I attended a 10-day Vipassana meditation retreat. The retreat required me to remain totally silent for 10 days, and required nearly 100 hours of meditation. I had never meditated in my life before stepping into the retreat center. Here follows my story.
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
Wednesday, January 4, 2012
Part Six: Solitary No More
Ten Days of Hell
Entry Number Six. As usual, first the column as published in The Noise, with follow-up notes.
Being alone is hard for many people, but not for me. Despite having a very social and public job,
I’ve always been an introvert at heart.
I relish the rare chance to spend a quiet Sunday – kids gone, house to
myself – alone in my pajamas all day. The hermit lifestyle seems to me an ideal
retirement. Now, though, on the final
day of a 10-day retreat where I could not talk, listen or share anything with
anyone, I discover that the other side of me is stronger than I thought.
The morning of Day Ten comes, and all I can think about is
leaving. The rules are fairly clear when
you arrive: no one is allowed to leave on Day Ten. At about 9:30 A.M., silence is broken and we
are allowed to talk freely once again.
Our teacher tells us that our serious work is done now. Day Ten is about relaxing into the transition
into the “real world.” But I don’t
care. My first words upon the lifting of
silence, after nine and a half days of my inner roller coaster of emotion, are
to Yogi, the Course Manager: “I want to leave.
Now.”
This is a ruse, of course.
I can leave if I want. I don’t
need permission, and Yogi does not give it to me. He says that he’ll ask the teacher but is
pretty sure the answer will be no. I’m
happy to wait. While I do, of course,
all the other meditators are engaging in conversation. One meditator approaches me – the one who I
had called Shaggy in my head for ten days because he looked just like the
character from the Scooby-Doo cartoon – and asks me how my retreat went. We talk and it turns out he has a real name:
Sam. Other meditators join our conversation.
Two things stand out to me now that talking is back in my
world. First, people are smiling with
light and expression in their faces.
It’s truly a joy to see. Remember
Eddie Murphy in ‘Raw’ talking about how if you’re starving then a plain cracker
becomes the most glorious delicacy you’ve ever tasted in your life? Well, after ten days of eyes pointed downward
without expression, I feel that way about seeing smiles on people’s faces. Suddenly, my world is full of joy again. A smile from a male meditator, who had seemed
creepy for ten days, makes me feel like there really is a chance for world
peace and the end of hunger.
The other thing is that everyone talks about the pain and
torment of these ten days. As odd as it
may sound, I had assumed that everyone else was working calmly and diligently
like experienced meditators, throughout the retreat. Of course, I had never meditated before
coming here, and I assumed no one else was crazy enough to come here without
some experience. But that didn’t
matter. Even the experienced meditators
struggled through this.
This realization has a huge impact on me. I had felt so alone, so dreadfully solitary
for so long, that to have smiling faces tell stories about challenges similar
to my own gives me hope about my struggle.
I begin to feel as if my deficiencies and shortcomings are not a result
of my ineptitude, but rather a result of being human. This is revelatory like the parting of the
Red Sea. Suddenly, the world has opened
up again. I feel free, alive, and
bountifully happy.
All of my fellow meditators now feel like life-long
friends. This is a shared experience,
not a solitary one. The connection I
feel, not just to these other meditators, but also to the people in my life and
to all human beings, is strong. I
discover that my desire for solitude is more about my desire for peace than it
is about wanting to get away from people.
After all, without others who provide their mirrors, how will I ever I
learn anything about myself?
~~~~~
1. Shaggy (or "Sam" if I must) also asked me this: "Would you ever come back for another retreat?" My response: "Never. I would never again willingly put myself through this kind of torture. Ever." So my initial response to the "Ten Days of Hell" was indeed that: it was hell. It wasn't until I was out in the world again, and re-experiencing my life with a renewed perspective and attitude, that I began to realize the benefits I had gained. After time, I realized that eventually, I must go back. It was too valuable an experience to not repeat, in hopes of keeping that new perspective alive in me.
2. Day Ten is really a lot of fun. Making new friends is one part. You also get to have your things back. I grabbed my phone and even got to text a few people. I had been so badly craving these little "normal" things, it made Day Ten enjoyable to the point that I was actually a little sad to leave. A little.
3. Best line of the retreat, this one by a guy I nick named "Mohawk"... which I have to set up first. You see, after ten days of only being around men in all areas except the meditation hall, it's a little hard not to look over to the women's side of the hall during meditations. Of course, no one can wear anything revealing while there, so all clothing was very modest. Which meant that the only skin you'd see is a little bit of the neck and the ankles, maybe a forearm or two. Boring, right? Not after 6 or 7 days in the midst of hellish solitude! That skin was all we had. As Mohawk said on Day Ten, seeing those ankles was like Amish Porn.
