Desire and The Work of Byron Katie
Desire.
One of the great dilemmas in my life, something I used to fight, or fall into like drowning.
The way I once felt about desire was that it must be controlled, very carefully approached, and hopefully extinguished like a campfire getting put out with five buckets of water.
And yet.
Did I really hope to turn out the light of desire forever?
When I used to binge-eat, or smoke, or drink in my early twenties, or fantasize….
….I thought of all these activities as terrible, escapist, wrong, shameful.
I went to lots of therapists trying to dig out the dark festering parts, and squash the desire.
But here’s the strangest unexpected surprise.
When I found the way to question what I was thinking, and see if it was really true, I stopped having such a terrified feeling about myself and my urges, cravings, impulses or desires.
I once listened to a recording of Byron Katie facilitating a man through his beliefs about attraction. He admitted attraction to his own sister.
Most of us might find that horrifying. And so did he.
I could hardly believe he let himself be recorded.
And yet, as I listened, I realized he was allowing his innermost shame to come to the surface and be seen.
Without suppressing, controlling, and attacking himself for being so awful, he could study what he was feeling, with compassion.
Who would you be, right now, without the belief that you have something terrible inside of you that needs to be either cut out, or destroyed, or suppressed, or hidden?
What if you let whatever’s there….be there?
What if you just let go of the thought that you might be bad for others or bad for yourself?
What would you act like, feel like, be like if you had respect for everything you felt, thought, and desired?
I know, as I became friendly with my own desires and cravings, even in the long distant past (like when I had a raging eating disorder) looking back….
….I became friendly with my own mind.
Turning these thoughts around: my desires, cravings, or what I wanted was NOT evil, did not need to be controlled, was not something to be destroyed.
These feelings were to be brought forward, not hidden.
Wow.
I found, exposing my desires had so many advantages.
It made me normal, a regular human, it created intimacy through the honesty admitted, it created a place for true investigation, for understanding, for connection.
No longer cast out like a sick person, to be locked in jail.
Instead….following my desires, acting on my desires, studying my desires created transformation.
Freedom.
Take that one step to stop pushing your desire down. Find out what you really want. Write about it. See what you think is missing. Study this idea. Question your thinking.
“When the resistance is gone, so are the demons.” ~ Pema Chodron
Love, Grace
You Talkin’ To Me? My First Reaction To The Work
It’s sooooo weird lately how complicated or tricky The Work appears, as I’ve been working with people brand new to it.
It seems simple.
And yet….
I remember what it was like when I first encountered it when I read Loving What Is.
The first time I heard the question in my mind “is it true?” and was trying to do The Work, I said “huh?”
I heard a New York east coast accent voice, also in my head, saying “you talkin’ to me?!! you talkin’ to me?!!”
(Like Robert Deniro in Taxi Driver).
How would I know if something is true or not? Jeez!!
I didn’t even have the sense of inner self that could actually answer the question, or even believe I could try.
And then, question 3?
It was so painful!
How do I react when I believe a stressful thought?
I’m trying to forget about it! Why’d you have to remind me!?
Then question 4….
….what in the ?
Who would I be without a thought?
I pictured a sort of vacant-headed strange animal. No thought?
That sounds horrifying!
And turnarounds seemed extremely tricky. I could find the opposite, but then I was sort of stumped, unless I had a super easy simple original concept I was taking through the process….
….like “I hate her.”
One verb. I don’t hate her, she hates me, I hate myself.
True, true, true.
Anything more complicated would get whacky and I’d skip one accidentally, and some of the wouldn’t even make sense.
But over time, it got easier, and easier, and easier.
It became fun to practice, to experiment, to try things on and be astonished at the alternatives to my thinking that had its typical ruts it would stay in over and over.
The thing is, the Work wasn’t exactly “fun” or “interesting” for about two years, not for me.
It was weird.
I didn’t see the use. Because I didn’t actually do it.
When I went to the school, THEN I did The Work, and THAT changed everything.
I suddenly saw that huge viewpoints I had carried with me since I was a kid could be completely dissolved.
Now that was pretty incredible. I was completely blown away.
I loved that I could use my very own mind to imagine other ways of seeing the world, like putting on a new pair of glasses. Everything in a different color entirely.
So even if The Work seems meh, or you haven’t had a huge lightbulb go off yet when doing it….give it a little more time.
Wonder about the questions themselves. Actually let you answer them, with the final answer, without being so full of self-doubt.
“You are the teacher and healer you’ve been waiting for.” ~ Byron Katie
Love, Grace
Eating Peace: The Best First Question To Understand Eating
Eating Peace Online is closed for this session, no exceptions now.
I’ll have it open up again next fall.
We began the live inquiry sessions today….
