Day 7 –So I woke up with a realization that after that literally insane experience when falling asleep that I definitely needed to see this process through. I had obviously touched on something and found some real scary things inside of me.
Even if it was making strange things
happen, I was learning a whole bunch and that these new experiences and
challenges were just the sort of things I wanted, and ultimately the type of
thing that is on a road to a rare destination. I went to morning meditation
with renewed energy and determination to get better at the technique and see
what else there was I could learn. Even if I thought I was destroying some of
the sankharas that I liked, I determined that I probably couldn’t do any long-term
damage to my ambition, my sex-drive, or anything else worth caring about in
just 10 days so I was probably going to be fine. Besides, I had committed to do
this for 10 days, so I was going to give it a full 10 days.
But in another immediate twist of attitudes,
and despite waking up so resolved that I was definitely seeing the process
through, by the afternoon I had once again decided that I was going to leave. I
thought I had reached the limit of how far I wanted to go…
This is how it happened. I was making my
second lap of my head to toe body scans in one of the afternoon sessions. I was
working my way down my face going feature by feature. I was going from my
cheeks (which were rather easy to find sensation) to my lips and they just sort
of connected. I was simultaneously feeling sensation in both of the areas. It
felt very strange because for the last several days I had just been
concentrating my mind on one very small section of my body at a time. And now
doing two at the same time seemed like it took a little bit of extra
concentration. Instead of playing toss I was now juggling two balls. I had to
keep my mind on the thing I was just looking at, but also use part of my brain
to go to another part at the same time, while still keeping an eye on the old
one and making sure I had a firm grip on both.
This intrigued me so naturally I decided to
not follow the directions I was given and kept running with this concept to see
what could happen and where this might take me. While still thinking about my
lips and cheeks I added my nose and my chin. Then the area around my eyes and
my brow temples and forehead. My thoughts were very focused yet jumping around
to every one of these locations within a second so that way I could make sure
that nothing was being left out. My mind was working at an all-time rapid pace.
I was having trouble with my scalp and getting up to the top of my head. But I
made it to my ears. Everything was tingling around my whole face. I was feeling
everything that was happening in that area. From my ears I went backwards to
get to the back of my head and worked my way up the scalp. Before I knew it my
whole head was now tingling simultaneously as I was receiving information from seemingly
every neuron on the surface of my head simultaneously. Wow, this feels really
crazy. But let’s not stop now.
So I kept going. Now this had occurred much
more quickly than it takes to read or write. Perhaps it was 20 seconds to get
the whole head involved. So I went down
my neck slowly not forgetting to remember that I was feeling sensation through
my whole head. I picked up the collar bones and the shoulders. I figured it
would be better to get the torso before I went down any appendage because it
might be easier to manage if everything was directly connected. This feeling
was pretty great. I wasn’t trying to get attached to it, but I was really
excited about the tingling. The more parts of my body I had involved the easier
it actually was to keep going, like the snowball effect. It was just spreading,
but at the control of my instinct which knew that one little distraction could
make this whole juggling act fall apart. So I had to move quickly. I went back
up to my right arm and worked down to the elbows and it just started to flow on
its own lighting up all the nerves on the way all the way to the end of my
fingertips. It was as if all these parts of me were being dipped in hot water
the way the tingling everywhere felt. The left arm was quickly added just like
the right. My body was physically starting to shake noticeably while trying to
concentrate on everything at once. In my practice because it was easier to do I
usually did congruous areas of the legs at the same time. So I kept going all
the way down my legs. I finished the left leg down to the toes about a second
before the right. When the big toe on the right leg was finally added as the
last part of my body to be dipped in the hot water, the last part of where I
was simultaneously concentrating on nerves that covered my entire body, this
amazing energy grew.
I was already tingling everywhere on the
outside of my skin, but there was massive heat, tightness and fullness or
electricity that began inside the skin of my feet and started working its way
up my body it ran up my legs and kept growing higher and higher. It was intense
and full. There was so much to it. It kept rising past my waist and as my torso
was rapidly being swallowed and there was a moment of doubt. This was a lot, I
actually got afraid. I was afraid that I was going to explode. Not literally
explode but just that my mind couldn’t handle it. I thought I was going to
launch myself into another plain of existence. My body was getting really
tense. I panicked. What was going to happen when this spread to my whole body?
I had doubt, I had to call it off. STOP IT!! My eyes flew open as the energy
was just rising up to my neck. As my conscious came back out into the world I
felt the energy continue to rise at the same time it was fading away. It lasted
for about one to two seconds after my eyes were opened and made its way about
to nose level before it faded away and I was back to full outside awareness in
the meditation hall. I had to leave the room immediately.
