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Sunday, November 27, 2016

Violence and meditation are mutually exclusive but...

Violence comes in many forms - physical, sexual, emotional, verbal, financial. Those who perpetrate violence often do so from having been victims themselves which might include direct or indirect methods. A good example of the latter is being a witness to violence such as parents in violent relationships or, as seen in the flood of refugees, witnessing the crimes and destruction of war.

Not all victims of violence become violent but the trend is strongly there. Men are more likely to perpetrate on women as a result of their own experiences and women are more likely to be victims as adults.



Another important form of insult is the withholding of love, care and attention. When a parent refuses or is incapable of giving these things to a child, it creates of state of emotional deprivation. Feeling important might be made up when another adult offers it - such as a relative or a teacher, coach or even the parents of the child's friend. But rejection from those who are supposed to nurture you is felt deeply.

Betrayal is a wound that impacts identity: I'm not worthy; I'm not meant to be loved; I am a horrible person. These wounds are also powerfully linked to physical and mental health disorders. The Adverse Childhood Experiences study has demonstrated this.

For those who have experienced violence, one of the common emotions is powerlessness and the inability to be in control of self. Violence takes control of one's existence away. Victims know that the other people are able to be in charge in a moment. They dictate what is acceptable!

Recovery from these kinds of traumas involves therapy, ceremony, support, changing language to such words as survivor and the use of techniques that help to manage and control emotions. Meditation is one such technique - it is part of the recovery toolbox.

Meditation should not be done as the sole recovery tool. In meditation, strong emotions and memories can arise. We learn to observe rather than react. At the same time, we typically need supports to help with processing what may arise. Meditation allows us to step back and no longer be the actor in the story of the violence.



A simple tragedy

She cowers in the corner
Nightly
Listening
Alert

She knows the sound of the punch
Whack
Thud
Unmistakable

She hates the yelling
Booming
Crude
Insulting

She protects her little brother
Crying
Clinging
Bowed

She pushed the bed against the door
Protecting
Defending
Hoping

She sings to her brother
Pretending
Hiding
Denying

She gets up the next morning
Tiptoeing
Cleaning
Vigilant

She prepares her brother
Caring
Loving
Supporting

She takes them both to school
Happy
Connected
Safe

She leaves the grade four classroom
Slowly
Tense
Timid

She takes her brother home
Lonely
Fearful
Angry

She plays her part in the family tragedy
Hopeless
Isolated
Pained


© Peter Choate, 2016

Friday, November 25, 2016

Childhood as a place of meditation

There have been some very interesting experiments lately with introducing meditation to children.  Some of the news reports are showing quite positive results. Other reports see it in a somewhat mixed  way. One perspective that might be considered, is the way in which behaviours in childhood act in a number of different ways in adulthood:


  • they create a sense of identity for us - the who we are;
  • they tell us about how we connect with others as well as ourselves;
  • they intrigue us about what does and does not work;
  • they tell us how to cope with adversity which is linked to our resilience;
  • as well, they tell us about situations and patterns that make us feel better or worse.


There are certainly lots of other things that childhood experiences lay down for our adult life. The neuro-biology of the brain gets significantly wired in childhood. It remains changeable, but it is much harder to do in adult years after about age 25 when the brain is seen as "fully" developed.

These childhood experiences are pathways in adulthood that help us develop a coherent story of our life. When childhood is dangerous, fearful, chaotic or lonely, then the story tends to be less coherent and comforting. Thus, in adulthood when we meditate, we are often drawing upon emotional territory that first came to light in childhood. 

Let's take an example. Sit quietly for just a few minutes. Ask which experience in childhood really stands out for you. As you recall this, focus on how your body is responding. If the event was happy, you might experience a smile on your face, feel your pulse quieten, or muscles relax. The reverse might be true if the memory is unhappy or disturbing. These show the legacy of childhood. 

In meditation, when positive or negative emotions from childhood arise, stepping back, observing and letting the emotion pass, permits truth to be known without it becoming "the story" of who you are. At the same time, observing (not attaching) to these emotions permits us to understand why we react certain ways. When the adult behaviours create upset or attachments, we can use meditation to observe, let go and still teach such that, the next time we behave in a particular way, we can take three simple steps:

  1. Observe the emotion knowing that you have seen it before - it is familiar;
  2. Acknowledge that it is there; and
  3. Let it pass shifting attention to the next experience that arises. 
Our past does not define who we are now but it certainly influences it. Bearing that in mind helps us to see the value of helping a child to learn meditation.

Eight years old

Breakfast done
Toast and peanut butter
Two wheels
Off with my buddy

Ravines
Sand dunes
Railway tracks
First smoke
Export A unfiltered
Last smoke

Learned the word fuck
Tried it on mom
Told to wait
Till dad got home
Lecture endured

Fish and chip Friday
Dinner over
New book
Hardy Boys
Great day



© Peter Choate, 2016

Sunday, November 13, 2016

Trump and meditation

The title of this post may immediately seem a contradiction. As I was meditating this morning, though, it is evident that more of this connection is needed. We are seeing growing passions, pro and con, following the American election. In some sense, we are seeing a nation divided.



An editorial on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) this morning talks of similar divides in Europe. We have seen Brexit and there are elections coming up in Germany, Austria, France and a referendum in Italy. There is much foment about.

Being politically aware and engaged is a good thing. It is also the source of much emotional upset within self and within and between groups. Without meditation and contemplation, we increasingly become impulsively driven by the disagreements and divisions. We begin to lose our way to reasoned intervention failing instead to the kinds of behaviours that lead to further division.

There is no question we need to protect all peoples regardless of race, gender, sexual identity, health status, economic position. Here is Canada, we face a particularly powerful moment as we, as a collective nation, must address our own history of violent, oppressive racism. The results of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission call us to action to repair and redress the history. Canadians must be careful to not call out other nations if ignoring or failing to act on its own challenges.

Meditation grounds us. It affords us the opportunity to see peace within and to find our place in the broader discussion of society. What seemed such a good idea, after meditation and reflection, may not seem so. Rather, the way may be clearer as we just sit with our emotions and allow pathways to evolve.

Society is in desperate need of meditation based reflection, thought and conversation. We are awash in rhetoric, anger, revenge and impulsivity. Ask what personal price you will pay if anger, revenge, hatred or despair become your internal dialogue. Politics today is inviting this. Engaging it is not without real payment required. How can you engage in a way that adds without destroying? How can you engage without internal harm? Where are the points of action that will make true change possible even if at a very local level? How will you treat the person who today is afraid of their place in society? Finding answers from within to those sorts of questions may be where your true power lies. Falling for the political rhetoric may instead bring internal crazy making.



I sit
I am
I be

I see my place
Here and
Everywhere

I am a force
But not alone
And not silent

I add to the direction
Of safety and welcome
Bringing together

Division hurts
Divide destroys
Understanding is hard

Listening
Thinking
Including


© Peter Choate, 2016