When We Don’t Make Anything “Wrong”
Sometimes
when I talk about Radical Acceptance, I like to tell the story about Jacob, a
man who at almost seventy and in the mid-stages of Alzheimer’s disease attended
a 10-day retreat I was leading.
A
clinical psychologist by profession and a meditator for more than twenty years,
Jacob was well aware that his faculties were deteriorating. On occasion his
mind would go totally blank; he would have no access to words for several
minutes and become completely disoriented. He often forgot what he was doing
and usually needed assistance with basic tasks—cutting his food, putting on
clothes, bathing, getting from place to place.
Photo Credit: Shell Fischer |
A couple of days into the retreat, Jacob had his first
interview with me. These meetings, which students have regularly with a teacher
while on retreat, are an opportunity to check in and receive personal guidance
in the practice. During our time together Jacob and I talked about how things
were going both on retreat and at home. His attitude towards his disease was
interested, sad, grateful, even good-humored.
Intrigued by his resilience, I asked him what allowed him to
be so accepting. He responded, “It doesn’t
feel like anything is wrong. I feel grief and some fear about it all going,
but it feels like real life.” Then he told me about an experience he’d had in
an earlier stage of the disease.
Jacob had occasionally given talks about Buddhism to local
groups and had accepted an invitation to address a gathering of over a hundred
meditation students. He arrived at the event feeling alert and eager to share
the teachings he loved. Taking his seat in front of the hall, Jacob looked out
at the sea of expectant faces in front of him … and suddenly he didn’t know
what he was supposed to say or do. He didn’t know where he was or why he was
there. All he knew was that his heart was pounding furiously and his mind was
spinning in confusion.
Putting his palms together at his heart, Jacob started
naming out loud what was happening: “Afraid, embarrassed, confused, feeling
like I’m failing, powerless, shaking, sense of dying, sinking, lost.” For
several more minutes he sat, head slightly bowed, continuing to name his
experience. As his body began to relax and his mind grew calmer, he also noted
that aloud. At last Jacob lifted his head, looked slowly around at those
gathered, and apologized.
Many of the students were in tears. As one put it, “No one
has ever offered us teachings like this. Your presence has been the deepest
dharma teaching.”
Rather than pushing away his experience and deepening his
agitation, Jacob had the courage and training simply to name what he was aware
of, and, most significantly, to bow to his experience. In some fundamental way
he didn’t create an adversary out of feelings of fear and confusion. He didn’t make anything wrong.
We practice Radical Acceptance by pausing and then meeting
whatever is happening inside us with this kind of unconditional friendliness.
Instead of turning our jealous thoughts or angry feelings into the enemy, we
pay attention in a way that enables us to recognize and touch any experience
with care. Nothing is wrong—whatever
is happening is just “real life.” Such unconditional friendliness is the spirit
of Radical Acceptance.
From Radical Acceptance (2003)
For more information go to: www.tarabrach.com
For more information go to: www.tarabrach.com