Parenting Towards Enlightenment

We, a class of aspiring yoga teachers, are sitting on the floor of the meditation hall at the ashram in India when the conversation turns to the conflict between practice and parenting. “But how,” asks one of the men, “do you work with being here when your children are somewhere else? You have to worry about them, think about them… otherwise…” His hands go up in a gesture of helplessness. I (chagrined) admit a moment of surprise, because this is usually a conversation had amongst mothers, and to hear a man in a traditionally patriarchal society express the same concerns brings me back to reality. Parenting is this agreement we all make, described by Elizabeth Stone as letting your heart walk around outside of yourself.

I try to take it up, this question. How do you be here when they are elsewhere? How did I justify leaving my three children for an entire month to go to the other side of the planet where (it turns out) I will be unsuccessful even at finding the post office to send home the promised letters, let alone making a weekly phone call? And how is this search for myself related to my search for their mother, hidden somewhere inside me?

The teacher offers mother-love, the mythic, all-giving, all-merging force. The Mother, she says, sacrifices of herself for the sake of her children. The boundaries blur, her self is merged with that of her children, the Love is complete.

“No, no!” my inward protest screams. “That’s a recipe for disaster! Don’t you understand? Mothering must include the art of letting go, of moving from a place of merging, where even yourbodies are shared, to letting thinner and thinner tendrils connect you… it is a process by which you remain and become separate people.”

What I actually say, stumbling, is something like, “I need to have faith that I am not the only one. My children are surrounded by a web of other adults who support their growth. And worrying about them isn’t really about them. It is a superstitious belief that I can somehow influence their environment, keep them safe simply by fearing that they might not be. That just keeping them in the background of my awareness is somehow necessary to maintain the relationship to them. It is, in fact, taking care of the fear that if I stop that worrying, even for a moment, it is a sign that I don’t care.”

Despite years of education and training, daily exposure to cynicism and a tendency to a too-scientific view of the world, my superstitions run deep.
When my children were infants, I was afraid to sleep, believing somehow that their continued existence in the world relied on my sheer force of will. I’d like to say that this improved by number three, but it didn’t really. Some nights, even now, I peek into the children’s rooms on the way down the hall, just to make sure that I haven’t imagined the whole thing, and that no thief has come in the night, stealing these parts of my heart. There they all lie, even the 13 year old whose feet are now larger than mine, breathing quietly all these years later, with no effort on my part. I name this fear, that if I glance away, even for a moment, if I fail to show my appreciation, maybe they will be taken from me. Better not to chance it.

***

When my mother came to meet my first son, mere hours old, I held him up and said, “Hey, Mom! Look what I made!” She grinned. I grinned. We were as proud as when we shared my macaroni-and-handprint crafts in kindergarten. Yet even in that placental space, it’s not quite true that “I” made “him”. I had to walk through the world and gather the molecules from which my son would assemble himself, according to codes so complex that we don’t yet understand them. In this process I was neither the agent nor a mere vessel: he and I grew as entwined systems, evolving, communicating, sharing the resources of time and energy. It continues even now, as my limited time must be allocated among family members and my ever-growing list of projects, becoming myself among them.

In the varied practices of meditation and yoga, I learn to hold up my motivations to my own internal scrutiny. On the one hand, I don’t want to be a mother who treats her children as an extension of herself. This is an easy mistake to make, in a world in which we are judged based on our children’s behaviours. I admit feeling a pinch of pride when older women stop me in restaurants to say, “Your children are so polite.” (I even put it in here. You may call me on it.) Yet I pat myself on the back for having chosen to let them grow away from me organically. I take a certain amount of satisfaction in having faith that they will be OK for a month, even while feeling like I should probably miss them more.

It is a matter of some effort, placing my awareness on this ever-shifting boundary: where do I stop and you begin, child of mine? When I do this thing for you (whatever it is) am I responding to an actual need, or am I projecting one of my needs upon you? Worse, am I doing it to prove something to myself or the world around me, that I am able to play this role, that I am worthy to be this Mother of myth?