Outside my heart was beating strongly I was
thinking about how amazing that was and what had just happened. I didn’t do
significant research or story reading before I went on the retreat so I had little
knowledge of what to expect. This was something really incredible but scary
too. I wanted to keep my grip on everything and all the highs and lows were
getting to be a bit much. But there was still a resounding feeling which
generally spoke to me, “Oh my god! Holy Shit! I just went full Christmas tree! (This
was a term that I had just made up right then to express how I felt that my whole
body had been lit up with an electricity flowing through it). I had everything
going at once! That was really amazing!”
I really need to think about what I had
just done and where I was going with this.
I wanted to scream. I wanted to run. I
wanted to talk to someone. But it was already engrained in me that I shouldn’t
do these things and that there was method to this madness. So I sat outside for
almost two straight hours just thinking. This is too much, I’m as far as I want
to go. I was obviously still holding on to fear making sure that I progress
through all of this at my own pace.
After sitting outside in the sunshine and
just contemplating everything I decided I should get back in there. And I made
it back inside the meditation hall before our evening tea and fruit. In the end
I ended up regretting that I called it off. Feelings like that don’t come too
often in the real world and I definitely let an opportunity go. I wish I hadn’t
held on to whatever I was holding on to that prevented me from embracing that
fullness. I should not be controlled by my fears if I want to live a full and
interesting life, which I know I want. The next time I decided I was just going
to see where it takes me, even if it is another plain of existence.
I kept working at my practice but largely the
rest of Day 7 this was uneventful, especially compared to the last couple I
just had. I think I was still a bit traumatized and overwhelmed to really
concentrate.
Day
10 – Without too much excitement to report, and
since this is just supposed to be the highlights anyway, I decided to skip
ahead to the final day. Once I made it to Day 8 I had stopped thinking about
leaving because I was so close to the end and wanted to see what the finale was
like. I did go full Christmas tree two more times before the end of the course.
It wasn’t as special as it was the first time, though it was still a very
interesting thing. For the longest duration I think I was able to hold full
body sensation for about one minute. Afterward I felt a little bit exhausted
and drained.
On the last day after I was getting really
good at getting whole parts of my body to feel sensation in a sweeping pattern
I was instructed to take it a little bit further. I was instructed to move the
sweeping pattern inside. I was disappointed that I hadn’t thought to do this
myself. For the most part I was actually picking things up a day or two prior
to them being taught, but this one I totally missed and it was pretty
enjoyable. So I would feel a tingling on my back, and I would try to then run
it through my body, kind of like a knife going in, and see what I felt on the
inside. I actually started to feel sensations coming from various organs and internal
structures. I could feel the outlines of my bones and my ribs and my muscles.
It was really quite a strange thing because I had never tried to feel things
from inside my body before. Though I know that I’m capable, because there are
nerves and I’ve felt pains and all sorts of strange sensations that came from
inside my body in the past. I didn’t get to try this too much before the class
came to an end.
Goenka continued to have very amazing
discourse sessions from 21 years in the past. He talked about how Vipassana was
such a useful thing because it was an actual practice. It’s not talking about
things and quoting things, it’s things you actually experience and you learn
the truth and wisdom through these experiences, not empty words with no backing.
So many religious sects don’t practice what they preach, when practicing is
such a more valuable experience. It would be really great if preachers,
pastors, reverends, priests, rabbis, etc. could convince their congregations to
practice what their faith believes and actually spend time on the holy day
doing that, instead of doing ceremonies and preaching they might actually be
more successful in conveying those principles to their congregations.
We broke the noble silence just before the
evening tea on the 10th day. (If you’re counting at home, the 11th
day was the day we actually left the place in the late morning.) I was walking
silently as usual but I knew that the time had passed and I was now allowed to
talk to people (we still were not allowed physical contact with anyone though).
But I didn’t know who to talk to. I didn’t know where to start, and I didn’t
know anybody’s name, so I just continued walking toward the dinning commons
down the path that I had come along thus far. I remained silent and was somehow
a little bit nervous about talking to people again. Did my vocal chords still
work? There was an element of social pressure which had returned that I was now
slightly dreading. There was a guy who was two rows in front of me in the
meditation hall seating arrangement who had long blond hair pulled back into a
man pony tail. I generally disliked guys with a ponytail, despite how
fashionable it may have been two hundred years ago, so I hadn’t really much
liked this guy during the course, though other than the ponytail I had
absolutely no reason for that. He must have heard my footsteps because he
slowed down and turned around.
