Primordial BFF (Best Friend Fear)

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The nature of experience is ever changing. Change brings a lot of feelings, deep emotions and fear. Fear need not be fearsome, however.  In fact, fear can be our friend.  Maybe our best friend. Fear is a natural part of our psychology.  Fear has roots  in a series of base level programs developed long ago to protect us from danger. Our minds, attuned to frequencies of fear, have enabled our species to thrive. Fear lets us know when a stegosaurus is approaching. Fear has been a staunch ally for a very long time.
However, as the design is quite old, it is a bit crude with regards to the subtleties of modern life.  And as this survival system is filtered through emotional patterning from childhood, we are essentially working with an archaic system programmed by a four year old.  Something triggers an age old pattern to avoid danger and the child at the controls suggests we eat a pint of ice cream and watch the iPad from bed.  It may be a beautiful day outside, but because we are stirred by the change in things, we have fallen back into our mind in order to protect ourselves from our life.

Its a curious irony that our survival instinct works to protect us from life.  But, the same energy that was originally intended to wake us up, has begun to shut us down. Once triggered, we shut off and check out into patterned reactions. However, if we hold our awareness and balance, we can open up to fear. In this way, we actually become more fully present, and alive. We are, in fact, more able to protect ourselves then if we had shut down behind a wall. Awareness is the best defense. In the same way, we can open up to joy and love and life and be more capable of enjoying ourselves.  We need fear. Fear keeps us alive, but it can also keeps us awake. It provides an edge to things that help us stay present. Athletes, performers and meditators all use fear to stay present.  Rather than shutting us off from life, we can ride fear to actually connect us back to life.

The Tibetan Buddhist tradition looks at fear as a protector; a dangerous friend we can employ to actually help us stay awake. But, like a protector, we can employ it or, if we abdicate our authority, it can employ us. And, if we refuse to pay attention, it can actually become the enemy. But, if we take our set as the leader of our experience, it can be a friend.  Like a dog. Our best friend, maybe. If we learn to tame the energy and work with it we can lead the energy of fear into further waking.

The key is assertive kindness. I call it channeling my inner Cesar Millan.

When a dog barks, we are alerted. But, we generally don’t follow the dog out of the house yelling into the street or wrestle the postwoman to the ground. We wake up, pay attention and then, sussing the situation, calm the dog.  We settle the dog with assertive kindness, as further aggression will only agitate the animal. And passive acceptance will do nothing to calm the animal.  With awareness, we become familiar with the relationship and making friends with fear, know its only following the protector’s program. We might actually be grateful. We patt the its head and say “good dog.”  Then, we can open to the situation non-aggressively with confidence because we are awake. And, of course, if there was a threat, we always have the dog. So, we can actually have confidence in the reliable old system, as long as we learn to use it, instead of being used by it.

I’m not saying its easy. There probably won’t be anyone addressing our panic with a frisbee in the park saying, “Wow dude. Sweet fear. Its soooo cuuuute.”  But, of course, if someone did, it would be because we were being kind to the fear in the first place.

So, it really comes down to self care and respect. When we forget ourselves and lose our connection to our basic human dignity, gasping and grasping groundlessly through life, we scare ourselves and the fear takes over and controls our life.  However, when we are in touch with our basic human dignity, we regain authority over our life and fear simply alerts us to the present.

And for that, we can actually be grateful to the old beast.

 

Opening The Present

christmas-present-300x233… and Receiving The Gift Of Your Life.

Welcome to spring! There’s people to meet, markets on the street, clothes to peel, and air to breath, again. Ahhhh…

Kind of scary, isn’t it?  Maybe we should wait till next week. Or, till we lose some weight, get some new clothes, or shake off the cottage cheese on our thighs.  Sometimes its easier to stay in bed on days the rest of the world seems to be living a Nike ad.

Sluggish patterns, in dissonant contrast to the burgeoning spring, seem hungover from winter. We heard a lot about seasonal affective disorder, or “sad” last winter. Yet, any change can trigger depression, including the longer days of spring. Its ironic to make it through winter just to find that we can be just as depressed in the spring.

At least we can still employ the acronym, as Spring is Also Depressing.

But, depression feels extra bad on beautiful days.  The rest of the world is flying and we’re chained to something that sinks us back into our room, and into our mind. The sadness is extra deep here.  Not only are we missing out on the life others are having, we have plenty of time to beat ourselves up over missing the life we should have had. As if it were over. But, in truth, its not. Its not over. If you’re reading this, I have news for you. IT’S NOT OVER. In fact, if you’re reading this, your life has just begun. Despite the stories we create to substantiate not showing up to the ball, we have so much to offer.  Our life is much richer and more rewarding than we have learned to see. Learned. That’s right. Learned. Avoidance, resistance, depression do not occur as a punishment, it as proof that we are bad, or unworthy. They are learned behavior that becomes seated in repetitive patterning.  Once we have a pattern, its very hard not to follow it, even if the outcome is the same dead end again and again. And few things create patterns as readily as negative input, as the mind is programmed to imprint negatives as a way of safeguarding the reproductive momentum of our species.  We are, therefore, much more receptive to creating patterns around negative, rather than positive, stimuli. We do this instinctively and our society conspires. Our parents, in all love and best intentions, act on their fear to guide us away from danger by supporting our minds of fearfulness.  We end up locked in our room, like bad children, comparing ourselves to mythical beings outside our window, who seem to have it all. We look at them with longing. Their lives seem so balanced, while ours fail on the balance sheet. We fixate on the things we need to change in order to find health, happiness and a life we deserve.