Which brings me back to that ashram in India. There is a message for my children even in my absence, and it is this: Someday you will be adults and you will leave me. We are in this for the long haul, you and I, but one of my tasks is to grow away from you, so that when you leave the parting will be gentle. The motion of two human beings, having walked together for so long, finally walking apart.

And in the meantime, as in so much of our practice, the instructions are, “Not too tight, not too loose.”

Peaceful Practice

This was originally posted on The Peaceful Professional, another blog of mine which has apparently suffered catastrophic failure due to neglect. That is to say, I can’t find it any more, having made some errors in setting it up that I haven’t been able to repair. It is dead (for now), but the writing lives on. Go, writing.

A couple of years ago, in a moment of frustration/inspiration, I grabbed a permanent marker and wrote on the wall in my sunroom. “Life is Practice,” I reminded myself. I was in the middle of parenting, writing, partnering, thinking about the meaning of it all, and trying to make time for practice in the midst of the chaos. It was around the same time that I placed the shelf with the children’s toys on it directly below my own shelf of sacred objects (among them a statue of the Buddha, a bowl for alms, a carving of the triple goddess, and a Galilean thermometer.)

But as true as this was, it didn’t negate the need for time on the mat, on the cushion, and alone with my thoughts. The practice of daily life is to apply the practice of… well. Practice. It’s like daily life is the performance, and the time for intentional Practice is the warm up, the rehearsal. The scales, if you will allow me to continue my musical metaphor.

“My life is not busy, it is full.” A new friend reminded me of this the other day. It echoes the words of another friend/teacher of mine, who said when I commented on her heavy bags at the farmer’s market, “No, not burdened. Laden.”

This is the fruit of Practice. The mind leaps to new places, develops new tracks, new default ways of framing experience. We are able to think different things, having confronted, relaxed with, and integrated the things we thought before. In my case, Practice leans heavily on Buddhist meditation and yoga… although I’m exploring the subtleties of those. I’m starting to realize that they may not be strictly compatible in terms of foundational assumptions about the world. Nevertheless, they provide useful ways of working with the mind. “Skillful means,” in the words of the Buddhists.

This is an approach that works with my engineering/scientific training. On the one hand, I am very interested in how things work… but on the other, I am equally contented to explore whether they work, whether we understand the mechanism or not. I understand that I may therefore be doing things that are not necessary. Perhaps someday we will be able to trim this all to the bare essentials. I am down to following the breath while sitting on a comfortable cushion on the floor, though, so there isn’t a lot more to trim down. Not in the ritual, at least. Notice the thought, label it thinking, come back to the breath. Such simple instructions, such a difficult thing to do. Some days my labelling sounds like this: “Thinking, thinking, thinking, th, thi, th…”

But somehow, it translates into a calmer mind. I find myself in the midst of frustration spontaneously labelling: “Thinking,” I think, and sometimes the quiet comes. Sometimes only for a moment, but sometimes… sometimes it just works. It didn’t used to work.

The goal… it is not to stop thinking. So many people I love tell me, “Oh, I can never meditate. My mind just runs on and on and on…”

“Of course,” I want to say, (but I am their friend, not their teacher.) “That is what minds do. And then they catch themselves. And come back to the breath.” Dearhearts, that is why it is called practice. Not performance. Not perfection. Just… Practice.

Poem: My Missing Skin

I think I left my skin somewhere.
How else to explain
This longing, yearning
To return to

the sea
the sky
the land

To crawl through the undergrowth
Belly-ground touching,
Scales tingling with
Anticipation

Oh, to eat

Unencumbered

To fly, knowing that

This is all there is!

To leap, fully alive,
From the depths and
come crashing down
All thirty glorious TONS of me!

Yes.
There must have been a skin lost.

Perhaps I left it up that tree,
Or in the glade where they
cornered me.
Humiliation has a way of causing
forgetting.

Maybe it is hiding in the corner of some playground,
Under a pile of leaves,
Trying to figure out the teasing
Rules. You, not you. Take
Three.
Big.
Steps.

