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Dissolving Solid Views
by Pema Chödrön
The secret of Zen is just two words:
not always so.
-- SHUNRYU SUZUKI ROSHI
 It
takes some training to equate complete letting go with comfort. But in fact,
"nothing to hold on to" is the root of happiness. There's a sense of freedom
when we accept that we're not in control. Pointing ourselves toward what we
would most like to avoid makes our barriers and shields permeable.
This may lead to a don't-know-what-to-do kind of feeling, a sense of being
caught in-between. On the one hand, we're completely fed up with seeking comfort
from what we can eat, drink, smoke, or couple with. We're also fed up with
beliefs, ideas, and "isms" of all kinds. But on the other hand we wish it were
true that outer comfort could bring lasting happiness.
This in-between state is where the warrior spends a lot of time growing up.
We'd give anything to have the comfort we used to get from eating a pizza or
watching a video. However, even though those things can be pleasurable, we've
seen that eating a pizza or watching a video is a feeble match for our
suffering. We notice this especially when things are falling apart. If we've
just learned that we have cancer, eating a pizza doesn't do much to cheer us up.
If someone we love has just died or walked out, the outer places we go for
comfort feel feeble and ephemeral.
We are told about the pain of chasing after pleasure and the futility of
running from pain. We hear also about the joy of awakening, of realizing our
interconnectedness, of trusting the openness of our hearts and minds. But we
aren't told all that much about this state of being in-between, no longer able
to get our old comfort from the outside but not yet dwelling in a continual
sense of equanimity and warmth.
Anxiety, heartbreak, and tenderness mark the in-between state. It's the kind
of place we usually want to avoid. The challenge is to stay in the middle rather
than buy into struggle and complaint. The challenge is to let it soften us
rather than make us more rigid and afraid. Becoming intimate with the queasy
feeling of being in the middle of nowhere only makes our hearts more tender.
When we are brave enough to stay in the middle, compassion arises spontaneously.
By not knowing, not hoping to know, and not acting like we know what's
happening, we begin to access our inner strength.
Yet it seems reasonable to want some kind of relief. If we can make the
situation right or wrong, if we can pin it down in any way, then we are on
familiar ground. But something has shaken up our habitual patterns and
frequently they no longer work. Staying with volatile energy gradually becomes
more comfortable than acting it out or repressing it. This open-ended tender
place is called bodhichitta. Staying with it is what heals. It allows us to let
go of our self-importance. It's how the warrior learns to love.
This is exactly how we're training every time we sit in meditation. We see
what comes up, acknowledge that with kindness, and let go. Thoughts and emotions
rise and fall. Some are more convincing than others. Habitually we are so
uncomfortable with that churned-up feeling that we'd do anything to make it go
away. Instead we kindly encourage ourselves to stay with our agitated energy by
returning to the breath. This is the basic training that we need to just keep
going forward, to just keep opening our heart.
Dwelling in the in-between state requires learning to contain the paradox of
something's being both right and wrong, of someone's being strong and loving and
also angry, uptight, and stingy. In that painful moment when we don't live up to
our own standards, do we condemn ourselves or truly appreciate the paradox of
being human? Can we forgive ourselves and stay in touch with our good and tender
heart? When someone pushes our buttons, do we set out to make the person wrong?
Or do we repress our reaction with "I'm supposed to be loving. How could I hold
this negative thought?" Our practice is to stay with the uneasiness and not
solidify into a view. We can meditate, or simply look at the open sky — anything
that encourages us to stay on the brink and not solidify into a view.
When we find ourselves in a place of discomfort and fear, when we're in a
dispute, when the doctor says we need tests to see what's wrong, we'll find that
we want to blame, to take sides, to stand our ground. We feel we must have some
resolution. We want to hold our familiar view. For the warrior, "right" is as
extreme a view as "wrong." They both block our innate wisdom. We stand at the
crossroads not knowing which way to go. The crossroads is an important place in
the training of a warrior. It's where our solid views begin to dissolve.
Holding the paradox is not something any of us will suddenly be able to do.
That's why we're encouraged to spend our whole lives training with uncertainty,
ambiguity, insecurity. To stay in the middle prepares us to meet the unknown
without fear; it prepares us to face both our life and our death. The in-between
state — where moment by moment the warrior finds himself learning to let go — is
the perfect training ground. It really doesn't matter if we feel depressed about
that or inspired. There is absolutely no way to do this just right. That's why
compassion, along with courage, are vital: they give us the resources to be
genuine about where we are, but at the same time to know that we are always in
transition, that the only time is now, and that the future is completely
unpredictable and open.
As we continue to train, we evolve beyond the little me who continually seeks
zones of comfort. We gradually discover that we are big enough to hold something
that is neither lie nor truth, neither pure nor impure, neither bad nor good.
But first we have to appreciate the richness of the groundless state and hang in
there.
It's important to hear about this in-between state. Otherwise we think the
warrior's journey is one way or the other; either we're all caught up or we're
free. The fact is that we spend a long time in the middle. This juicy spot is a
fruitful place to be. Resting here completely — steadfastly experiencing the
clarity of the present moment — is called enlightenment.
This
article was excerpted from The Places That Scare You, ©2001, by Pema
Chodron.
Reprinted with permission of the publisher, Shambhala Publications, Inc.
www.shambhala.com
Info/Order this book.
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About the Author
 PEMA
CHODRON is an American Buddhist nun and one of the foremost students of Chogyam
Trungpa, the renowned Tibetan meditation master. She is the author of
The Wisdom of No Escape,
Start Where You Are, and the
best-selling
When Things Fall Apart. She is
the resident teacher at Gampo Abbey, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, in Canada, the
first Tibetan monastery for Westerners.
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