Friday, 3 June 2011

A bitter pill: celebrate when you are happy, mourn when you are sad

A friend of ours recently loaned us a copy of  Barbara Enrenriech's Smile or Die: How positive thinking fooled America and the world. Enrenriech's point is that there is real misery in the world, and sometimes sadness and grief are appropriate reactions.

Last week photographer and blogger Susannah Conway wrote a post, Can we just be honest? Susannah is bemoaning the PR version of themselves that some bloggers project, filtering out the shit, to "to share their bestest most shiniest selves on line".

In The Crooked Cucumber David Chadwick recounts the story of a time when Suzuki Roshi became very angry with his students....
Dan Gurley asked Suzuki Roshi why we shouldn't move when our legs hurt and why do we have to be so austere and not be comfortable and Suzuki Roshi answered him and started getting more intense and said, "You don't want a bitter pill. All you want is a sweet pill," and then he started saying, "You're spineless" and he jumped off his cushion and started whacking him over all his sweaters which was futile and he might have hit others and he said that thing about how if he told us the truth he’d be left sitting there by himself listening to the sound of our cars driving up the road. And the next day he apologized for getting angry and he was so sweet saying, "Oh, last night I got very angry. I was too angry. I shouldn't get so angry." and the like.
The quote is from David Chadwick's website, from an interview with Peter and Jane Schneider. In the book David goes on to stress that while Suzuki Roshi apologised for his anger, he didn't apologise for the content.

We all want the sweet pill. But life isn't sweet all the time.

For a long time I used to resist feeling deep loss or grief. So much so that I think the feelings I repressed almost disconnected from any specific loss. When I eventually began to feel some of those feelings, when I was able to cry and to grieve, it took much less time than I imagined to get to the bottom of that well of feeling. I expressed my feelings, and then I was able to move on. I was ready to feel something else.

Based on those experiences, and on the experiences of others I've spoken to, I have a sense of how often we don't allow ourselves these uncomfortable, and unfashionable, reactions. These feelings might be in response to hurt that someone has caused us, or they might be in response to seeing that we have hurt others.

Life is hard. We are living in difficult times, and yet we refuse to swallow the bitter pill. We are avoiding reality. When we can live with reality, when we can allow natural responses to loss and hurt, then we are able to feel much more alive.

It can be hard to feel these things. We're told to just "Let them go". In my experience we can only let them go after having fully felt them, after having fully owned our hurt and loss, and capacity to hurt.

Be honest with yourself about how you feel. Be sad when you are hurt, be contrite when you hurt others. And then start again. Be honest about how you feel about the next thing. Celebrate when you are happy, mourn when you are sad.



Wednesday, 1 June 2011

Wedding Small Stones

Kaspa & Fiona have taken over my blog for today, because they need our help.

They are both on a mission to help the world connect with the world through writing. They are also getting married on Saturday the 18th of June.

For their fantasy wedding present, they are asking people across the world to write them a ‘small stone’ and post it on their blogs or on Facebook or Twitter.

A small stone is a short piece of observational writing – simply pay attention to something properly and then write it down. Find out more about small stones here.

If you’re willing to help, we’d love you to do things:

1) Re-post this blog on your own blog any time before June the 18th and give your readers a chance to hear about what we’re doing. You can simply copy and paste the text, or you can find the html here.

2) Write us a small stone on our wedding day whilst we’re saying our vows and eating cake, post it on your blog, and send it to us.

You can find out more about our project at our website, Wedding Small Stones, and you can also read our blog at A River of Stones.

We also have a July challenge coming soon, when we’ll be challenging you to notice one thing every day during July and write it down.

Thank you for listening, and we hope we’ll be returning from our honeymoon to an inbox crammed with small stones, including yours.

Kaspa & Fiona