I slip into it sometimes: one Perfect outfit.
Look into the mirror and sigh with
recognition. Ah, yes! That’s me.

Look at me there! Tall and glorious and
exuberant and loud.

How do we live our lives like this, in
skins two sizes too small? Always afraid of
Moving too fast,
Breathing too deeply,
Stretching too high for fear of

Splitting
The seams.

I could be anything

If you could be anything, what would it be?

“Anything?” she said.

“Sure. Anything.”

hmm… famous, beautiful, rich, immortal, a whale, a dolphin, a famous movie star…

“I’ve got it!” she said.

“So soon?”

“So soon, so obvious.”

“Well then, oh clever one, what will it be?”

“Complete.”

***

“And,” he said, after a pause punctuated by kisses and rejoicing, “What would that look like?”

“Ah,” she said, and rolled onto her back to look at the ceiling. “Therein lies the problem.”

***

What was it about the spaceship in Battlestar Galactica that appealed to me so much? At first glance, I’m sure the hybrids are meant to inspire horror, the mumbling form trapped forever in a vat of slime. “Oh!” I said, “I want to be a spaceship!” My partner was duly scandalized: “WHAT!?!”

“A spaceship! I want to be a spaceship.” No five-year-old was ever more certain than my 40-year-old self in that moment.

“But they’re trapped there!”

“No, they’re not. They can feel all the bits of the ship. Their body extends out into space. They can feel the minds of everybody on board. And they have long range scanners! What’s not to love?”

***

Several weeks later he asked me, “Do you still want to be a spaceship?” (incredulous, I think, although he could repeat back to me my reasoning.) “Yup! Plug me in, baby!”

Now the weirdest thing is, I would claim not to have a transhumanist bone in my body. I don’t even carry my cell phone consistently; forget about being all Borg-y with the Bluetooth. What kind of chicken-keeping, organic-gardening, yoga-twisting, home-birthin’ hippie holds secret aspirations of becoming the beating heart of a spaceship?

Well. Me, apparently.

***

Neil Young’s Legend in her Time comes on the radio and I sing loudly. “…somewhere on a desert highway, she rides a Harley Davidson, her long blonde hair flying in the wind…” My voice catches in my throat, the image so vivid, so appealing… even though I would never ride a motorcycle without a helmet. I know that yearning, to be… to be… somebody else. The somebody you once were, dreamed of becoming, might have been.

I don’t, I now admit, really want to be a spaceship. I’m sure if the aliens turned up tomorrow with a waiting place for me, I would balk, run back to my waiting children. Who would drive them to swimming lessons? (my last meek protest before booking my plane ticket to India last fall) But there is something in this prospect of merging that I can almost taste. I imagine finally having enough mind to encompass my thoughts, these things outside my control which go racing, tumbling one over the other until I can’t tease out the separate threads into a coherent paragraph mathintoscienceintophilosophyintoendlesstodolists. It is the eternal torment of the incessant “why” that I want to escape.

I could hop onto a motorcycle and let the wind blow it all away, or jack into a greater consciousness…

The spaceship still has a body, I insist on pointing out. It is a body made of wires and tubes, but a body nonetheless. A mind that runs incessantly, popping into conscious communication now and then to communicate only a garbled and mysterious prophecy. I don’t know. This should sound awful to me, but there is something so compelling… so… familiar…

***

“… when I went in seeking clarity…”

Serial Having it All

Several years ago, I was in the midst of a frantic time. I was working, going to school, still nursing a baby, up all night, getting up and driving to work at 6:30, getting home at 7:00 (or later), living on fast food and coffee, and generally… well. Frantic. And out of shape. Very out of shape.

One day in the middle of this, they had a life coach on the lunch time phone-in show. I called in, looking more for reassurance than guidance, truth-be-told. “I’ve been dealing with all of this, I’m only sleeping 3-1/2 hours a night, I know I need to eat better and get some exercise, but I’m just exhausted.” We talked for a long time (much longer than usual for these phone-ins) and I eventually said, “I think maybe we can have it all, just not all at once.” He concurred, wished me luck and moved on to the next caller.

