Excerpt
from
The Holy Longing:The Hidden Power of Spiritual Yearning.
Contents
and Prologue of The Holy Longing
Prologue:
My Longing for the Light: A Meditation on Up
Part
I. Before the Fall: A Guide for Faithful Believers
Chapter
1. The Holy Longing
Awakening
to Holy Longing
God Longs for Us as We Long for God
The Inner Marriage:
A Story of Holy Longing in the Sufi poet Rumi
Chapter 2. Longing
for God: The Hidden Object of Desire
The Changing God-Image: Involution or
Down
The Changing God-Image: Evolution or Up
The Inner Marriage: A Story
of Holy Longing in the Hindu Master Ramakrishna
Chapter
3. Longing for the Beloved: The Search for Romantic Communion
Beloved
as Parent: The Psychology of Romance
Beloved as God: The Archetypes of Romance
The Inner Marriage: A Story of Holy Longing in the Sufi Lovers Majnun and
Layla
Chapter
4. Longing for the Divine Human: The Search for Spiritual Communion
Priest
or Teacher as Parent: The Psychology of Spirituality
Priest
or Teacher as God: The Archetypes of Spirituality
Priest or Teacher as Divine
Human: The Teacher/Student Relationship
The Inner Marriage: A Story of Holy
Longing in the Christian Saint Catherine of Siena
Part II. After the
Fall: A Guide for Disillusioned Believers
Chapter 5. Meeting
Spiritual Shadow: Darkness on the Path
Encountering the Spiritual Other: The
Breakdown of Communion
The Consequences of Spiritual Abuse
Uncovering
Patterns of Abuse
Who is Susceptible to Spiritual Abuse?
Meeting the Shadow
of Addiction
Death and Transcendence
Midlogue: My Longing for the Dark:
A Meditation on Down
Chapter 6. Rekindling the Flame: Shadow-work
for Spiritual Abuse and Disillusionment
Communal Shadow-work
Separating
from a Teacher and imago dei
Reclaiming the Light
Reclaiming Independent
Thinking
Reclaiming Authentic Feeling
Reclaiming the Body
Reclaiming
Action on our own Behalf
Reclaiming Images of the Divine
Finding our Spiritual
Myths
Epilogue: Creativity as Practice
Prologue
My Longing for the Light: A Meditation on Up
As a meditation practitioner
for more than 30 years, I have been insane for the light. Like a moth diving into
the flame, I sought to be consumed in the burning, cooked, turned to ash.
At
times, on my knees, arms outstretched to the heavens, I beseeched my god. At other
times, sitting still like a yogi for hours on end, my senses switched off, I turned
an ear within to hear my god. Occasionally, for moments, the timbre of a celestial
voice suggested itself; the horizon of another realm shimmered. But, at other
times, disappointed and exhausted, I suffered the indifference of my god.
At
age 19, I turned toward the East. The turn back did not begin until 12 years later.
Today, in certain ways, I am still struggling to make the turn.
A
student at UC Berkeley at the time, enjoying an intellectual, politically active,
experimental lifestyle, I learned Transcendental Meditation for no holy reason
or higher motivation but to date a man who would not get involved unless I learned
the practice. I had no idea how this seemingly light-hearted decision would radically
alter the course of my life.
After about a year of sitting twice a day, eyes closed and legs crossed, several
internal changes had taken place: My chatterbox mind, usually highly active and
alert, was quieting down. At bedtime, it was not full of obsessive or random thoughts,
which kept me awake. My breathing, too, was quieter, softer and gentler, so that
my body felt calm rather than agitated much of the time. Emotionally I felt more
stable inside. Friends commented that I seemed less angry.
As my emotional turmoil subsided, I grew less engaged politically with "the enemy"
out there and more engaged with the battleground within. I also grew less interested
in saving the world through social activism and more interested in saving myself
through the development of consciousness. Increasingly drawn to the meditative
state, to the ocean of silence that pulled me away from complicated relationships
and toward the simple goal of making that silence permanent -- enlightenment --
I began to long for god.
I signed up for a month-long retreat that involved meditating for many hours each
day and listening to long lectures at night. Sitting in the hall that first morning
with several thousand others, whose restless eagerness could not be detected in
the stillness, I awaited the guru. I wanted to be calm, yet alert, open, yet unattached
-- in the correct state of mind for him. I wanted to please him already.
A door opened and a small man with bronze skin that shone through a filmy white
Indian dhoti glided into the room. His thin dark hair fell to his shoulders and
a bushy beard, just beginning to gray, covered his face. He folded his knees beneath
him on the dais and waved a yellow rose in his left hand as he laughed. An infectious
giggle rolled through the room.