I looked up ahead at him and to my shock
was greeted with big blue eyes and a genuine but slightly awkward big smile.
“Hello,” he said. “Hello,” I said, not trusting the sound of my own voice.
“This is weird” he said. “Yeah, I’m not sure if I’m ready to talk yet. I mean I
haven’t really thought about it. I don’t even know what to say now that I can,”
I said awkward as ever. “Well how was it?” he asked. “It was pretty crazy,” I
said, “It was really intense from time to time. What about you?” “It was really
good actually. I’ve done this a couple of times before and each time it has
been totally different.” And that’s how I started talking again, and I quickly
became comfortable interacting with others again. The mood of the place had
changed. What used to be characterized by isolated reverie changed to everyone
talking with really great energy. People were just so happy to be speaking, but
the tone everyone had was very positive and there was lots of laughter.
I felt very connected and open with these
people I had been sharing space with for the last 10 days. I didn’t know their
names and mostly had only seen the sides of their faces at most. Yet I wasn’t
afraid to tell any of the stories that I told above to these people who on some
level were still technically strangers. Everyone was amazingly nice, and
everyone felt connected that we all had just done this thing together, even
though we had done it completely separately. Nobody had known the details or witnessed
any of the interesting parts of my 10 days but they could still relate.
There was a lot of fun speculation as to
what everyone did for a living while we were all ignoring each other during the
‘noble silence’ period. This was the time for everyone to share the things they
had made up. Nobody believed that I was a CPA, and there was such a fun group
of professions represented. There were folks that worked for charities and
non-profits, there was a yoga instructor, the dean of the economics department
at my university who was there when I was a student and I totally should have
recognized. There was a hockey player, a computer engineer, a biology student,
someone in med school, a music studio technician, another CPA, and a couple of
folks that were just kind of drifters.
It was also revealed that we had three male
students who left the group consisting of one planned departure and two
defectors that just sort of disappeared in the night. I had noticed one missing
person in the hall, but the other I had totally not noticed. All the things I
was missing while lost inside my own head. I confessed that I was almost another
and that I was planning my escape on multiple occasions. So I could certainly
relate to anyone who left, as only the strangest of circumstances kept me here.
At some point talking with the guy with thick
glasses we compared our strangest experiences. His wasn’t very notable, but I
told him my demons in my vision while I was wide awake story from night 6. He
said I actually gave him the chills as I was telling the story it was that
creepy of an event. He compared it to stories he’s heard from people who have done
hallucinogenics. Note to self: don’t do hallucinogenics. He also speculated
that I may have picked up some strong sensations when I was in South East Asia
two months prior as there were strong references to the atrocities of Vietnam
and Cambodia in my experience. I stayed up all night talking with people,
learning about them and trading stories until about 1 am.
Day
11 – After some clean-up activities and looking at
some cd’s and books that could help us continue our practices, and a message
from Goenka encouraging us to stay active with the meditation. It is a lifelong
thing, and the greatest gift you can give someone is teaching them how to come
out of their misery.
On the drive home my mood went from really
positive to out of this world ecstatic. I just had this desire to share
Vipassana with absolutely everyone in my life who I knew was miserable about
something. I wanted them to feel as great about life and myself and my place in
the world as I did at that time. I was told that I would feel good when I left
the meditation center, but this was unreal. I was in the clouds. I drove home
at about 90mph on a 60mph highway with the top down in my convertible. I was
passing cars in the other lanes and I was actually yelling aloud things like “I
love you, don’t let the speed I am going make you feel pressure to go fast as
well. Take as much time as you like getting to your destination. Everyone
should go at their own pace,” as I overtook slower cars. The world seemed so
full. The sky was amazing, the air was amazing, the sun, the trees looked
amazing, I was so pleased that there were other people on the road enjoying its
winds and the unique route it took over the hills to get us to where we needed
to go. Music sounded incredible. I loved listening to it. I could hear each
instrument, it wasn’t the usual drowning into loudness, though I definitely had
it loud. It was a symphony, where I could hear each of the individual parts
sounding great individually, but I could see how they were synched together to
make a wonderful collective sound. I decided that I thought music and art are
some of the easiest ways to see synergy happening in real life. Much more
accessible than the synergetic details of large corporate mergers anyway. I met
some old friends for lunch and generally had a wonderful time in a very natural
high that lasted for a few days.