….to understand what the heck is going on when it comes to eating being a problem!
Today I share how to begin to understand.
It all starts with answering a simple question: Why are you upset about your relationship with food? Why are you upset about eating?
You can write the answer in your journal.
You may even want to add to it over time.
You may notice you have a whole lot to say.
But once you have it written down, you have powerful concepts and beliefs to examine, to wonder about.
Watch here, and I’d love your comments and will answer any questions you have.
Lots of Peace,
Grace
It Not Only Wasn’t Bad, It Was Wonderful…The Surprise of Losing All My Money
Last night the current Money telecourse gathered.
We’ve been looking for seven weeks now at money.
What money is, what money does, what money would give us, what money offers, and checking the very common belief that so many people share that More Money Is Better.
Isn’t it funny how true that can appear to be?
Nothing inherently wrong with loving money….but so dang stressful when wanting money becomes intense, demanding, full of despair, or confusing.
It’s like unrequited love.
As we looked last night, I love how participants in the class noticed their childish feelings, demanding that their money level be different, at least hoping that it would be higher later, if not now.
Many years ago (but not all that long–it was December 2008) I remember well. I had $10.81 left in my bank account.
It was Christmas time.
I could afford almost nothing for my children. I could hardly believe this was happening. I was a single mom.
If I didn’t come up with almost $2000 within 2 weeks, I would begin the foreclosure process with our little cottage, my one asset besides my old clunker car.
I had pictures of the Titanic sinking, full of money. Everything pouring out, going down. Or me riding an airplane dive bombing towards the earth careening out of control.
But who would I be in that moment, without the belief that I needed more money?
Almost bizarre.
Really?
I could be without that thought?
Wouldn’t that be dangerous, or stupid, or in denial, or retarded of me? I mean, it was OBVIOUS I needed more money.
I needed it to “save” my house. I needed my car. I needed to live in that cottage. I needed to keep my kids in that school. I needed to remain in that neighborhood. I needed to buy Christmas presents.
Are you sure? Are you entirely positive? Would life be so ruined without these items, this plan….that is MY plan?
Who would I really be without the belief that it has to go MY way?
Wow.
As I became willing to open my mind to alternative possibilities, the turnarounds started tumbling forward, shockingly, without too much effort.
How could this be….interesting? Advantageous? Exciting? Full of potential? Curious?
I remembered when I was 22 having a major existential crisis and I gave away or threw away all my possessions. Even my highschool year books. Most of my clothes, gone. All trinkets, photo albums, posters, material possessions….gone.
Everything I owned fit into my car.
There was a freedom and lightness I had never known, in having nothing. Nothing to worry about, nothing to protect, nothing to take care of, nothing to repair or fix or get upset about.
Ha ha! Maybe this could be the same.
Could I have Christmas and have the genuine experience of the Grinch story?
Yes. I could.
I borrowed about $60 and went to Goodwill and bought used thrift store items for my two kids. It looked like nothing under the tree.
On Christmas morning, it didn’t matter.
There was almost nothing to wrap. It made things pretty easy. I thought of Laura Ingalls Wilder like I imagined when I was little, who received an orange and a stick of candy in the Kansas blizzards, and how amazing she thought it was.
I noticed the awareness of knowing nothing is required.
Nothing Is Required.
The absolute freedom of pure nothing. Knowing nothing, having nothing, be wild and undomesticated and open to the unknown.
Who would I be without the belief that more money would be better?
Free to start right now living in the joyful present moment, where we were breathing, warm, laughing, alive….with zero expectations for the future.
“I have helped people do The Work on rape, war in Vietnam and Bosnia, torture, internment in Nazi concentration camps, the death of a child, and the prolonged pain of illnesses like cancer. Many of us think that it’s not humanly possible to accept extreme experiences like these, much less meet them with unconditional love. But not only is that possible, it’s our true nature. Nothing terrible has ever happened except in our thinking. Reality is always good, even in situations that seem like nightmares. The story we tell is the only nightmare that we have lived. When I say that the worst that can happen is a belief, I am being literal. The worst that can happen to you is your uninvestigated belief system.” Byron Katie in Loving What Is
I noticed that day, the birds flew, there was enough gas in my car to drive to my mother’s house for celebration, there was a feast to eat with family, everyone was alive, happy, breathing.
Except in my head, nothing terrible was happening.
And then, not even in my head.
Having so little gave me awareness of what it was really like, instead of imagining what it would be like.
It was wonderful.
How lucky could I be?
Love, Grace
Stop Yelling! Start Working! When Stress Hits The Fan
If you want to jump into inquiry on Parenting for 8 weeks, or even Eating Peace Online before tomorrow….there are just a few spots available.
Hit reply and write if you’re interested.