And did the next caller start with a question? No. She said, “Well, that lady just needs to get up half an hour earlier so that she can go for a walk every morning.”

I looked at my radio, incredulous. Did you even HEAR the part about 3-1/2 hours of sleep a night? Nursing a baby? Writing papers until 2 in the morning before getting up at 6 to drive 100 km to work? My major health risk isn’t my weight or my diet; it’s dying in a fiery wreck when I fall asleep behind the wheel on the 401. (Frankly, I don’t think I should have been permitted to drive at all under those conditions… except that then I would have lost my house on account of not paying the mortgage. I apologize to everybody who shared the road with me for endangering your lives.)

Having it All – A Trap!

I tried to have it all. I spent many years assuming that everybody else was just better at it than me. That their houses were always tidy, that they never had to threaten their children with haircuts to get them to submit to the brush, that somehow, magically, they had more hours in the day so that they were able to cook the healthy meals that they were serving to their children who ate them gratefully and blissfully an hour before they got home from work. (Did I mention that during several of these years my husband was a graduate student, so I was also the primary earner in our household?)

So, um. It didn’t work. And then I spent a fair length of time (like, years, maybe) thinking that maybe it didn’t work just ’cause I was bad at it. Even after that conversation on the radio.

I have a hypothesis. That is, I think I have an explanation that I can’t prove. That’s like a hypothesis, right? This problem of failing to “have it all” seems to be  associated with the middle class, particularly “professional” women. And the explanation I have come to is this: We’re not the class we think we are. We were raised both to be participating members of the leisure class, and simultaneously to provide all our own support. You know those people of past generations that we compare ourselves to? The ones who accomplished so much? For the most part, they had… (stage whisper) WIVES. And/or servants. Chatelaines. Butlers. Somebody else took care of the necessary parts of life so that they could carry on doing the “work” of the leisure class. Thinking, reading, writing, researching were the point of their days… they weren’t also coming home, making dinner, doing the laundry, putting the kids to bed and then trying to fit in 4 more hours of work before they started it all over the next day… We’re trying to be multiple people all at the same time, and each of those roles is a full life in and of itself…

I found this in draft from last year. I still don’t know how to finish it. Maybe because I still haven’t reconciled the reality of my life with the narrative of the “successful woman.” That is, I still don’t “have it all”, and thus don’t feel entitled to speak about it. Does this resonate with anybody?

Saruman is not our Leader

I want to get one thing straight. We’re not secretly evil. (1) It’s not like Canadians are trying to create Orthanc in the Boreal Forest… it’s just kind of… happening.

You know, you can basically have the Global Warming/Climate Change/Environmental Pollution conversation with any five-year-old caught in the middle of trashing his room…
“Augh! What are you doing?!”
“What?”
“This room! It’s a disaster!”
“No it’s not.”
“Look! There’s stuff all over the floor!”
“It’s not that bad!”
“Your pillow’s in the closet! And where are the rest of your clothes?”
“I don’t know. Maybe my sister did it.”
“Your sister isn’t even here. She’s at school.”
“Well, maybe she did it before she left?”
“Look, I don’t care who did it, I just want it cleaned up.”
“But (bursts into tears) I didn’t *mean* to!”

(Then, being a good mother, I come to my senses, deal with the tears, put him on track to get the room tidied up, and eventually read everybody a story, probably without tipping to his sister that he tried to blame her.)

Maybe what we really need in this conversation is some Good Mothering. “There, there, Industrial Civilization. I know you don’t want to destroy the planet… but maybe we could do something about this need to boss everybody around and take all their toys? And while we’re at it, why don’t we do something about the mess in here?”


1. At least I hope we’re not secretly evil. If you are secretly evil, could you please let me know in the comments?

What Does It Mean?

An unsubtle synopsis of the last two decades of my unpublished writing which you should read while you can, because I’ll probably think better of it in an hour or two. “[These words.] I do not think they mean what you think they mean.”