Final
Thoughts – I am somewhat of a hypocrite as I write
all of this now, because I didn’t continue the practice once I got back home. I
had determined that I was content with my life. Now that I have experienced a
bit of… perhaps relapse is the word,
I have again seen the value of the practice. Sometime I don’t spend my time
doing useful things, and sometimes I have difficulty focusing on some of the
tasks I should be doing. Sometimes I find myself too connected to computers and
silly entertainment that I think I’m missing out on some of the better aspects
of life that will make me a happier person. Meditation appears to be the cure
for a lot of these things providing genuine sustainable peaceful happy
feelings, providing mind clarity and focus, helping you confront and conquer your
fears, overcoming both the mental and physical effects of stress, and deal with
your cravings and addictions that make you miserable.
I have not forgotten the practice and I had
a committed two week stretch last where I meditated daily and really got good
at it again. I definitely felt the benefits, but as usual, something in life
came up, this time work, and I sort of lost track of it. I did start to feel
really good while doing it. It could be a placebo effect but I don’t think so.
The actual meditation process is work and is something that can’t be faked. I
know I am doing that properly, so I think that is all that counts at this
juncture in time.
I think one amazing philosophical
conclusion from this is the settling of the nature vs. nurture battle. If you
believe in the elements of the practice, it becomes clear that misery and evils
are created through interaction with the outside world, and that after you
strip away all the trauma and associations you are left with a happy loving peaceful
person. I think if everybody in the world meditated in this fashion we would
collectively become a very peaceful society. This technique holds cures for I
think many mental conditions from addiction, to anger, to stress and pain. The
difficult thing is that it takes a willingness to want to change, it’s not
something that can simply be prescribed. There have been trials of Vipassana
programs in correctional facilities. But I think it would do a world of good
particularly in drug rehab. While it is a difficult thing to do, for those
willing to take on the challenge and really prepared to face their fears I
think this is something that could really work.
During my retreat I feel that I encountered
my dark side, something beforehand I was skeptical about whether it truly
existed. The light versus dark, even within a single person, is a very common
theme in lots of philosophy as well as movies and books and everything else. Everyone
has multiple facets of their personality and there are times when the nicest
most genuine people can seem like completed dicks, and times when dicks seem
like nice genuine people. The dark side used to be something I feared,
something that was comprised of my deepest secrets, insecurities and childhood
trauma buried deep in my subconscious. Despite my curiosity, my policy was usually
just to avoid it because it only showed itself occasionally, though unpredictably,
but that aside from those rare times it could largely be ignored and
suppressed. I now think there is a better more proactive coping strategy, which
is to bring the dark out into the light. Look at it, observe it, see what it’s
made of. I think I will find when I really get down to the way deep that there
isn’t anything to be afraid of and that to ever have been fearful was a silly
thing. I think that through continued practice of Vipassana that I will
eventually rid myself of fear. In theory this will make me a more loving
person.
The approach of only dealing with a dark
side when it arises, as opposed to seeking out the confrontation, gives it
strength as it does become something to be afraid of. I don’t know what the confrontation
process is for everyone, but I know that Vipassana meditation is the safest way
I found to get there. Looking back on it now and living a few months of normal
life, it is astounding what a truly unique experience this whole thing was. It
was such an emotional and mind-opening journey I went through, with so many
highs and lows. It brought out the dark parts of me into my conscious mind. And
instead of hiding them from my conscience where they can really do all their
damage completely unsupervised I was able to look at them, face to face and see
it for what it was. I know I kind of sound like a crazy person, but there was
an awesome truth inside me, and it wasn’t god, a reciteable phrase, or anything
gimmicky. Skeptics can say this is all some hippy new-age bullshit, but I must
admit that I am one of the most skeptical people around, and I can only say any
of this because I actually experienced it. It was real. There were no drugs
involved. It was actual sensations and thoughts, and for me it explained so
much of my behavior, many of the questions I’ve always held because I could
never answer about my subconscious, of all those things that I wish I could
control better on a daily basis but was always troubled by.
During the course and during my life have
been countless things which crop up and make me doubt myself. Whether it is a
tiny noise that breaks my concentration and makes me doubt my ability to
concentrate, or if it’s a criticism from a reader that I wrote another awkward
sentence and I doubt my ability to write. These things prevent me from
improvement, but not so much because of them but my reaction to them. Maybe
it’s my dark side, maybe it’s my lazy side that just wants to do everything
with as little work as possible, even if it means I never improve, maybe it’s
my attempts to find a comfort zone where my worries will disappear. I really
want to be so many things that I’m not, even though I genuinely believe I have
the ability. Somehow learning to meditate, learning to focus and control my
mind and the way it interacts with the outside world, seems like the right path
for me to take there.