I beheld the image of serenity, depth, and self-sufficiency. He embodied freedom
from suffering, ignorance, even death. A complete, self-realized human being whose
mere presence implied that I, too, could be free.
After
several weeks, I was at home. I had found a community of dedicated, like-minded
seekers, an intellectually sophisticated and compassionate teacher and, most of
all, a simple practice that emptied my mind of trivial thoughts and filled my
heart with love.
Almost without noticing it, I adopted wholesale a philosophy that ran counter
to everything I had been taught: The "real" world is an illusion. The only reality
is consciousness. Pure consciousness can be reached only through meditation --
this kind of meditation. Enlightenment or liberation from suffering is a result
of the regular experience of pure consciousness.
I began to believe that the way I led my life was the source of my pain. My attachment
to people and things caused my suffering. The high stimulation of my lifestyle
produced the stress in my nervous system, which agitated my mind, which triggered
more desires, which led to seeking more stimulation -- in an endless cycle of
frustration and desire.
Like a key fitting into a lock, this teaching fit into some unknown part of me,
and a hole closed seamlessly around it. As this message held a growing numinosity,
the rest of life held less shine. The satisfaction of desires through personal
love or creative work seemed futile. Working only to save money to go to more
retreats, and socializing only with people who shared my worldview and my goal
of enlightenment, I burned for god.
Very
quickly, the spiritual group became my new family, harmonious and aligned, unlike
my family of origin. My parents, from this new perspective, seemed lost to the
world of materialism; my old friends seemed lost to the illusions of politics
and romance.
I
read voraciously in Eastern philosophy, assimilating its ideas until they were
a part of me, flesh of my flesh. I found my life purpose and, like an arrow heading
for the target, went off to a teacher-training course in Europe. Sitting with
2,000 others in a huge blue tent on a white sandy beach, I meditated . . .and
meditated. . .and meditated. When my back ached and my concentration faltered,
I wondered what latent, nagging, restless urge led me to shut my eyes to the beauties
of the world. But then my mind quieted for a moment, dipping into a delicious
silence, and the questions evaporated.
After
two months of a rigorous routine, I cast aside any remaining doubts and chose
to become a member of a long lineage of Hindu teachers dating back thousands of
years. As I bowed before a colorful, deco-style painting of the guru, I heard
a whisper from the corridors of my childhood: "Thou shalt have no other God before
you." I turned a deaf ear to the warning.
I
could hardly believe my good fortune. Like many before (and after), I felt chosen
- and certain that enlightenment would arrive within ten years, if only I meditated
enough.
I
taught meditation full-time for about eight years in small university towns and
large metropolitan centers. Greeting each day with an extraordinary feeling of
fullness and a great gift to offer the world, I watched people "transcend" for
the first time and listened to their stories of hope. I began to believe we were
riding a wave that was sweeping across the planet with the inevitability of a
tsunami, washing away suffering and pain in its wake. I was no longer saving myself;
I was part of a greater plan that was saving humanity, ushering in a new level
of consciousness.
In
1976 I traveled with several hundred American women to Switzerland, where we stayed
in a hotel in the Alps for an advanced course for six months. During that time,
I practiced yoga, meditated, and ate simple meals. I did not see a man; I did
not get distracted by other stimuli. For all intents and purposes, I led a monastic
life.
Near
the end of that period, I was in an altered state of consciousness: deeply rested,
yet hyper-awake inside. I did not need to sleep or dream, that is to go under
into unconsciousness. Instead, the inner wakefulness simply continued, whether
I was lying down or walking around.
However, something else had changed as well. When I joined this spiritual army,
there were no signs of regimentation, authoritarianism, hierarchy, or even rigid
adherence to dogma. Perhaps because I knew nothing of the dark side, I couldn't
see it. But I believe that in its early years this meditation movement was fairly
tolerant and open-ended.
This
attitude shifted dramatically in the mid-to-late 1970's when the teacher began
to offer a new set of practices -- yogic powers -- and people clamored for instruction.
Then, guidelines set in. You had to have such and such meditative experience to
receive the next initiation. People lied. You had to give up therapy, bodywork,
chiropractic, or any other practice that could interfere with meditation. Again,
people lied.
For me, there was no dramatic violation of my rights, no singular spiritual abuse
from which to recover. I simply began to grow uncomfortable with what I witnessed
on that retreat -- spiritual hubris, an insidious competition, secrecy and hypocrisy
in the name of god.
