Tag Archives: challenge

letting go + palm springs

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One year older. I realized some things this past weekend… one thing was my mother (I haven’t seen/spoken to her for almost a year; my choice). There are still many times I get angry and upset and many of my reactions stem from the past with her. But a lot of why I get angry is my mind not understanding why. Why she did this, that, why she can’t understand me, why both our souls were put together in this life, why she is the way she is.

But a thought popped into my head and told me, I’m just going to let go… I don’t need to understand why because it is what it is. She is emotionally stunted along with many other mental problems and irrational fears (that’s putting it nicely; I think she is a monster) so why even try to piece all that together.. it’s like trying to understand an unsolved mystery. Sometimes things don’t have explanations (like life, I suppose). The same goes for people too. I spend wasted energy trying to figure people out but… unsolved mysteries.

It doesn’t mean I’m “healed” or forgive her (I wish forgiveness was as easy as some people make it sound–even if you forgive it takes a long time for that energy to transform into complete peace. Or perhaps I have challenges with forgiveness which is why this is my situation in this lifetime to learn how to do so..)

I may have a lot of things to work through but one thing I’m not going to be held back by is fear. I’m not afraid if it takes me til the moment before I die or when I’m in the darkest place of shadows. At least the dark place is real.

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But anyways, Paris has been pushed back til the end of May (YAY) and Palm Springs was…. duh, hot. We judge cities by their food and this place has a bunch of glorified IHOPS. Food snobs, perhaps?

But I’ll give credit to Purple Palms. It was pretty nice and anytime you get a whole fish head stuffed with surprises is a good sign.

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Currently reading Taco USA. Does anyone else besides me get cravings for a taco so HARD? Like, every hour of the day?  If you want good mexican food… go to a shop with a B rating. Trust me (& not the roaches on the floor).  And if this doesn’t cancel out the food snob in me, I don’t know what will.

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(I love this shirt. It’s from my friend’s clothing line Hardcouture. And the gold shark tooth necklace is from her store too :) )

Listen

“Most of us hear but we don’t listen. We argue, we defend but we don’t listen. Listening means waiting that extra moment and recognizing that another person may have their own way of doing things and that if we were that person and came from where they came and with the same circumstances, we would probably think just as they do. Understanding this is the true nature of listening. Our job is to not judge another’s actions; our job is to listen beyond the words.”

-Karen Berg

 

My silent meditation experience

Driving up the mountain; 5500 ft in elevation!

Agonizing.
Painful.
Surreal.
Cleansing.
Sensational.

I’m not sure how to explain something so indescribable with something as simple and transparent as words..

I’ll start with day 1.. (Note: I actually did 5 days, not 6)

My first zazen (seated meditation for almost 2 hours with 2 short walking meditations between) was surprisingly easy. I was told to count my breaths and let my thoughts flow in and out of me. One, two, three, four.. before I knew it the bell rang and we were to get up to begin a very slow walking meditation (foot slowly goes up when you breathe in and then steps back down when your breath lets out). Afterwards, we had a break for 2 hours. Break? What is there even to do here? I had no cell phone, no book, no pen or paper and this was a silent sesshin (an intensive zen retreat) so we weren’t allowed to speak to each other. Confusion.

It seemed the second I laid my head down for a nap, the sounds of the bell were heard to begin another zazen. It felt like something right out of a movie — people in their loose black robes whisking by with their monotonous chants and lighted wicks. My mind was absorbing all of the new and time seemed to be going by without a hitch. By the third zazen, my mind had absorbed enough and I was resisting. My knees hurt, one of my legs were numb and I just couldn’t sit anymore. Thoughts of rebellion crept in.. sitting in lotus position, I wanted to do a cartwheel off of my cushion and land two feet in front of me in resuming lotus position. One, two, one, two, in, out, in, out.. Kanye West rapping popped into my head. How many more days did I have left? 4. Oh. Right.

We did four separate zazens a day which meant almost 8 hours of meditation a day. The first couple zazens were easy but the following sittings got harder and harder. There was a sense of dread at certain points of the day. Again?! The mornings were the hardest for me. We got ourselves out of bed at 4:45 every morning and started the grueling zazen right away. It was freezing and dark outside and it took the life out of me to keep my head from nodding off to sleep. Maybe I could practice how to fall asleep sitting up. Almost like clockwork, the last portion of each sitting, my eyelids would fly open and I would look around the room. I would stare at the time-keeper. Telepathically I was asking him, could you ring the bell please?

After the third day, I had thoughts of going home. I couldn’t take it anymore. I wanted to speak! To eat potato chips! To sing! I wondered what texts I had awaiting me. I felt trapped. My body ached. My foot was tingling. It’s funny how separate the mind can become and we believe these thoughts. I had to be my breath, my sitting, the zazen. The more I believed my pain and tried to move or resist, the more it persisted even worse. Once I surrendered to it and breathed the pain, it fizzled away into nothingness. Nothingness, emptiness — essence.

