Monday, August 31, 2020

I (Too) Am Waiting

 I (too) am waiting


My thanks to Lawrence Ferlinghetti for fifty years of inspiration.


I am waiting for the last meme to be made with invisible ink

So that we face a beautiful block of color with a question

and I am waiting for the political machine to break down

For the rusted cogs to shatter and leave us bereft 

I am waiting for the mechanic to tell us we don’t need 

a machine to treat other people right I am waiting

To see if anyone will miss the machine and begin anew

Dancing with everyone where anyone can dance and

I am waiting for a rebirth of love


I am waiting for the end of a pandemic that does not

Leave all of us dead I am waiting for that super clean 

Magic machine that will clean the air and make it safe 

To breathe I am waiting for the Doctor to arrive and 

Be accorded all of the respect he deserves and I am

Waiting for the twisted schemers be assigned off planet work

Scrubbing asteroids into shiny mirrors so they can 

See themselves as they really are and

I am waiting for a rebirth of love


I am waiting to walk across the Millennium Bridge

Or perhaps travel by bicycle in search of Vera to ask her

About the maker of her mackintosh I am waiting

For a restoration of personal tolerance 

Where “we hold these truths to be self-evident”

Becomes a secular scripture I am waiting

For my cat to sing out and shout that she is

Waiting for a rebirth of love


I am waiting for the bright green leaves to 

Turn brown and a rebirth of Fall I am waiting

For the roads to be washed clean under the

Tropical deluge and I am waiting for the super

Shopper to complete the order and deliver to 

The needy to those in need to those in want

Basic necessities for everyone in need and 

Everyone in want and I am still

waiting for a rebirth of love


I am waiting for the sand to run out of time

While we discard our calendars and embrace

The solitary Sun the shadow and the dial 

Which in ever turning splendor attends to

The day and I am waiting for the moment to

Return to the forefront as we discard tweets

And texts and emails while embracing the

Heartbeat the breath the footstep and

I am waiting for a rebirth of love 



I am waiting for the realization that we are until

We are not to shake the bones raise the shoulders

And splinter false feet that reinforce our expectations

Of our entitlement our economy of private justice 

Our immortality of our intimations

For I am awaiting the cold wind on a blustery day

To sweep the streets clear of insidious intent and I am

Eternally and faithfully and constantly 

Waiting for a rebirth of love


Rod Scott

(C) 2020





Monday, August 24, 2020

The Second Post In A Series On Meditations - The Exploration and Amelioration of Pain


THE ESSENCE


Find a comfortable posture and comfortable place that allows you the freedom and space to investigate this experience of pain.

Pain is not a singular event but may be seen at times as a cluster or constellation of sensations that increase and decrease in frequency, changing sensations that appear and disappear.

The natural response to pain is to try to wall it off, to push it out, to banish it from our lives. 

This response roots the pain and can even magnify one’s experience of pain.

Letting go of our grip on the painful sensation is the first step toward diminishing the power of the pain over our body/mind.

Releasing our grip on the pain sensation allows the beginning of a softening in the painful area.

Secondly, use your imagination to actively expand and soften the painful sensation. 

Vividly expand that painful sensation so that it is the size of your room, your apartment, your house, your neighborhood!  

The expansion of the painful sensation into a vast space frees your body/mind from the white hot tightly gripped pain and the sensation drains away. 

In some painful sensations this single imaginary act can provide tremendous relief to an experience of a sharp painful episode.

Dealing with long term pain requires a slightly different approach. One may need to connect their breathing to the softening and expansion visualization.

The inhalation and exhalation provide softness and expansion to the sensation of pain.

Continue breathing as normally as possible while maintaining the imaginary expansion as long as necessary. 

Practicing this visualization/meditation before a painful episode occurs equips you for the time when the painful sensation strikes. 

May my heart be filled to the brim with gratitude for all of the blessings of this moment.



A COMMENTARY 


Find a comfortable posture and comfortable place that allows you the freedom and space to investigate this experience of pain.  You may find that being prone is comfortable, or that laying flat is not. It may be to your advantage to sit in a recliner, or lay on a mattress on the floor. No one can tell you what posture is best. You are about to investigate a sensation of pain, and your choice of position is the final authority. 