Only, we’re already living the life we deserve. Or, better said, we deserve the life we’re living.

You see, once we begin to see ourselves as worthy of the life we want, we might find that that is exactly the life we have. Because in order to believe we deserve goodness in our life, we have to find strength in ourselves. Inner strength comes from believing in ourselves and gaining a natural confidence that is not subject to other’s approval. Its belief in ourselves, that comes from ourselves and answers to nothing.  Once we have that, then anything in our life is workable because we don’t need any of it to complete us. In fact, because we are complete within ourselves, we can offer to our world, rather than continue to deplete it. In return, we gain sustenance from the exchange, rather than depletion.

In order to do this, we have to retrain the mind to learn to care for itself. Instead of habitually beating ourselves up, and waiting for someone else to save us, we can learn to stand up for ourselves.  If we stop the self-flagellation over a perceived lack of success in an imaginary world, we might have the energy to actually enjoy the life we have. We can begin by appreciating the fact that we are here at all.  We can commit to giving ourselves the gift of life, the life we deserve, the life we have, by simply going beyond our fear and opening to the present.

In order to do this, we don’t need to buy anything special, own anything special or be with that special someone.  We simply learn to be alone, with ourselves, mindful of the details of our life. Through manual application of mindfulness and self compassion, we learn to develop natural confidence.  In time, we allow our fear based mind to relax and lower the walls so we can come out and play.  By waking up to the present, we take hold of our life.  In order to do this, we need to work with the fear that triggers us into patterns that keeps us imprisoned in our own minds.

I’ve been thinking about Sakyong Mipham’s teachings on fear. How, in order to be fearless, we actually need fear. How we get into trouble, again and again, by trying to run from fear. I’ve been re-committing to the purpose of NOT abandoning myself simply because I get anxious. I’ve been thinking that every time I want to check out, I can retrain myself to instead check back in. Simply that. To stay with myself. My best friend. So, with the spring comes a new resolution: to stay and regain authority in my life. I want to lean in to how life feels and to learn to deepen the connection to myself.

And no, I’m not talking about building the ego. I’m suggesting that when we choose to remain in our own space, grounded in the actuality of our present experience, we are actually boycotting ego states. Ego states are predicated on denying our present experience in favor of a patterned scenario. Ego states are exit strategies for when the edges become too sharp and we feel threatened. The irony is, by retreating into these defensive states, we are not defending ourselves at all. In fact, as we lack awareness, we are far more vulnerable. We are cut off from what is going on and what is going in. And, like a country under martial law, our access to reality is seriously compromised; we hear only what we’ve been told many times before. This process actually erodes confidence.

And, by abandoning ourselves – our body and our present moment – we abandon the very link that connects us to our life.

Conversely, by staying present, we become more confident in our experience and actually reduce the need to retreat. We can actually lean in to the sense of being threatened. We can learn to train ourselves to look into the fear, as a way of working with our fear. So, rather than run from fear, I want to look into the mind of fearfulness with loving kindness. I want to become my own best friend and throw my arms around myself in encouragement. And, instead of abandoning my fearful mind, I want to take it with me into the present so it can enjoy this life.

So, I’ve decided to remind myself daily to come back to my body, and my present experience. Every time we want to run and retreat into some story, lock ourselves back in our room, or not show up for life, we can redirect the impulse and come back to the present. In this way, we are with actual feelings happening now.  In other words, we have opened to the present. Once we connect to the body and what it is presently feeling and sensing, we open to life simply and without expectation. Then we see life as it is, exhilarating, boring, challenging and scary as heck, but so worth the effort. And each time when we fail to check out, but instead, resolve to check in with ourselves, we can open to the world with natural confidence.

Then we may discover ourselves blooming in the light of another spring.

Out of (Pine) the Box

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   (and Into The Fire)…

He finally had a paid gig out of the country. Professional. He was to leave in two days on his first tour. He had one day of work left before his trip to riches and glory. He was going to take that day off. But, his mother thought to teach him something of self-reliance. No one made money in a rock ‘n roll band.

Blues, he said it was. And he worked hard to learn the guitar. He was good.

Blues, rock, opera, what have you. She wouldn’t relent. You go into work, even if its your last day, she told him, and finish the job right. The next morning Tony went to work at the steel shop. That afternoon, he was rushed to the hospital with the tips of two fingers missing.