The first clause of the code of ethics for the Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of Alberta reads:

“Professional engineers, geologists and geophysicists shall, in their areas of practice, hold paramount the health, safety and welfare of the public and have regard for the environment.”

These are the guys who, in the face of this:

EPA temperature projections

Have elected to do this:

Canadian Oil Sands. National Geographic. Photo by Peter Essick
http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2009/03/canadian-oil-sands/kunzig-text

I have written hundreds of pages about technical decision making. I went back to school to train myself in subtle, nuanced consideration so that I could be effective. I slid all the way from logical positivism to poststructuralism. I am sympathetic to the engineering mindset, and the reality that we have to exclude things to make problems solvable.

But sometimes, I still want to grab somebody by the collar, and yell, “What the FUCK are you thinking?!?”

Losing My Head

I don’t know about where you are, but around here we have a saying, “She’d lose her head if it weren’t attached.” It is (I fear) applied to people like me, those of us who are wont to put things down where we are standing and then wander around for half an hour saying, “Where’d I put that cup of coffee?” (Ans: look in the microwave.)

But at least I was pretty confident about my head.

Until I was at yoga practice one morning, doing a simple side bend, and the teacher came along and put his hand on the side of my face to straighten up my head. There it was, off at some random angle, probably twisted forward as well, being used as a counter-balance, or whatever habitual thing I do with it.

That afternoon, we were concentrating on hip-centred forward bends, keeping our spines neutral. “Watch what people do with their heads,” he said. Well, look at that. There we go again, moving our heads without paying attention to them, necks kinked backwards even when they think they’ve kept them in a line for the whole manoeuvre. Nope. Even though they are attached, here we all are, losing our heads. It was a humbling moment.

This is why we do asana… or at least part of it. We train ourselves to know where we are in space, to pay attention to the subtle movements of our limbs and joints. Adopting a posture, we make gross movements with control. “Bend forward from the hips, going only as far as you can maintain a neutral spine.” (1) And then, once we’re there, we can make the subtle adjustments necessary for the alignment of the asana.

For the last month, one of my key lessons has been Finding My Head.

As I take my seat, where is my head? Slouching at the table, reading something on the screen, my head slides forward and its weight is placed on my hand, straining my neck. I notice, correct, notice, correct. The principle of non-violence applies: I do not call myself names or roll my eyes. Just notice, straighten. Move the weight into the weight-bearing column to relieve the stress on the muscles. As it becomes a habit, I have noticed that I have to correct less frequently.  It gets easier to bend and get out the laundry without kinking my neck. I can sit at the keyboard longer and knit for longer periods of time without pain in my shoulders and hands.

This is the thing I want to teach in my yoga classes: it isn’t about the time on the mat. Think of the class as a lab for life. Here you are in a stripped-down environment with distractions kept to a minimum. The job is to pay attention to the body, and the breathing, and the mind. We do it on the mat to learn it as a skill. And then we discover that the job is always to pay attention to the body, and the breathing, and the mind. The mind is racing: bring it back to the task at hand. The breathing is shallow, jerky, warning us to listen… anxiety? Fear? Are we folded up and feeling draggy? The body is overstressed, reaching for sugar to keep running, or warning us at the limit of our extension that we are about to overstretch and pull something. Listen.

For now, I start with my head. Where is my head? It turns out that I’d lose it, even though it is attached.


1. People don’t like this instruction; they seem to want to touch their toes however they can get there. But then they miss the great benefit of going slowly, taking the lessons as they come.

When in Rishikesh…

All unannounced, (at least in blog-land) I went to India for a month last fall to study yoga and Ghandian philosophy. I couldn’t admit it to my blog, because then I would have had to admit it to myself, and I was having to sneak around my fears to be able to get myself to the plane. Someday, maybe I’ll tell you how to plan a trip without letting yourself know.

We could pretend that I managed to affect the role of the seasoned traveller, and that there was very little hand flapping. And that I did not cry tears of joy and anticipation on the plane over, distressing the flight attendants. But we would be lying.

