because you’re different. You see different things.”—James Cole to Kathryn, while hiding out in a movie theater, watching Hitchcock’s Vertigo
                                                                                                               

Prison Guard: “Volunteer duty!”
Cole: “I didn’t volunteer.”

But, of course, I did. It’s just that with these insertions, it’s hard to remember that I did. But it’s true. A long time ago (in the time dimension), I volunteered to assist the beings in that dimension.

Of course when I’m outside of that dimension, these concepts seem absurd. There is no sense of volunteering, traveling through time, remembering people you haven’t yet met. There is no point in time to meet, travel, volunteer—Consciousness just is.

But then I’m re-inserted into the time dimension and I forget all this. The sensations are so loud and the feelings of the body so present, it’s easy to see how the subtle understandings of the non-physical dimensions get overwhelmed and overridden.

The scientists, as always, are in charge of the mission I “volunteered” for. I suspect they are also volunteers, but on such a different level as to be beyond my comprehension. The recurring objective is to put the world back in balance, and in this iteration, it is to stop the release of a deadly virus that kills five billion people. To that end, they’ve been inserting me at different points in time to find out how the virus was released, so they can stop it from ever happening.

They said they selected me because they needed someone strong and tough-minded, and I am—mostly. But with each insertion, it gets harder and harder to keep track of what is real. At times I believe the scientists are making mistakes, other times I think they just want me to follow orders for the sake of obeying, and then sometimes I start to think they’re not even real and I’m going crazy. You know, when everyone in the insertion tells you you’re delusional, it’s hard to not start believing them.

When I start to think of the mission as a delusion, my mind turns its focus onto life in the insertion. The mind starts to think about what it wants and what will make it happy. This time around, my idea of happiness is to run away with Kathryn. I’ve carried her in my mind for so long that she feels like an old but undiscovered love.

When I told the scientists I was staying with her and to leave me alone, they sent someone in to remind me of my task. I know an outsider might think it’s a tragedy that I didn’t get to stay with this woman I love, but that’s just a projection of their own idea of love. My love and loyalty are to the Dharma, so the real tragedy would be not completing the mission. Yes, I do get distracted during the insertions, but that is the nature and danger of the time dimension. It’s a bit like that story of Indra when he incarnated as a pig. In that form, he was totally content with his sow and piglets, so the gods came down and slayed his pig family. When Indra began to weep and mourn, the gods ripped his pig-body open. As Indra emerged, he began to laugh that he, king of the gods, had thought pig life was the only life. I’m not comparing myself to Indra, but when it comes to getting sidetracked in the insertion, at least I’m in good company! So I’m grateful the scientists sent someone in to course-correct me.

Kathryn was a beautiful helpmate—one of my favorites. Together we did finally ID the man who released the virus. I died trying to kill him, but in doing so I showed the scientists who he was, and they were able to come back and stop him—so it all worked out. And of course, I didn’t really die. I’m not saying that because I was there as a kid at the airport, watching the whole thing, being prepared for a mission that was yet to come. Rather it’s that only bodies die in the time dimension. And of course, I don’t just exist within time.

Success

If success is the greatest revenge,
what is success?

Is it a destination within samsara,
like owning your own home,
managing a product line at work,
or being a great daughter or mother?

Or is it
(catches a glimpse of the Buddha
pointing off the wheel)
somewhere beyond,
where the concept of revenge
doesn’t even exist?

Unnecessary Suffering

When everything is set to right,
When sexual harassment ends,
When Black lives matter,
When wars no longer begin,
Will you be happy, will you finally be alright?

No, of course not.

Instead seek enlightenment,
and discover
the futility of suffering—
carrying as you do,
this mine of bliss
inside you.