Archive for the ‘meditation’ Category

SLC Beatdown

Friday, August 13th, 2010

I’m walking down a sidewalk (don’t remember the surrounding environment, but it seems very open, pseudo-urban, industrial. More cement. Maybe some grass. Maybe I’m in downtown Lincoln. Or Salt Lake City, since I recently watched SLC Punk and it seems to have had an affect on me… maybe some of the landscape shots seeped into my long-term memory.) There is a group of “kids” sitting on the sidewalk. They are trying to watch me subtly, but I’m older than they are and I’m “like them” – so I’m a few steps ahead because I’ve been like them longer than they have. (I’ve often thought that I would still have a teenage mindset after I became an adult.) so I know they’re watching me. I can tell they’re going to ambush me as I walk by. They don’t want anything, they’re just angry and violent and they want to smear somebody. Maybe kill me in the process. Maybe it’s a premonition, maybe I can see their weapons. I don’t remember. I know there are rocks lying nearby. Some of the kids seem to either be reaching “subtly” for the rocks, or already holding them out of sight.

As I walk by they start up. One or two kids throw rocks at me. But I change my pace with more subtlety than they had – I actually pass through the other side of the group right at the moment they had meant to surround me (a miscalculation they wouldn’t have made if they’d thought I knew what they were up to).

On my far thigh, I’m drawing my Stiletto (the one I laid on my desk before I went to sleep. This is how I know it’s a dream – and realizing this, I also realize that “realizing it’s a dream” cuts my time-to-wake down to a few real-time seconds, so I’d better resolve the situation quickly.) It seems there must have been other people around who I didn’t want to see this, or maybe I was trying, with what little knowledge of weapons that I have, to hold the knife in a good position (kind of like you keep your hands in front of
your face when boxing.)

*snap* They don’t hear it (the blade coming out)… they keep moving toward me as a threatening mass. I feel threatened, don’t show it on my face. I’m [...] fearless [...] with a machine gun. This irks them a bit… I turn so they can see my knife. In my mind, I’m fighting them off like an action hero movie already, all at once. (Interesting to note that I use visualization in a dream. I’m not sure how this is possible but I distinctly remember generating imaginary images which I also remember distinctly, images that were distinct from the “images” representing the events of my dream). The willing suspension of disbelief gives me the ridiculous ardor I need to hide the fact that I’m genuinely intimidated. They stop short, intimidated themselves. Hesitation. I’ll play to it. Make them confuse this perfectly valid moment of pausing-to-reevaluate-their-strategy with fear.

“OK, WHO WANTS TO GET CUT FIRST??” It’s a psychological question – smarter than a threat, smarter than using the F-word (which would make them feel tougher for being “man enough” to listen to), smarter than something like, “I’ll take you all on!”… no one wants to be that one guy who gets it before the others take me down. (Also, “getting cut” sounds like it hurts more than “getting killed.”) Crowds are braver than individuals. These guys have beat people up before, but none of them have ever been stabbed. And, they may be street smart, but none of them have studied psychology. I’ve often marveled at my real-life ability to bring academic, intellectual reason to bear on a situation within a fraction of a second. Besides which, if it comes down to it, I have nothing to lose by fighting them all at once, to the death, … in fact, they’ve taken away my other options. And I think they can see that.

I lift my knife a little and they back down in a torrent of epithets. I’m a [...] chicken. I ought to pick on someone my own size. That type of thing. (The word poser has to be in there, although I don’t remember it specifically. It’s a general insult that keeps careening around, bouncing off the walls my subconscious.) They seem to sit down or fade away, give up and turn away and I jerk abruptly into wakefulness. Apparently I pushed that dream all the way to its limit.

Interestingly, I have meditated on the idea of carrying a knife into my dreams with me (although not this one), concentrated on the feel of it’s contours in my hand, the way it looks. Drawing it from a pouch on my belt seems to have been a freebie, especially considering that this part of the dream wasn’t fully developed into an event which I experienced as much so as it was a fact (where did this knife come from? Oh, I pulled it out of that pouch.).

This is one of the first recollections I have of diffusing a threatening situation in a dream without violence. I’ve shot gangsters, [... fought someone off] with a frying pan, [... defeated] intruders [...] or hit them over the head with the leg from an old table I used to have. I’ve also been [killed in various ways...] but I’ve never beaten a person or group of people who threatened my life or safety without harming anyone. I wonder if this has something to do with my recent thoughts on the pure stupidity of violence and the senseless mind-set people have in my hometown of always being ready for a fight. My recent thoughts about running first and fighting later. Maybe it’s the discovery I made within the last couple of weeks that I can still fight after all my physical resources have apparently been exhausted that causes me to feel a bit safer expending other energies before taking someone on in a fight. In any case the non-violent solution didn’t lead to my destruction any more than a violent solution led to safety (since it most likely would not have).

