Let's suppose that a Guru comes to our town and advertises that for
some fee or other he will teach a class in meditation and that a certain
group of ladies who have the necessary time and money sign up for his
class. He tells his students to close their eyes, relax deeply, breathe
rhythmically, get into a passive, receptive mood, and then to concentrate
upon a rose - to construct mentally, petal by petal, thorn by thorn, leaf by
leaf, this rose.
So everybody sits there trying to do this and then after awhile one woman
starts squealing like Tweety Bird... "Ooooooh: I did it: I did it:" And she
totally disrupts the proceedings babbling on about seeing this perfect rose
that glowed with a kind of brilliant AURA and she jabbers on about how
she never really understood roses until this very moment... and how after a
mere ten minutes? or twenty? how long was it anyway? - time just seemed
to stand still! - no matter! she NOW knows all there is to know about
roses... and wasn't Gertrude Stein so right when she said, "Rose is a rose
is a rose! Wow!" Blah, blah, blah. And this woman won't shut up or can't
shut up ... but whatever the reason people become annoyed because she's
really making a nuisance of herself and being quite unfair. The others have
come there to learn about meditation not to hear her silly jabbering.
Everyone's relieved when the Guru comes to sit with the woman and
stroke her head.
Isn't it amazing? At any given moment on the earth's surface there are
dozens of philosophy professors who would KILL for even a glimpse of one
of Plato's Ideal Forms... and there's that silly woman babbling on and on
about this perfect rose that she's seen in this brilliant, timeless moment.
Well, for the record, this woman has indeed seen one of Plato's Ideal
Forms and she may be vilified and ostracized but nobody can take that
vision of perfection away from her. She knows what it is, as the mystical
poet William Blake has said, "To see a world in a grain of sand and a
heaven in a wild flower, hold infinity in the palm of your hand and eternity
in an hour."
We call her irrepressible chattering Zen Disease. Plato called it Divine
Madness. This is the euphoria that immediately follows the experience of
true meditational transcendence. The euphoria is definitive. As I tell my
students, if, when you get up from your cushion you are not euphoric, then
I don't know what it was you were doing but one thing you were not doing
was meditating.
Quietism is not meditation. Neither is hypnotic trance.
Incidentally, when the Guru went to that woman to stroke her head, he
wasn't being merciful to the unfortunate or gentle towards the absurd as
everybody thought. He was simply trying to share her most uncommon joy.
And needless to say, while that woman may well have wanted to become a
disciple of that Guru, she wouldn't have tried to repeat her success sitting
publicly in his ashram. She would have gone to his ashram to sit at his feet
and learn from him.
I'll repeat the rules the Guru gave: sit quietly, relax deeply, breathe
rhythmically, get into a passive, receptive mood as if you're listening for
something. Then mentally focus your attention on a common object... a
rose, a shoe, an umbrella, a stone, a pencil... without, of course, going first
to the object to inspect it - this is not an exercise in memory training: Just
construct the object and itemize its qualities without discursive thoughts. In
other words, if you contemplate a shoe, don't start thinking about shoes
you have known... your favorite shoes... shoes you hate, etc. Just construct
a shoe in your mind - any shoe will do - see the sole, vamp, heel, tongue,
laces - without getting personal about it.
Another powerful meditation technique is merely to listen to sounds
without analyzing them. Get yourself in a gentle, receptive mood, close
your eyes, and record the sounds you hear without thinking about them.
Have no expectations. Without expectations there are no anxieties. Just
concentrate and keep your attention focussed. You'll be surprised at how
successful you can be if you bring a gentle, unassuming humility to the
task.
Baba Ram Dass who in his secular life was Richard Alpert, a psychology
professor at Harvard, used to tell the story about a lecture on meditational
transcendence he once gave before an audience of mostly academic types,
learned men and women from such disciplines as psychology, theology, and
philosophy. Encouraged by this array of intellectuals, Ram Dass, in clear
but sophisticated language, began his exposition.
Sitting conspicuously in the front row was a pleasant-looking old
grandmotherly lady and whenever Ram Dass made a point that should
have provoked a response from his audience, this lady and only this lady
nodded appropriately.
When he resorted to insider's wit, this lady and only this lady laughed.
Clearly, she was the only one in the whole group who understood what he
was talking about. At the end of the lecture he came down from the podium
and questioned her.
"Are you a teacher? he asked.
"No, no." she replied.
Then how is it that you understand so much?" he asked. "What do you
do?"
"Oh," she said simply, "I knit."
And on that pearl, I'll quit.
This was originally a talk given to Grace Christian Church,
Boulder City, Nevada, on March 27, 1996