*****
Yesterday, I was looking forward to a lovely interview in the morning with a fabulous facilitator of The Work, Ralf Giesen, to be recorded to share with you all and the world for anyone interested in how inquiry has affected his life.
I’ve done a couple of these interviews easily, and LOVED them.
(They’re on my youtube channel by the way).
We were both on our computers, with cameras, at the appointed time.
Looking at nothing.
Both had the google+ open, I was ready, he was ready….
….nothing firing up.
Waiting.
I was quickly checking all settings, sending another invite, googling youtube on how to start a google hangout so I could discover what the heck wasn’t working.
No answers. No Ralf.
Arrgggghh.
I have better things to do than fuss with technology! Kill the google hangout instructions! I hate this!
Fortunately, the next thing in my day of course was doing The Work, as usual.
It was a perfect segue.
The first teleclass on parenting for 8 weeks.
And there were some great situations shared by participants on moments with disruptive, yelling, rude children.
Which was the same way I felt about that google hangout situation.
They shouldn’t be like that!
It is true!
But who would you be if you couldn’t have that thought…even as things are going haywire, a child is yelling and upset, a computer doesn’t work, something doesn’t go as planned?
It’s like the most calm feeling in the world.
Even though something’s happening, moving, storming, making noise, and not going the way you’d like….
….what if you could ride the wave?
You’re sticking with it, staying connected, but not getting all worked up yourself.
Seems difficult, especially if a person (your kid) is upset and yelling, and it appears disrespectful.
But you wouldn’t rage back AND you wouldn’t withdraw and avoid.
Without the belief, I study hangouts and try to figure out how to do it differently next time, and I’m still not sure.
Participants in our teleclass felt the same.
They’re not sure how to be different yet, or how it will go next time, but it’s actually OK.
Turning the thoughts around: it should be like that.
That does feel lighter, and much less upsetting.
How could it be true, when it comes to kids, or to the technology breaking down?
Any benefits or advantages to it going the way it went, rather than your ideal or alternate version?
I don’t quite know yet.
But I do know I love connecting, whether with a colleague, or my kids.
True intimacy is courageous and loving.
And as easy as doing nothing, moving forward, asking questions, setting things up for the next time, talking….
….trying again.
“When you stay present with your children, that’s where abundance is. And when you stay out of their business, that is where everything you deserve in life is, it’s right there. When you are in presence, there’s no story there, and you are abundance, everything you ever wanted is there in that moment, and you come to trust it. And you come to trust the space so often that you just eventually hang out as that, because there is nothing that can move you out of it, not even a perceived child or a perceived anything.” ~ Byron Katie
Love, Grace
Ten Ways To Fail Miserably Doing The Work of Byron Katie
The Work of Byron Katie is a way to question what hurts in your life, and relax.
It may not end difficult events and experiences….
….but it will end your suffering and misery….
….if you do it.
When I first encountered The Work, I made darn sure I failed miserably by NOT really doing it.
You can make sure it does nothing for you, either, and give up in disgust or despair.
Here’s how:
1) Never write anything down. Ever. Just do The Work in your head on the fly by asking yourself the questions, if you can remember them.
2) When someone irritates you, feel the rage or angst, or fear and then immediately start berating yourself for being such a dumb ass to get so upset and uptight about them. Do The Work to fix yourself, ASAP, from being the type of person who gets upset.
3) Do The Work on yourself only. Notice that you have zero judgments of anyone in your life, ever. You’re over that. Keep saying “but it’s all about me and how wrong, unworthy, insufficient or stupid I am!”
4) Think of one-liners only….don’t write out a whole worksheet. One-liners are simple beliefs that seem to cause conflict or pain, like “he’s being a jerk!” These just pop in your head in the heat of the moment. Then see #1 above.
5) Only ask the first question when doing The Work….Is it true? Flippantly say “no, nothing is ever true” and move on without spending more time exploring the question.
6) When you answer the second question in The Work: is it ABSOLUTELY true? Start explaining why it is or is not true, in your professional opinion. Say things like “well, it’s true because….” and tell a big long story with lots of footnotes.
7) When you get to the third question in The Work (which is “how do you react, what happens, when you believe that thought?”) launch into a novel about how that person did you wrong not only in this recent upsetting situation, but also last year, the year before that, and basically the whole time you’ve known them. Give lots of examples of that person being a total freak or an asshole. Make sure you tell about how you’re the victim here.
8) If you get to question four doing The Work (wow, you made it this far?) then get super puzzled. Who would you be without that belief? Throw your hands in the air and say “I have no f*&$ing idea!” Say you have a terrible imagination and you really can’t think of what it would be like. Or better yet, say it would be dangerous not to have that thought.