In addition, this seems to have been a successful experiment in rudimentary lucid dreaming. I say rudimentary because this off-the-cuff solution is obviously contrived and unrealistic – how convenient that this particular demographic chose to ambush me instead of a more commonly occurring class of violent mob that prides itself on a nearly self-sacrificial machismo. (Like most of the gangs I would have been likely to encounter in my old neighborhood.) How convenient that they were unarmed (particularly with the type of pipes and clubs they would have had in the movie, or even with guns).

It’s also possible that I was using this dream as a vehicle for clarifying the observation I’ve made about “Lincolnites”… specifically that they possess a capacity for committing acts of violence, but seem to lack the “hardened” anti-social mentality of a real, hard-core “gangster.”

Now that I think of it, my choice of demographic may also yield some insight. Watching SLC Punk I noticed that the “real” punks spent time whipping up on the “posers” – the “punks” would sweep in and clobber the other kids, who never had a chance in the face of someone who was genuinely “hard core” and experienced with the tough realities of life on the streets. I’ve been bothered by the idea that maybe I will never be anything but a poser since I’m neither given over to violence nor stepped in daily, stereotypical “anarchic” behavior such as robbing liquor stores or driving 25 miles per hour over the speed limit. However in the dream, it was these “real punks” that threatened me, and that eventually backed down in the face of something that was “genuinely” intimidating, which was ME. It was perhaps a Freudian “fulfillment-of-a-wish” type confirmation that I’m that much more genuinely “hard core” than the “posers” that go around trying to use violence to prove how tough they are precisely by virtue of the characteristics they would criticize me for, possibly coupled with my geographical background. (Remember how they called me a poser and yet, in the end, it was they who were the posers.)

The other dream, I can’t remember.

What I really think…

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

I knew it wasn’t anger then, watching the knife fall in slow motion, ripples on the water. This thing that tears away at my insides, not pain… channeled into rage and violence. And yet I seem to be incapable of violent emotion. Reactions ebb and fade as I stare blindly. Left with nothing but this putrid calm. My head reeling from things that I’ve done… but would it reel like this if I wasn’t so sick? Guilt, fear and passion swallowed by depression, churned and mixed until there’s nothing left but exhaustion. No desire for revenge, no desire for escape or release, no desire… at all. (If this is Samadhi I’d rather have a mildewed mind). Except perhaps for the meaningless fleshly “delights”.

I’ve stepped out of my comfort zone without adapting to the new surroundings. So this is what it’s like to live with the consequences of your mistakes. If it was anger I could hurt my enemies without any remorse. If it was pain I would be able to think of a reason, and it wouldn’t tear apart the fabric of my soul. Maybe it’s nothing but allergies… but then it would mean all this suffering is meaningless (not to mention that it would fail to inspire any prose).

I think the philosophers were insane.

Eyebrow Raisers

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

Have you ever met a ‘bear robbed of her cubs’? You know, a really teeth-bearing, unreasoning, desperate, ready for some hard-core limb-ripping action Panda, Koala or what-have-you? Neither have I, but some days, I think it might be a nice change…

I’d like to take the day off and go to school, maybe hand out signs. “Here’s yours. Here’s yours. Ooo, and you DEFINATLY need one. (saw it spelled like this on an old-school BBS one time. Truly amazing.) And, I don’t usually do this, but in your case maybe you’d like a loud siren to go with it??”

Oh, and here’s one. Sure, the Lord made all things, “even the fool for the day of destruction…” but couldn’t He have at least provided some kind of fire safety net, to keep the rest of us from running across their Pathway to an Unspeakable Demise? Seriously…

Don’t bother reviewing this post, by the way; I’ll do it myself. “If this is his idea of a catharsis, then I’d hate to see masoc__sm. This just goes to show that if a stronger, freer spirit does or says anything to hurt your pride, you can always sanctimoniously dehumanize them without fear of reprisal.”

P.S. Imagine… Christian Tourette’s. “Hey, could you HALLELUJAH! hand me the wrench? I want to f-f- REPENT! fix the sink. PRAISE JESUS!”

Prayer and Sin

Wednesday, January 7th, 2009

In my study of world religions I came across two serious objections to the teachings of Christianity. Most of the objections I come across are stupid and poorly-thought-out, but these two have cropped up in my thinking again and again, because they seem to make a certain amount of sense.

