I am really really trying, but I cannot seem to come to a decision about whether or not to go to my retreat this October. First off I had to spend an obscene amount of money getting my house electric service up to code. My oldest son was very helpful in this however he is a bit of an alarmist: fire hazards and such which ultimately I don't think those really bear out—it’s more a question of the technicalities of let's say a fire does happen and let's say it was electric and let's say the insurance company got all Agro about it that's a lot of what-ifs.
Point is we found somebody
who was available and he
jumped to it and he did
the work in what appears
to be professional fashion
but also had his own time
schedule which turned out
to be pretty creative. I
should have known; this
guy's worked for my
brothers in the past and
they said he has a
tendency to disappear into
Mexico have a vacation
with his kids so
there's that.
I suppose the important
part is that we no longer
really have to worry about
that so that's a good
thing. It's sent me
off into fantasies though
of… what's
next?? And then come time
to cough up what is
arguably a fair price for
getting to spend a week,
room and board with some
pretty nice folks
listening to what is
self-identified very
pleasant claptrap, not
even close to
cult-adjacent . That's
actually part of the
reason that I continue
with it. Yet something in
me feels a pull to be
independent. Reminds me of
when I dumped my therapist
because he's a guy and
I was tired of having guys
tell me stuff. I may have
overreacted but
there's also echoes of
my old gender training
from birth. I'm so
tired of that I'm so
sick and tired of that.
What's the alternative?
This guy at the retreat is very clear that he is moving in the direction of lessguide in guided meditation and more community at the cafeteria. So I take take him at his word ironically which actually was one of the first things he ever told me, when I asked him how to reintegrate after a retreat: here's what I suggest—now forget I told you anything. Which
I then wrote down in the
journal I was keeping.
I admit I got trust issues
straight up man.
Where's the dividing
line when you're told
that there is no dividing
line and yet it's
evident that the
non-message message is one
of love: letting go of
resistance staying in the
moment no more telling of
stories, being present and
aware.
A few of us formed a
little WhatsApp group
because we're all from
the San Francisco Bay Area
and it would be nice to
get together. Various
false starts and we never
really did it. Finally I
met with a guy who had
just moved from San
Francisco to Oakland where
I am and we had a lovely
couple of hours just
chatting over a cup of
tea. Of course he's
young enough to be my son
and I think this is how it
could be if I had a family
member on board, which is
exactly what we’re
told is a setup for
disappointment. Mr.
Thing for example has
totally admitted that he
doesn't even talk
about what he does for a
living with his family.
They don't even know.
They don't ask
don't tell.
And I have three sons and
a grandson and two
brothers and now my
Oakland non-duality buddy,
which was great, but how
much male energy can a
person stand?
If you want to categorize
sort of male female energy
regardless of gender, I
think you could make a
case that being at the
retreat is a fine example
of vulnerable men, if
that's the definition
of female energy. This
ends up being, again, an
intellectual analysis
which is kind of what
we're trying to get
away from even though ha
ha we're not
technically getting away from anything cuz it's all here.
And then there's my
high school theater Mentor
who died several years
ago, very imposing fella
and yet tapping into
something in me from the
get-go. It's
hilarious. When I was a
freshman assigned to go
find a monologue, in
desperation I extracted a
couple of paragraphs of
Magwitch from Great
Expectations. Something
about the ballsiness of
choosing to do an over the
top male character when I
was a 14-year-old female
105lb dripping wet tickled
him I think. I give myself
points but more
importantly I stood out.
This catapulted me into so
much over the years, in
fact you could even say
when I auditioned for
Cabaret so many years
later and then had to
fight tooth and nail
because my young husband
was being a bitch about me
doing something outside
the home, I kid you not. I
remember the (female)
director telling me very
encouraging things to get
me to stay the course not
give up. I was pretty
conflicted and angry, yet
the compromises I made
make no sense to me now.
Fast forward past that man-child’s death. Why is not a useful question.
Me and the new guy used to
say that to each other
periodically. Something we
picked up at a weekly
tough love meeting back
when I thought it would
help my middle son.
That's a long story
don't need to get
into, but we did keep that
saying. Mostly people
don't get it. They
love the word why.
My younger brother
especially loves it oh God
that's another story
we don't need to get
into.
And I think leading
yourself into the thicket
with that question as
I've often seen people
do at the retreat, even
online they do it. They go
on and on and on I've
done this and I've
done that and I've
asked this and I've
asked that and why
am I not getting anywhere? That makes me want to scream.
Maybe that's my
answer: I'm past that.
If I'm watching Ram
Dass or Alan Watts or even
Krishnamurti all long
since dead, one of the
best things is that there
is no questioning.
There's simply an
excerpt of wisdom I would
call it. Elucidating.
The money thing makes me
squeamish. In fact I had a
cup of tea that same week
with another person from
the East Bay who joined
our WhatsApp retreat
group. She and I made a
promise to get together
after the last retreat.
Took a while but we
finally did it and yet
with this wonderful
freedom to just go with
whatever happens, she
shows up pretty much
destroyed. So much on her
plate, marriage problems,
now husband with
unexpected serious health
incident and feelings of
that pull towards
independence that I could
totally identify with.
It's all good. She can
cry and we can
commiserate.
And then she offers me a
ride home which I
didn't need but I
didn't want to be
rude. Turns out she's
got the most obscenely
expensive SUV really kind
of disgusting from an
activist point of view. We
go through my
neighborhood, pull up in
front of my house and she
says (she and her husband
being in the contracting
business) my goodness
that's not a
fixer-upper. The long
and short of it is I
really don't know much
of her backstory but in
the short time we were
together I discover that
she has buckets of money
and spends it traveling
and booking retreats, both
of which I have done, but
for every one I've
done, she's done 10.
Where I am talking myself
into expenditures, she is
whipping out her credit
card. All the sudden
I'm in this weird
world that seems so
counterintuitive to
everything we've been
immersing ourselves in at
the retreat. I mean you
could say I'm not
homeless. Comparatively
speaking I am rich because
I have some money socked
away where some people are
on the street. And the
other hand over-concerning
yourself with the
materialistic side of life
is somewhat of a cliche
when it comes to
self-exploration. Plus I
live so close to Berkeley
if you spit you hit it.
It's where I did my
Transcendental Meditation
training circa 1981.
Man this all seems to be
about control. Years ago
when I was going to get my
wrongful death settlement,
I actually went to a guy
who counsels people who
have come into money from
various sources that cause
anxiety, we're talking
lawsuits or lotteries or
beneficiary of a will. The
kind of stuff that
associates the money with
something bad. So this guy
spends an hour or so
chatting me up, charged me
a couple hundred bucks as
I recall and basically the
takeaway was it's not
about the money, it's
about the guilt of having
it. He suggested that I
carve out some and give it
to a worthy charity, blah
blah.
Yeah I know I don't
want to go back to those
days, especially since I
recently got a little
settlement for a trip and
fall which in retrospect
was a total fucking
testament to the extent
that lawyers have us by
the short hairs.
Yeah. I think I know what's going on.
I still can't wrap my brain around somebody having to die 44 years ago to give me the wherewithal to have the life I presently have.
And why is still not a useful question.
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