Overall, it was a remarkable journey. It
was very hard work at times and there were things in my body that wanted to
fight every step of the way. The urge to defect continually came up until I
could see the light at the end of the tunnel. I am forever glad, and a bit
proud of myself that I made it all the way through. It showed perseverance which
I occasionally questioned that I had. The feeling at the end was just
remarkable elation and appeared to be the prize of this hard work. I wanted to
tell everyone I knew I wanted to hug everyone who I encountered. I think there
was something about the fact that I was in a pretty good place to start with
that made me so able to embrace what was happening and not fight it as much as
I could have. I think for the same reason I am willing to talk about it and not
afraid to share it with everyone.
Another big takeaway from this is that it’s
not a religious course in anyway. Anybody of any religion or no religion can
participate. Religious practices are mostly put on hold during the course when it
comes to dress, objects, worship, reading, etc. but really it doesn’t interfere
with whatever religion or lack of religion you believe in.
For that reason and all the others, I
recommend taking a course like this for almost anyone. Reading about it, and
hearing my experience is one thing, but nobody but me really benefits from it.
You can be inspired sure, but the process of healing and bettering yourself is
a journey that you actually have to take and feel for yourself. I’ve described
it as well as I can from my perspective, but yours will likely be nothing like
mine. Be prepared for surprises, don’t have the expectation that you will
immediately have results and experiences like I did. Just actually give it a
try, with a real open mind and see what happens. There really isn’t too much to
lose, except for 10 days of your current life which, I feel, everyone should
take a break from every once in a while.
I think many people in modern society are
in complete denial about the extent of their misery. That they don’t find their
jobs fulfilling, they don’t like the way they look or feel on a daily basis,
they are in pain, they are dependent, and through these feelings they end up
becoming hurtful and destructive. This meditation won’t make you like your job
anymore. But it will help liberate your mind to figure out what it is you want
to do with it.
As I said though, I am a hypocrite. I stated
that I had bought in to practicing versus preaching, and yet here I am, not
practicing very regularly and preaching to anyone who will read this. The
integration of a lifestyle that includes modern friends and the internet with
the peaceful disconnect of meditation is a little bit difficult. Life is busy,
and though I did manage 10 days to go through this, can I manage it every day? Who
knows? But I am forever grateful that I have learned the set of skills that I
can take with me everywhere to keep getting better whenever I may want or need
it. I have registered for a 3-Day course starting in two weeks which will be a
mini version of the 10-Day and act as a good refresher. This is something I
hope to do at least annually to remind myself to unplug and keeping exploring my
inner-mind
Alright, cool story! It sounds like something I'd love to try, but I'm doubtful that I will make it a priority at this point in my life.
ReplyDeleteI'd love to have a deeper conversation with you on this topic. I think you hit the nail on the head when you said that a person needs to be ready to change when they do something like this. I also think that the fact that it is 10 whole days can help break down those barriers.
Your experience sounds similar to my burning man experience in many respects. I had similar feelings of ecstasy and excitement and discovery. I think I was also in the right mental place to experience those things, so that might be the key.
It's interested that hallucinogens were brought up, I had been thinking that same thing as I was reading your descriptions. I think that they can also be used to explore the mind-body connection and to reach new understandings of the world that extend beyond the high of the drug itself, but just like your meditation, you may find demons, and you need to have your mind in the right place.
There is a program at Google called "Search Inside Yourself" that is very popular. It deals with a lot of the research around this sort of mindfulness training, and the neuroscience behind it, and the softer science supporting its positive effects. I too and a skeptical person, but it seems like something that can be read about and researched to death, and until you do it, you won't know if it works for you or not.
Thanks for sharing.
Thanks for the comment, Alan. I never thought this would be anything close to the Burning Man experience, which has its appeal in its own right. But now that I think about it, disconnecting from your day to day life, and taking the time to have unique experiences and think introspectively are great things to do from time to time no matter the venue. I guess I always figured that Burning Man was perhaps too social an experience to truly be introspective, but of course I'm just judging without having experienced it.
DeleteThanks for sharing a bit about your story. I think it's good the more 'semi-credible' (I'll optimistically put both of us in this category) people that can talk about experiences like this so it doesn't seem like something only weird people do. It's also great to see Google again taking the lead on understanding the employer employee relationship and learning how to maximize the value of that relationship for both parties. It's that kind of forward thinking that can really help a society and an economy grow.