Loving Life
By Robert Gerzon
In those moments
when we love life with every cell of our being, we experience our greatest joy.
We've all seen that joyful shimmer radiating from a baby's body, shining from a
child's face with pure delight.
What happens to us
over the years? How do we "lose that loving feeling"? How can we
return to our original Eden of joy?
These questions
have guided my life's search. The answer that keeps coming up most consistently
is "fear." Fear (anxiety) blocks the experience of joy. More
precisely, it is our response to fear that is the problem.
What's the first
thing we do in response to fear? We judge. We have been taught to judge. (Have
you ever met a judgmental baby?)
"This should
not be happening." "You are wrong." "I did something
bad." Our judging only creates more fear and more defenses that block love
from reaching us.
Nonjudging
(acceptance) is the path to peace. Jesus, as well as other great spiritual
teachers, was very clear about how to find freedom from judgment's double-edged
sword: "Judge not, that ye be not judged."
How can we break
this all-too-human habit of judging? Try an experiment today: Notice the
judgments that arise in response to events without becoming attached to them.
Then release your judgments and enjoy the serenity that comes with
unconditional acceptance. It is this spirit of acceptance that ushers us into
the paradise of the present moment -- the simple delight in "what
is".
The challenge, of
course, comes when we encounter a threat to our well-being such as illness,
pain, relationship problems or financial difficulties. How can we accept these
without judging? Aren't they obviously "bad"?
One of the most
challenging assaults to serenity is intense chronic pain. Darlene Cohen, author
of Finding a Joyful Life in the Heart of Pain, suffers from crippling arthritis
that affects every joint in her body. "I was caught on the hook, and I
realized that 'this is my life'; I can either remain unconscious or come into
it and live this life." By practicing awareness and acceptance, Darlene
found that "tendrils of pleasure began creeping into my hell."
A college student
I have been counseling completed the past academic year successfully while
battling anxiety and terrifying panic attacks. With growing courage and compassion
she is learning to face her anxiety and accept the inner life of the emotions
without judgment. This summer she discovered the poems of Rumi, a thirteenth
century mystic, and sent me one that had spoken to her. It brought me comfort
the day I received it and I'd like to share it with you.
The Guest House
(translated by Coleman Barks, The Essential Rumi)
(translated by Coleman Barks, The Essential Rumi)
"This being human is a guest-house,
Every morning a new arrival.
Every morning a new arrival.
A joy, a depression, a meanness,
Some momentary awareness comes
As an unexpected visitor.
Some momentary awareness comes
As an unexpected visitor.
Welcome and entertain them all!
…treat each guest honorably…
…treat each guest honorably…
The dark thought, the shame, the malice,
meet them at the door laughing,
and invite them in.
meet them at the door laughing,
and invite them in.
Be grateful for whoever comes,
because each has been sent
As a guide from beyond."
because each has been sent
As a guide from beyond."
Another Rumi poem,
a favorite of mine, begins with the stark observation:
"Today, like every other day, I wake up empty and
frightened."
So Rumi, too, was
anxious. He learned to accept his anxiety (and even proclaim it to the world in
his poetry) instead of judging it as something bad. Accepting his existential
angst, he used anxiety to become more aware, more radically alive!
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