I spoke to friends about my growing discomfort. But no one wanted to hear. Growing
alienated from those I loved most deeply, I began to question the teachings to
which I had devoted my life. The more I questioned, the more the pain increased;
and the questions kept coming:
-
Why doesn't this community feel like home anymore?
-
What is this gap between the group's public persona and its inner workings?
-
Does the teacher really foster individual choice or is he seducing or coercing
us to obey him?
-
Why doesn't anyone else admit that something is morally or ethically wrong?
-
What would my life be like without my spiritual family?
-
How can I live without the hope of enlightenment or salvation?
-
If I leave, can I separate the meditation practice from the organization and its
beliefs?
-
How do I work through the grief of having invested more than a decade of my life
in this community?
Just as upon my discovery of Eastern philosophy the world had become unreal and
dreamlike (maya), so now my alternative world seemed like a bad dream.
At
that time, I wrote the following poem:
The
sacred books are filled
with nothing but words.
The guru is filled
with
nothing but water and air.
Even the mantra, holy sound,
is made of
vowels and consonants.
What is it that carried me
across the river?
At the end of the training, I stood at a fork in the road, about to make one of
those major life choices that quickly rules out other options and forms a certain
destiny: to continue my cloistered life with its sole focus on raising consciousness,
or to return to the quotidien world, to ordinary people and ordinary dreams. Even
then, the choice seemed to mean taking only one of two directions: up to the life
of spirit or down to the world of matter; up to god or down to earth.
With a heart clouded by uncertainty, I boarded the next plane home. I never took
official action, but other members knew that I had stepped out of the circle.
I expected my closest friends to understand; they did not. More than that, they
would speak to me no more. I returned to Los Angeles an apostate, without a friend,
without a job, without faith.
During the next 10 years, I suffered a deep disillusionment with the meditation
community and its teachings. I slowly began to look at each philosophical assumption
from every angle, turning it around and around, examining it as if my life depended
not on hanging onto it, but on seeing through it. I applied the discipline of
mind I had developed in meditation to questioning its premises.
I
tried desperately to understand what aroused this intense longing in me, this
hunger for spiritual sweets, this thirst for the nectar of the gods - this desire
to dissolve. I sought answers in the twists and turns of my family dynamics and
in the sweeping vision of transpersonal psychology. I studied the timeless mystical
traditions in an effort to find my predecessors there -- Krishna's devoted gopis,
the dancing Bal Shem Tov, Sufi poets Rumi and Kabir, the Hindu ecstatic Mirabai,
the nuns for god Catherine of Siena and Julian of Norwich.
And,
although my disillusionment with my teacher and his teachings was heart-wrenching,
I suffered an even deeper disillusionment with god who, I believed, set me on
the path only to betray me. For a long time, I railed at my god, pointing a finger
of blame at the heavens.
I
had believed that a spiritual commitment would save me from shadow suffering.
Like a child who believes that if she prays fervently enough, her petitions will
come true, I thought that if I meditated diligently enough, fulfillment would
result. And not only that: fulfillment without sacrifice.
I
had held a simple image of the spiritual path -- do your daily practice, purify
your lifestyle, open your heart in love - which ended in certain rewards. How
was it possible that my practices, my devotions, would leave me with empty arms?
How was it possible that god would give me stone when I had earned bread?
I
fell headlong into a well of despair, slipping into the underworld that I had
struggled so hard to evade. I disappeared into a great blackness, living for a
while at the bottom of a dark hole looking up.
Eventually,
groping in the dark for a thread to lead me out, I found a guide, a Jungian analyst,
who was familiar with the back streets of the underworld, a guide who knew that
my next key could be found in the darkness, not in the light. She helped me to
pierce the innocence that held me in thrall to my teacher, which eventually enabled
me to withdraw the spiritual projection onto him and reclaim my own radiance.
She helped me to dissect the simplistic framework that held me in blame, which
eventually enabled me to think more independently and to hold a more complex,
nuanced view of spiritual life. She introduced me to the many gods living in my
own soul, so that my former conception of a singular, all-mighty god appeared
naïve and childlike. She initiated me into the sacred shadow side of life, where
the hidden power of darkness shines like gold.
Today
I see my experience of holy longing as my source, my course, and my goal. I see
my awakening to this longing in my soul as my awakening to a conscious life, a
second birth. I see it as the fuel that drives my ongoing quest for greater understanding
and for ecstatic experience. I see this longing behind my other deepest longings.