Part Five: Gift of the Scorpion
Ten Days of Hell
Yet another entry in the ongoing saga. As usual, here's the column as published, then followed by additional notes:
On Day Six, I’ve reached a great pinnacle in my meditation
practice. I experienced ‘dissolution’
whereby my entire body was buzzing with vibration and energy. I’m proud of myself for coming so far in so
little time, and I’m eager to learn the next steps of the practice. Surely, there are more twists and turns in
the slowly unraveling practice that is Vipassana.
Except that it doesn’t work that way. The practice does not change. Throughout Days Seven, Eight and Nine, the
practice is exactly the same as it’s been: remain aware of sensations on the
body and do not react to those sensations.
It’s pretty stark to see how quickly my sad little monkey mind goes from
eager pride to boredom and disappointment.
In less than a day, my so-called “accomplishments” are gone and I am
left, once again, with nothing but my unhappy self. I’ve fallen into the trap of thinking that
Vipassana is about accomplishment, about reaching the next step, about prideful
progress. And this leads me into a
painful trap of disappointment and dreadful boredom.
The first three days of this retreat were about pain. The next three were about discovery and
excitement. These three days are by far the longest of the Retreat, and are
excruciatingly boring. I’m so eager to
go home that I can’t focus to meditate.
Instead, I daydream about the morning of Day Eleven, when I leave this
place. I dream about having an egg
omelet (all the meals are vegetarian here), listening to music again, and
hugging my kids. I fantasize about
sleeping in my own bed, and even about going back to work.
By Day Nine, I am so wrapped up in my fantasies that I don’t
really pay attention to what is around me.
I stumble into the Meditation Hall for the first group session of the
day after yet again sleeping through the early morning “on your own” meditation
session. I expect to sit there for a
full hour without doing Vipassana at all.
As I plop down on my pile of cushions, a small scorpion scurries out
from underneath.
I remain relatively calm, but know something must be done.
Smaller scorpions are the most poisonous, and I can’t let it sting me or any of
the closed-eyed meditators nearby. But I
can’t kill the scorpion (which is what I want to do), because upon arrival at
the Retreat we promised to abide by a Code of Conduct – one of the codes is not
to kill any living thing. For what feels
like twenty minutes but is only a short time, the Course Manager and I try to
lure this scorpion into a cup for removal from the hall. We get close, then the scorpion jumps away
from the cup, and we both leap backwards with fear. I’m sure we look silly, and I assume everyone
thinks we are only battling a harmless cockroach. I want to call out to all 125 of them, “This
is a dangerous deadly scorpion! We are trying to save you from doom!”
Once the scorpion is taken to greener pastures, the session
begins. It takes thirty minutes for the
adrenaline rush to wear off, and when it does, I am able to meditate with
strong focus. The daydreams are
gone. I move my attention throughout my
body and again find myself experiencing dissolution.
As the retreat comes to a close, I am thankful for my little
scorpion friend. He was a fairly
ordinary scorpion as far as I can tell.
But I know this: Day Nine is the final full day of silence. By midday on Day Ten, we’ll be able to begin
speaking again, and I will leave on the morning of Day Eleven. It was the scorpion that shook me out of my
boredom, frustration and haze, and brought me squarely back into focus so that
I could benefit from the last moments of these truly powerful ten days.
~~~~~
Some follow up notes to this post:
1. This is one of the pitfalls of being around 125 people while in Noble Silence. You can't tell them about the scorpion you're hunting. You also can't apologize. One time I sat down at a table in the dining hall with four other meditators already there, and I bumped into the table, spilling the soup of two of them. "Oops! I'm sorry" is not the way to handle this. You can't even make gestures to apologize. All I could do was grab a bunch of napkins and help clean it up.
2. The dissolution thing is a topic of much discussion. After my third retreat, I befriend a man named Mike. In a conversation after the retreat, he reveals that he didn't experience dissolution at all during the retreat. But then he got home and two days later, experienced it after a meditation session (not during). He said that he spoke to another meditator at the retreat who had attended 12 ten-day retreats but had never experienced dissolution. Clearly, everyone has different experiences in the practice.
3. The Course Manager's name was Yogi. Seriously. I never had to think up a nick name for him.
4. His response when I whispered to him that I had a scorpion under my cushions was the quietest-loudest exclamation "WHAT?!?" ever. He went and got a cup and tried to hand it to me. "Will this work to catch him?" he asked. I nodded yes, but did not take the cup from him. Sorry, dude, titles like "Manager" have their privileges.
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