Pain is not a singular event but may be seen at times as a cluster or constellation of sensations that increase and decrease in frequency, changing sensations that appear and disappear. Pain is experienced in so many varied ways that at times it might not even seem to be the same sensation. There are deeper meditations that investigate the multifaceted aspects of pain, but this is not one of them. Here we will work with pain at a higher level. 


The natural response to pain is to try to wall it off, to push it out, to banish it from our lives.  I dislike pain and clench my body in resistance to the ache. It’s easy to harden the body and attempt expel this awful experience. Grimacing and crying out are natural responses to a painful sensation. Yet, there is another way to experience pain. 


This response roots the pain and can even magnify one’s experience of pain.  As difficult as it may seem our natural response to pain is almost always guaranteed to increase our painful experience. By gripping our pain we’ve insured it cannot escape and by trying to wall off the area of pain we’ve confined it to a particular location in our body. 


Letting go of our grip on the painful sensation is the first step toward diminishing the power of the pain over our body/mind.  For some of us this is not easy to do! It seems that screaming pain compels the viselike clamp we keep on the painful part of our body. Yet, a release of the grip can be an astonishing revelatory experience in our relationship to our pain. 


Releasing our grip on the pain sensation allows the beginning of a softening in the painful area. This hard spot of pulsating pain is suddenly allowed to expand. But that is not the only positive move we can make.


Secondly, use your imagination to actively expand and soften the painful sensation. The use of your imagination at this moment begins the process of reducing, attenuating and under some circumstances, eliminating the painful sensation.


Vividly expand that painful sensation so that it is the size of your room, your apartment, your house, your neighborhood!  This is the key moment. Taking that painful  sensation and allowing it to expand out of your body into a huge space reduces that white hot sensation of pain. There is no imaginary limit to your expansion!


The expansion of the painful sensation into a vast space frees your body/mind from the white hot tightly gripped pain and the sensation drains away. The efficacy of this technique has been proven in the lives of thousands of people around the world. It works, yet works in different ways depending on the pain sensation. 


In some painful sensations this single imaginary act can provide tremendous relief to an experience of a sharp painful episode.  In the cases of some injuries the sharpness of the pain can be reduced so greatly that the mind is so surprised that it loses the imaginary construct and the pain returns instantly. This has happened to me. The antidote is to return to the imaginary space inducing vision and the pain can disappear. 


Dealing with longer term pain requires a slightly different approach. One may need to connect their breathing to the softening and expansion visualization.  One can only maintain an effort while they are conscious,  it requires a focus to keep this going for long periods of time. By tying your inhalation or exhalation to the expansion process (like blowing up a balloon!) your breath propels this effort. If your pain requires painkillers this pain mediation can provide an adjunct to “take the edge off” during periods between doses of meds. 


The inhalation and exhalation provide softness and expansion to the sensation of pain.  You may find that inhalation allows for softness to be created in your heart toward you sensations, your pain, your discomfort. This softness allows rather than rejects the pain. The exhalation might be seen as a way to “pump up” the expansion of the expanded floating pain sensation. It’s increased buoyancy reduces its weight and allows it to float higher and farther away from you. 


Continue breathing as normally as possible while maintaining the imaginary expansion as long as necessary.  It does not require too much energy to visualize this expansion. It can be kept up for long periods of time. Do not be surprised if the experience leads to drowsiness. Relax and go with the flow that gives you the best result.


Practicing this meditation before a painful episode occurs equips you for the time when the painful sensation strikes.  One of the keys to the efficacy of this meditation is practicing the imaginary steps you take to soften and expand the sensation of pain. Any sensation in your body/mind could be used in practice. Your practice will allow you, in the midst of sharp pain, to recall the steps you can take to reduce or eliminate your receptivity of the sensation of pain. 