Image
This is a picture from a field trip with the Bija Vidyapeeth group to a Sikh temple in Himchal Pradesh. We are from (in order) Austria, Tibet/Dharamsala, France/Madagascar, Canada. This is about 1/4 of the group. We garnered rather a lot of attention from the Indian pilgrims, many of whom wished photos with our motley crew.

***

I found myself one evening, on a tiny (10 rupee) ferry in the middle of the Ganges River at dusk, looking up at the bare sliver of a new moon, and realizing that I never could have planned this. The magic of that moment was complete. And then it just kept going, to the puja with the enormous statue of Shiva, out on a bridge in the river, looking back at the assembly of devotees chanting their nightly Hares. (1)

To placing our own offerings of flowers in the Ganges, splashing ourselves with the water at the edge of the ghat, and finding myself separated in a crowd from the woman who had my shoes in her backpack.

It would have been less amusing, I guess, if I had been able to remember the name of the ashram I was staying at. Or if I understood the vikram system, and why exactly we had taken 2 taxis on the way to the ferry. And if I knew how to hire a taxi to take me back to the ashram, which I was pretty sure involved crossing a footbridge. And so, I decided… she will find me. There is no point in panicking. Here I am, standing with my feet on the ground in India, surrounded by other people, also with their feet on the ground in India. And the phrase that is sometimes given us in meditation came to me, “What is it, exactly, that you are lacking in this moment?” My feet did not hurt. I had air to breathe. I had no need of water, and was not nearing death by any known means. I was not in imminent danger. So it was an adventure, not a crisis.

I stood on top of a wall, surveyed the crowd and waited. Somebody asked me, “Did they steal your shoes?” (It happens. That’s why my friend was carrying them.) “No. They’re in somebody’s backpack. She’ll come back for me.”

And she did. And then we went for pizza.

***

1. “Do you want to go to the puja?” had come the question. I had already determined to say yes to whatever adventures came my way. This is how I had come to the ferry, not knowing where I was. Pretty sure that the river was the Ganges, at least? As we got off the ferry, my Turkish roommate, a second year student, and thus an actual seasoned traveller, said, “The puja’s at 6 o’clock.” “Aha!” said my husband, as I told him this story. “So, it’s an event, then?” “Yes,” said I. “That’s about the point in the story where I figured that out.”

It’s the word for the ceremonial offerings in the Hindu tradition, it transpires. Frequently involving ghee.

The Kitties of XNOR

Whoa. Totally sounds like a sci-fi title. I promise there are kittens at the bottom of this post. It’s worth the math for the kittens.

The other night while playing board games, I had an obsessive need to remember what XNOR was for. It is a digital logic gate, but I couldn’t remember it. I was sitting there on the couch, running through OR, NOR, NAND, how to use NOR gates to construct a NAND, the meaning of XOR… but for the life of me, I couldn’t remember XNOR. I know. Good times.

“Exclusive NOR. Exclusive NOR. What could that possibly mean???” I refused the chance to play another game, turned on my cell phone at 11 o’clock at night and spent the next half hour reconstructing my digital logic foundations on the whiteboard in the living room.

XNOR plus gardening lists

This means that the operation is true if both of them are true, OR if both of them are false, but not if only one or the other is true. (I started that sentence with “in plain english”, but after I wrote the rest of the sentence, I deleted that part.)

Anyway. Once I figured this out, I asked my husband, “What is that good for? When would you use an XNOR?” And he said something about it being useful as a logic gate, mathematical calculations, blah blah blah… “No!” I said. (I’m emphatic about math.) “Give me an example of something that is true when both factors are false.” “mumble mumble…” (I got the same answer from a computer scientist the next day.)

And then I discovered the kitties of XNOR. The very next morning, I picked up these guys from the side of the road:

I realized that I was willing to give away both of the kittens. Or neither of the kittens. But I didn’t want to have somebody come and take one of them and leave me with the other. My internal truth-state was an XNOR. And the mystery was solved.

Ha, ha! Digital logic and kitties, together at last. The internet is complete.


No, Mom. I’m not keeping them. My friend the farmer had a surprising need for 2 kittens, and is coming to get them this week.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 271 other followers