The first is about prayer, and I believe I finally have an answer. It ocurred to me while I was reading Murray’s book, “With Christ in the School of Prayer.” But the explanation requires a little excursion into my train of thought.

Prayer, from the perspective of a thinking outside observer, appears to be little more than ineffectual hoping. You might balk at the idea, but think about it for a minute. How do you explain all of those ‘no’ answers? “It wasn’t God’s will.” And in response to, “Why pray then?”, we usually say something that can be reduced to, “God just likes to hear what we’re thinking once in awhile, so He won’t get lonely.” Or worse, “Well, if you don’t pray, then you’re sure not to get it, because God often waits to carry out His will until someone prays for it.”

Then you have to go on to argue, “Then is God’s hand shortened, that it cannot save?” Of course not… and a 5-pointed Calvinist (this term is used derisively on purpose, and therefore doesn’t apply to you Calvinists of a sharper disposition) says, “well, God always ordains someone to ask Him to do what He wants to do.” That sounds to me like a bit of stretch–

But it gets even worse when the rubber meets the road, and we come right down to my personal prayer life. Because when I pray, how am I, as an individual, supposed to know whether what I am praying for is God’s will, and; therefore, whether or not I will get an answer? In effect, the neigh-sayers are right. I’m only expressing my desires to God, with the vague hope that what I ask for will coincide with His will. And if this is true, then what is prayer if not a useless, misplaced desire– a lazy replacement for taking action?

Indeed, certain religions take this “prayer,” which I have just described, and which ocurrs primarily in a self-subjugated position called “kneeling;” and, they replace it with a little thing called “Will,” which is capitalised in those belief systems just as it is here. The idea is, the stronger your will is, the more likely you are to get what you ask for, because instead of asking for what you want, and asking, and asking and asking, and doing nothing at all, you say, “Hallowed be MY name! MY kingdom come… MY will be done on earth, for there IS no heaven!!” And that is supposed to increase the likelihood that you will get up, go outside, and accomplish more of what you want by the time you expire than the ineffectual, unfaithful prayer of an unrighteous man could avail in ten thousand years.

Well, first of all, these religions also have loopholes. If you don’t get what you want, then either you didn’t want it badly enough (your will was either weak or divided), or you wanted something that just wasn’t possible. After all, there are still the laws of nature to consider– but since we’re trying to get what we want, why not do as much as possible to stack things in our favor? Here is where Christianity actually trumps, because our God is not confined by our thinking, and He can do things that don’t fit our superimposed models of observation, these so-called “natural laws”. The difference here isn’t that those with the Will to Power [Nietsche, Beyond Good and Evil; and Freud, On the Interperetation of Dreams] somehow vouchsafe to themselves the impossible; the difference is supposed to be that the Freudians and Nietsche-ans go out and take, while many (and I dare say, most!) Christians sit around and hope that things will start going their way.

Second of all, there’s what I read in Murray’s book. He reawakens the importance of the will in our prayer life, to a degree our detractors and I have never fully grasped:

“But the word of the Master teaches us more. He does not say, What dost thou wish? but, What does thou will? One often wishes for a thing without willing it. I wish to have a certain article, but I find the price too high; I resolve not to take it; I wish, but do not will to have it. The sluggard wishes to be rich, but does not will it. Many a one wishes to be saved, but perishes because he does not will it. The will rules the whole heart and life; if I really will to have anything that is within my reach, I do not rest till I have it. And so, when Jesus says to us, ‘What wilt thou?’ He asks whether it is indeed our purpose to have what we ask at any price, however great the sacrifice. Dost thou indeed so will to have it that, though He delay it long, thou dost not hold thy peace till He hear thee? Alas! how many prayers are wishes, sent up for a short time and then forgotten, or sent up year after year as matter of duty, while we rest content with the prayer without the answer.

“But, it may be asked, is it not best to make our wishes known to God, and then to leave it to Him to decide what is best, without seeking to assert our will? By no means. This is the very essence of the prayer of faith, to which Jesus sought to train His disciples, that it does not only make known its desire and then leave the decision to God. [emphasis mine.] That would be the prayer of submission, for cases in which we cannot know God’s will. But the prayer of faith, finding God’s will in some promise of the Word, pleads for that till it come. In Matthew (ix. 28) we read Jesus said to the blind man: ‘Believe ye that I can do this?’ Here, in Mark, He says: ‘What wilt thou that I should do?’ In both cases He said that faith had saved them. And so He said to the Syrophenician woman, too: ‘Great is thy faith: be it unto thee even as thou wilt.’ Faith is nothing but the purpose of the will resting on God’s word, and saying: I must have it. To believe truly is to will firmly.

