Releasing our Masterpiece
When Michelangelo was asked how he created his masterpiece, the statue of David, he replied that he did not create David — he simply chipped away everything that was not David. David, he said, was already there, hidden within the stone.
As with Michelangelo releasing David from the stone, Meditation practice is not about constructing a better version of ourselves. It is about releasing what is already present at the core of our being — our essential self.
To begin, it is important to understand what we mean by the essential self and the neurotic self.
Our essential self is our natural state of being: open, aware, present, and unburdened. It is what some traditions refer to as Buddha Nature — an innate, luminous quality that exists prior to all confusion, striving, or self-doubt. The nature of our essential being is awareness and the rock in which its encased is essentially ignorance. The Shambhala Buddhist tradition refers to this essential being as Basic Goodness. That is, the core of our being, as with everything in the universe, is fundamentally pure as it is. This goodness, both within ourselves and our perception of our world, is obscured by habitual patterns and misconceptions intended to unnecessarily enhance or protect us. As these patterns employ outmoded and ineffective strategies, they fit the classic definition of neurosis.
Our neurotic self therefore, is the conditioned tangle of habits, fears, fixations, and narratives that we mistake for who we are. It is the overthinking, the self-judgment, the endless loops of anxiety or anger — the “static” that clouds our innate clarity.
In everyday life, these two aspects are fused together. We believe our neurotic thoughts and emotions are who we are. We don’t even question it. Like a fish that reflexively accepts the water in which it swims as reality, even as the water becomes increasingly toxic and murky. The neurotic self and the essential self feel like one seamless identity.
We identify as the rock, cumbersome and protective, that is covering the true being yearning within.
However, as these neurotic patterns were developed as defensive strategies, they were originally intended to protect us. They can be handled with kindness as we become aware of them. They also have basic goodness, so can be acknowledged and then released. This release doesn’t immediately rid us of the pattern. That will come in time. And, so along with kindness, we need a good deal of patience – and acceptance, as these patterns will appear embarrassing or even infuriating. Yet antagonism only makes our protective patterns dig in harder so we need to accept these patterns with a smile. I call this the Brittany Spears affect, as in “oops I did it again.” Releasing David is an act of love that requires grace and humor.
Consistent Meditation practice creates a space between these the neurotic and essential selves. This space allows our basic goodness to emerge as awareness. Each time we sit and bring awareness to the present moment, we are invited to notice when we become distracted — when we get pulled into a train of thought, a feeling, a fantasy, or a worry. The simple act of recognizing distraction releasing and returning it — noticing, letting go and returning to the immediacy of our breath or body — is not just a simple technique. It is a profound act of dislodging the fusion between our essential and neurotic selves. We don’t have to try to do anything, or to fight anyone as struggle just adds another layer of stone. But by naively doing the practice without elaboration, we are becoming familiar with our patterns and that distance happens naturally. And with that distance we begin to see.
With each recognition of distraction and each release and return to ourselves, we are chipping away at the stone that encases the David. We are practicing the art of liberation. We are learning, on a deep, experiential level, that we are not our passing thoughts or emotional storms. There is something beautiful inside. And that something beautiful is primordial, and exists even as our patterns exist. In time, we change our allegiance from reflexively believing ourselves to be the rock, to resting in our true nature.
We are cultivating an intimacy with our true being and its essential nature, which is an awareness that is steady, unshakable, and kind. We begin to see the masterpiece lodged within the stone.
Uncovering Buddha Nature
Over time, as this process deepens, something miraculous happens.The essential self — the one that was always there — begins to shine more clearly. Our basic sanity, kindness, courage, and clarity come to the surface not because we manufactured them, but because we stopped covering them up.
We find ourselves less trapped by compulsive patterns. We respond to life more spontaneously and wisely. Our neurotic patterns may still arise — but now they arise in the vast space of awareness, no longer mistaken for the whole of who we are.
In this way, meditation is not about adding something new to ourselves. It is about letting go of what was never truly us to begin with. It is about trusting that, like David within the marble, our Buddha Nature is already complete. It always was. It always will be. The emerging truth is David is not only beautiful, but actually stronger than the stone that encased them. Yet, that raw shad to be loved as it was, until the sculptor could begin to feel the essence within. The act of chipping at the stone must be an act of kindness and respect for the raw material.
And as you can see from the illustration, size does not matter. David is not ashamed. David is a work of art that stands for the immense strength of acceptance, diligence and love. All we have to do is patiently, lovingly, chip away what obscures our Masterpiece.
And maybe, you know, polish it now and then.