Melissa led DPX last Sunday with a body scan meditation that took us through all the sense doors. She then kicked off the discussion with a reading from Pema Chodron’s book, “When Things Fall Apart.” Telling it straight, but always with compassion, Pema says…. Things don’t get resolved, they come together and fall apart. Let there be room for this to happen. We don’t know and we must leave room for not knowing. Disappointments can be a beginning. The spiritual journey is not about getting lasting pleasure with no pain. That is Samsara, grasping and ignorance. Nothing can be counted on for security. We need to learn to stay with the difficult states of mind, the broken heart, the anger, the uncertainty. Staying relaxed in the mists of these difficult states is the spiritual journey, not expecting them to go away.
In our group discussion we talked about, how we bring our judgements and expectations to a situation, then attach significance, and label it as if it matters. When in truth, nothing is permanent. The suffering comes from clinging our ideas. People in our group talked about their responses to life with Covid. Many felt comforted by knowing we are all in this together struggling with similar situations. Stating that seeing comradery in people all over the world has helped. We are all bottomed out and experiencing something painful at the same time. Similar to life with Covid, members of our group talked about recovery groups that have helped them along their journey by gaining strength and emotional support from shared experience. Healing through finding commonality with how people begin to overcome enormous grief and loss, and rebuild their lives together.
Pema Chodron wrote about her need to try to put her life back together after it had fallen apart, as a human instinct and natural desire. But she realized, while putting it back together may seem easier, it’s often is not possible and one needs to move forward not backward. The same configuration doesn’t always work. Each decade we enter brings another challenge for us. Our progression has good and bad cycles. There is a natural aging process marked by life’s stages, so going back is often impossible. Mary reminded us that “With our Buddhist practice, every decade gets better based on the wisdom gained from within.” Brendan aptly stated “Falling apart stems from the misguided assumption that we had it together in the first place. If we don’t have any expectations for our lives to be a certain way, it won’t fall apart.”
Melissa closed our session with an appropriate poem by Emily Dickinson:
We grow accustomed to the Dark —
When light is put away —
As when the Neighbor holds the Lamp
To witness her Goodbye —
A Moment — We uncertain step
For newness of the night —
Then — fit our Vision to the Dark —
And meet the Road — erect —
And so of larger — Darkness —
Those Evenings of the Brain —
When not a Moon disclose a sign —
Or Star — come out — within —
The Bravest — grope a little —
And sometimes hit a Tree
Directly in the Forehead —
But as they learn to see —
Either the Darkness alters —
Or something in the sight
Adjusts itself to Midnight —
And Life steps almost straight.