“But is not such a will at variance with our dependence on God and our submission to Him? By no means; it is much rather the true submission that honours God” (75-76).

Need I say more? All of you who denounce displace prayer with Will Power, this is my answer! You are not limited by the laws of nature but by the will of God! No amount of magic(k) or effort can overcome it! And to you Christians I say, stop praying ineffectively! You are limited by the Will of God only, and He is a kind and merciful God, Who is delighted to give us more than we need.

The second is about sin. I mean, I’m working on memorizing these verses, right? From the Vest Pocket Companion for Christian Workers, by R.A. Torrey. And one of the first verses in there is I John 1:8, “If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us.” Which is pretty bad news… since we are supposed to “be perfect, just as [our] Father in heaven is perfect;” and, “stand in awe, and sin not.” I was talking to one of my friends and he said, it seems like it’s just setting you up to fail. Clearly the Lord doesn’t want us to spend all of our time in the temple, beating ourselves up and crying, “have mercy on me, a sinner!” Besides, isn’t God “faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above what ye are able; but will with the temptation provide a way of escape, that ye may be able to bear it?” Then why are we condemned to perpetuate this “wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from the body of this death?”

Well, the only plausible explanation that I can come up with is, this whole life is just one long, torturous purification ritual. We are doomed to be punished and to suffer and to repent, and repent again and, just when we feel that we’ve suffered enough to have ceased from sin (I Peter 4:1), we run up against I John 1:8. Where does it end? Don’t you know, it’s pretty stressful being stuck in this rut with pretty much a guarantee that the only escape is death. Any thoughts?? Because I’d just like to put my sin behind me, once and for all. lol

Buddhism is Blatantly Immoral

Thursday, September 4th, 2008

“Karma explains the problem of sufferings, the mystery of the so-called fate and predestination of some religions, and above all the apparent inequality of mankind.”

“Maitri or Metta in Pali (Loving Kindness) and Karuna (Compassion) to all living beings including animals. Buddhism strictly forbids animal sacrifice for whatever reason. Vegetarianism is recommended but not compulsory;” HOWEVER, “Buddhism goes beyond doing good and being good. One must not be attached to good deeds or the idea of doing good; otherwise it is just another form of craving.” Instead, “In Buddhism, the ultimate objective of followers/practitioners is enlightenment and/or liberation.” And, “The idea of sin or original sin has no place in Buddhism. Also, sin should not be equated to suffering.”

(These quotations are from http://www.buddhanet.net/e-learning/snapshot01.htm) As this page explains, the goals of Buddhism are completely self-serving. There is no sin, and there is no special need for or attachment to good works, or to other people. The goal of enlightenment, (Knowledge is the idol of Buddhism) takes precedence over love for the Lord or for others. In fact, love, as a Christian understands it, constitutes WRONG THINKING and WRONG ACTIONS (there is no sin) for a Buddhist.

Beware. Your Buddhist friends don’t care what happens to you.

A New Invitation

Monday, August 18th, 2008

I’m thinking – I’m not feeling.
My emotion’s hit a ceiling.
Open me up to You.
I’ve often contemplated where I’ve been situated.
Tried to change, but I’m still jaded,
So open me up to You.

My heart’s frozen under like tundra.
My eye-light’s an eclipse with no penumbra,
So open my up to You.
Cold and empty, lonely, dry insanity
Motivates me to pursue true Christianity.
Put prayer in my mouth instead of profanity
And open me up to You.

Time and money are not objects.
My friends, family, and all of my projects,
So open me up to You.
I’ve read about it in the Bible.
Melt my flesh and give me a new revival.
Your grace is the key to my survival.
So open me up to You.

They said…

Monday, June 30th, 2008

“Be a man.” It was the voices in my head. Not literally; it’s just those figurative voices, my guesses about what people would say, if they could hear my thoughts and be brutally honest.

A bullet seems to have hit me out of a clear, sunlit sky. So with the fan on me, in my overstuffed chair, I pulled back the gray matter and, taking a pair of mental tweezers, I realized as I began to tug carefully (never-so-carefully!) that it may just have been one of “these ol’ wounds of mine, they just seem to start actin’ up every time the weather changes…” Like maybe it didn’t hit me today.

I’m remembering the English class I taught in Japan. The one that started a year ago this month, and how I brought watermelon to the graduation party. Or was it July. And how the door to my apartment was chained shut when I got home. (my fault!)

Now I have the bullet lying here in my lap, soaked with just a smidge of blood. It looks a lot smaller than I thought it would.