9) When you think of a stressful belief, just go straight to the turnarounds. So if you think the thought “I’m afraid of my boss” just flip it right away and say “I’m NOT afraid of my boss” and then fist pump the sky. Yeah! That’s right!
10) Anything you ever think that’s mean or sad about someone, turn it around to yourself and use this as an excuse not to ever talk with that person, tell the truth, connect, or actually change anything. “He abandoned me” flip to “I abandoned myself”. Feel worse about yourself than ever, you judgmental loser.
OK….I hope you’re laughing now.
Really, The Work is not easy.
Simple perhaps, but NOT easy.
If you need help along the way….take a class, call the Help Line, come to a retreat, come to Breitenbush in late June, sign up for Summer Camp For The Mind for short bursts of practice next July, or if you really want to go for it, join Year of Inquiry the next time I open registration.
There are lots of ways to sink into The Work.
Once you get a true taste of how amazing it is to question the stressful mind, you won’t ever stop.
You’ll start to wake up.
What could be better than that?
Love, Grace
Eating Peace – Seven Foundational Rocks For Your Eating Peace Home
Will The Truly Controlling One Please Stand Up
When I was a teenager, I considered my mom very bossy.
Not Speaking Up When You’re Afraid of Rejection…Is Rejection
The other day I had a little tantrum.
I know its hard to believe. (ha ha).
It was on the inside.
A friend told me how she was cutting someone else we both knew out of her life.
Like going on a gluten-free diet, she was going on a diet eliminating this other friend (someone I knew, but barely).
I said nothing.
My first reaction….A little nervous, but justifying the idea quickly.
OK.
Everyone gets to hang out with whomever they want to hang out with. People do that to each other all the time, right?
Who am I to say “you shouldn’t cut someone out of your life, you should use your irritation as an opportunity to connect, resolve something, learn something about yourself, work it out with this other person.”
But I noticed on the inside, I was thinking these things.
I remembered I had another friend once….
….who really reminds me of this current friend come to think of it….
….who was queen of chopping people out of her life.
And then she chopped ME out of her life one day.
At the time, I felt shocked.
But I suppose it wasn’t all that surprising since that’s what she did when she was threatened, or nervous, or unhappy with someone, or felt judged or rejected.
Oh boy, though.
I could feel the inner turmoil that showed it was time for me to do The Work.
“She shouldn’t kick someone out of her life”.
Is that true?
Yes! Of course its true! It’s mean, abrasive, attacking, and clickish!
Um. OK….come on back to inquiry now.
Are you sure? Is it absolutely true she shouldn’t kick someone out?
No. There’s a time and place for no contact occasionally with people. It seems to work better, or be the only solution for awhile.
Like baking soda and vinegar, sometimes two things together make for an explosion.
How did I react when I believed that thought?
As I considered this, I realized I held back my own opinion. I was terrified of being kicked out myself. I smiled fake-ish. I judged her without telling her.
I wasn’t real!
Wow, that all happened so fast, I almost didn’t catch how my own anger and irritation and judgment actually covered over fear.
Fear of rejection.
So who would I be without the belief that she shouldn’t kick people out of her life?
An amazing answer came forward, after contemplating this question.
I’d speak up.
I’d say, “Wow….that’s a big step. I feel a little frightened of the whole kicking-out-cutting-off thing you’re telling me about. I feel sad hearing this news. I feel like pulling away from you, I’m feeling uncomfortable. I’m anxious about being rejected myself.”
Yikes!
I turned the thought around: she should kick someone out of her life.
Well, that’s what she was doing. It really was her business.
But more importantly, I shouldn’t kick HER out of my life.
Which is what I was doing when I didn’t speak up, and let her know I felt uncomfortable about her report. Maybe if I spoke up, there would have been a greater opportunity for resolve, or understanding.
Another turnaround: I shouldn’t kick myself out of my life.
I’ve done this over and over again.
But especially sitting there in that moment with my friend, who I really do love, I didn’t share my true self, my true regrets and concerns about her plan.
I went right along with what appeared to be the easy way, and kicked out a real part of me feeling worried about rejection.
Now….I know a conversation I need to have soon….to connect, show up, stay in contact, express how I really felt then and feel now.
“How do you react when you think you need people’s love? Do you become a slave for their approval? Do you live an inauthentic life because you can’t bear the thought that they might disapprove of you? Do you try to figure out how they would like you to be, and then try to become that, like a chameleon? In fact, you never really get their love. You turn into someone you aren’t, and then when they say “I love you,” you can’t believe it, because they’re loving a facade. They’re loving someone who doesn’t even exist, the person you’re pretending to be. It’s difficult to seek other people’s love. It’s deadly. In seeking it, you lose what is genuine. This is the prison we create for ourselves as we seek what we already have.” ~ Byron Katie
Love, Grace