SOURCE(S)


I give all credit to my successful use of pain visualization/meditations to the writings of Stephen Levine. His teachings found in seminars and books provided the groundwork for many people to adapt and utilize these principles of the body/mind.  He published books over a long period of time so it’s important to consider the book that he saw as the one that distilled years of experience and practice into a single volume. This book that contains a heart of his compassionate teachings: Guided Meditations, Explorations and Healings.  Stephen goes into far greater detail than my adaptation of his method presented above. As he put it in the Foreword “This book is meant to be a culmination and distillation of these “technologies of the heart” and we offer them as experiments in the “healing we took birth for”.”



DISCLAIMER

The information on this site is not implied or intended to substitute for professional medical advice. All content on this website is for general information purposes only.  

Saturday, August 22, 2020

The First Post in a Series on Meditations - The Bird Song Meditation

 THE ESSENCE


Sit quietly in a place where you can hear the birds. 

Aim your attention toward the voice of one species of bird and do not worry about identifying the species.

Hear the bird either in solitary song, or in a conversation with another of its own species.

As your awareness of this bird (or these birds of a feather) becomes more all encompassing you are less aware of other surroundings or thoughts.

If you like you may expand your mind’s focus and allow other bird voices within your mental space.  

At a certain moment, after a certain period of time you may be aware and only aware of bird sounds.  

Rest in the space/time you have while conscious of bird songs/sounds. 

With no striving just ease out of this space/time at your own pace at your own time in your own place - and relax.

Let this oasis of space/time be cherished and recalled as a reminder of the place/time to which you can return.  

May my heart be filled to the brim with gratitude for all of the blessings of this moment.



A COMMENTARY


Sit quietly in a place where you can hear the birds. 

This first instruction does not prevent one from either standing or lying down while practicing this meditation, but recognizes that the latter posture might induce sleep, which is not a failure but perhaps an enhancement of the technique. 


Aim your attention toward the voice of one species of bird and do not worry about identifying the species. Allow that bird’s voice to be the sole focus in your mind. 

I’m thrilled when my wife hears a bird’s call and can identify the species. It’s a skill that can be picked up by many folks with some time and effort. 


Hear the bird either in solitary song, or in a conversation with another of its own species. Their voices echo through the landscape in what seems a call and response. Do not try to interpret their conversation. Let their calls provide the object of your sole auditory focus.


As your awareness of this bird (or these birds of a feather) becomes more all encompassing you are less aware of other surroundings or thoughts. Meditation usually involves the aspect of time. As you devote more time to the endeavor you are rewarded by results. 


If you like you may expand your mind’s focus and allow other bird voices within your mental space.  

As the consciousness of bird voices expands with other species they can form a choir, a “multi ethnic like” village market collaboration, a conclave of avian voices. Don’t be bothered by these categorizations, especially while meditating. 


At a certain moment, after a certain period of time you may be aware and only aware of bird sounds.  This is a moment that comes naturally with no need of striving.  It occurs spontaneously and when it does your mind is nothing else but bird songs/sounds.


Rest in the space/time you have while conscious of bird songs/sounds. 

There is no need for timing or clock watching! Just rest and relax at this moment for as long as you wish. 


With no striving just ease out of this space/time at your own pace at your own time in your own place and relax.  Eventually we are likely return to thoughts, plans, desires and what may seem to be ordinary consciousness. 


Let this oasis of space/time be cherished and recalled as a reminder of the place/time to which we can return.  

Consciousness is moment to moment and when we leave this place/time and while in the midst of life we can recall it’s savor. This recollection does not return us to this space/time but reminds us that this can be experienced again when we make the effort, when we make the time. 


May our hearts be filled to the brim with gratitude for all of the blessings of this moment.



SOURCE(S)


In the late 1970’s Stephen Gaskin was publishing quite a few books, conducting speaking tours and giving interviews to magazines, newspapers, and other media. This was in addition to being one of the leaders of one of the largest counter cultural communes in the United States: the Farm. I first ran across his description of this meditation sometime between 1979 and 1981 and have happily employed it many times over the years. Some of his early books include This Seasons People, Mind at Play, The Caravan, and Monday Night Class.



DISCLAIMER

The information on this site is not implied or intended to substitute for professional medical advice. All content on this website is for general information purposes only.