I felt warm energy throughout my body. It was cold outside but my palms were hot — almost sweaty. Time became nothing. I noticed after every sitting that I couldn’t even remember from the minute I started to the minute I ended. It was as if there was no differentiation. Time was nothing! There is no before or after! It is now, only now. A zen master said that thousands and thousands of moments live and die in each second. Words do not encapsulate the true meaning but perhaps I had felt a bit of that. Anytime I became too aware of the pain, I meditated on these five simple words: Every beginning has an end.

I was starting to notice how profound everything was — to do the smallest of activities with diligence and care. Each activity had importance. This profoundness was what defined being present, for me. I was shocked at how quickly the time seemed to go. No TV, music, talking, internet. Just me — in my skin, nature and the sky. And with that, time was just an illusion — each moment seemed to pass as quickly as it came before me, yet each moment was as important as the next. Odd!

By the last day, I didn’t really feel much of anything. There was no resistance, no “defining,” no reasoning — things were just as they were. Weren’t they also just as they were the moment I came in on my first day? I was more aware of my energy — the connectedness of my energy with another’s energy, with nature. The body, the trunk, the flower; aren’t these just temporary containers for the everlasting, collectiveness of the soul?

On my drive home, I felt immense gratitude, peace, love and happiness. Everything seemed crisp. Were the clouds always that white? I was buzzing with a feeling of intense love. I was inspired by the souls I met at the retreat — the dedication, love and goodness within them. I can’t quite explain the sensations I have within me but it is as if life is going by in slow motion, absorbing and enjoying every bit, watching the colors and movements resume yet in the same aspect, the illusion of time also seems to go by so quickly, giving me a sense of amazement that I am living this life right now and just how lucky we are!

The 2 words that sabotage

“Try to see the glass half full, not half empty.”
“I know.”

“If you want more business, focus more on your existing clients.”
“I know.”

“Two plus two is four.”
“I know.”

“One which is bound in an atomic orbital has quantized values of angular momentum.”
“I know.”

As an avid observer of people (and my own crazy brain), both successful and not so successful, one of the biggest differences I’ve found are these two simple, but quite harmful, words.

I can befittingly describe it as a water hose; the tubes in your mind flowing with thoughts, your cells rushing and circulating through those wires in your brain, connecting one thought after another. It’s running.. it’s progressing.. it’s learning. And then — cut! The water hose gets twisted and all activity stops. You have reached a limited plateau with these two words: “I know.”

To know something means you know it. You don’t need further information. It’s done. You’ve gotten to the finish line. But did you really get it? What do your actions say?

It’s interesting to see the mental pattern of an “I know-er” (I used to be one). Precisely the action that classifies such with an “I know this already” is what continues to cause problematic struggle, effort and setbacks — repeatedly, until we give up and move on to something else which we may inevitably reduce once again..

So, to read something is to have read it. To hear something is to have heard it. To know something means something entirely different — it is to implement it, to understand the cause and effect, weigh out the outcomes, to keep asking. In other words: putting it into action.

These two words “I. Know.” have a lot of subconscious weight. Heavy, unforgiving weight that suffocates us, leaving behind lazy imprints and allowing us to give up any inkling of hope and motivation to know more. The limit to knowledge and change is as how high or low we would like it to be, so let’s always keep asking and always keep doing.. :)

You might also like:
How to be a miserable person
How to begin change

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Helping the homeless

The futile, on-going debate on the topic of giving money to homeless people has got me thinking about why? and how?

9 out of 10 times I give whatever change I have or a dollar to a homeless person. I live in Hollywood — there are a lot of homeless people. I used to think how most people do: “What’s the point? They’re lazy. Why don’t they get jobs? They’re going to use the money on other things.”

I’ve realized that when I live my life grateful and blessed for what I have, these thoughts don’t exist in my mind anymore. The thoughts they are replaced with are: “At this present moment, does this person need this dollar more than I do?” The answer is almost always Yes. I don’t care what has happened in the past or what they are going to do with the money in the future. It’s about doing the good thing. It’s about having a tiny bit of compassion to know that maybe, out of those countless dollars, one will truly help that one person.

And those thoughts have slowly evolved to: “Well, it feels good to give money but how can I really help? Create a lasting change? Money is only temporary.”

Well, I’m starting small but I’ve thought of an idea of what we can do instead. Little bags with the essentials: towelettes, soaps, water bottle, mouthwash, deodorant wipes, some snacks. To make someone feel better and feel like a real person is priceless.




I ordered all these mini size products from www.minimus.biz, who I fully recommend. So many products and cheaper than if you went to the travel size section at Target. If you have soaps & shampoos from hotels, etc put them in ziplock bags and have them ready in your car. You can also donate them to shelters.