I see it behind my images; I hear it behind my words. I see this longing before
me, before I was, and before I become. My goal is not the end of longing; the
holy longing itself is my guide.
Perhaps you, too, feel a yearning beneath your other yearnings that gnaws at you,
despite the fulfillment of so many other desires. Perhaps you also fled the traditional
religion of your childhood and, like me, joined an alternative community hoping
to find spiritual values and practices that would deepen your inner life. Or you
may continue to be a believer but find yourself in exile from the traditional
forms in which your faith is expressed. Or you may have suffered spiritual or
religious abuse and disillusionment at the hands of teachers or clergy, resulting
in a loss of faith, hope, and trust.
And
yet. . .your holy longing stirs. You feel a restless desire for something more,
but you lack the words and images to describe your quest.
I
have found in my counseling work with hundreds of clients that this essential
yearning - a secret feeling with many disguises -- lies hidden at the source of
each person's life story. It is the seed of a soul's desire, which spurs us to
take certain actions, which in turn evoke more desire and again more action.
In
Part I, you will read many stories of peoples' longing and how the object of our
desire calls us to follow it, like a whispering echo. We respond, even unknowingly,
perhaps by pursuing a romantic union that we imagine will fulfill our deepest
needs. Or we seek a spiritual communion with a mediator for the divine, in a twinship
that promises to surpass human limits. Or we serve a fellowship community, a dedicated
group of believers who form a surrogate family in which we feel at home. In this
way, the obscure object of our longing, like a hidden compass, determines the
course of our lives, pointing us in its direction. And our life story unfolds,
invisibly shaping our destiny from moment to moment.
I
will uncover some of the invisible images at the center of the archetype of holy
longing, the fantasies of the soul longing for the divine. Together, they help
to account for our indescribable yearnings for something Other, something beyond
the bounds of ordinary life. Like Jung, who suggested that the gods are in our
own souls and appear to us spontaneously as archetypal images - the beloved parent,
the beloved partner, the beloved home, the beloved teacher or god -- I suggest
that by contemplating our own sacred images of holy longing, we can uncover our
own gods.
Is
there a transcendent God [stet capital G] blazing behind the image? That is a
question for theologians and people of faith. I am not advocating a position here
concerning the metaphysical reality of god. That is why I use the small "g" to
indicate the divine image or imago dei as it lives within our souls and as it
mobilizes uncanny power in our lives.
With
the help of this book, you can begin to detect the whispering call of your own
soul. You can begin to acknowledge your longing and to reflect on it. You can
explore what fuels it and what derails it, what ignites it and what numbs it.
You can
discover the particular ways that you override your religious yearning by misplacing
it onto concrete objects - sex, food, drugs, and alcohol. When you fail to discriminate
between these "idols" and your true object of desire, you are left feeling forever
frustrated and dissatisfied. In addition, you silence the urgent message of your
soul and hear only the voices of distraction, addiction, and compulsion. Instead,
you can learn to attune to your holy longing, to hear its echoes of the past and
its portents of the future.
In
Part II, you will become aware of the dark side of holy longing -- the inherent
pitfalls that can result when religious yearning goes awry. Countless recent headlines
have highlighted the forces of destruction and annihilation that lie dormant in
religious fundamentalisms and blind faith of all types - whether Christian, Jewish,
Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist or new age. As a result, today we see the painful consequences
of religious abuse and disillusionment on the faces of believers everywhere. I
will attempt to shed light on this dark corner of religious life by exploring
the roots of charismatic personalities, as well as those who are susceptible to
them, and by uncovering universal patterns in spiritual abuse that can be used
as wake-up calls for the purpose of prevention.
Clearly,
the encounter with spiritual darkness throws believers into the fires of doubt.
And these fires can either consume us or transform us. As Fyodor Doestoevsky put
it, "The ideal passes through suffering like gold through fire."
The
work of recovery, which I call spiritual shadow-work, cannot save us from suffering.
It is not offered as a solution to a problem. Instead, I suggest that when we
enter the night sea journey, as Jung called it, we are not off the path; we are
on it. In fact, we may be spot on it, right where we belong - ready to face spiritual
shadow in ourselves or others.
If
that is the case, then our disillusionment or loss of faith is an innate part
of the inner journey. And our psychological work to recover our faith and to reclaim
parts of ourselves that were sacrificed during periods of spiritual naiveté
is part of the larger spiritual task. In the same way that our cultural innocence
was betrayed by the events of September 11, 2001, and our religious innocence
was betrayed by the epidemic allegations of abuse by Catholic clergy, each of
us undergoes the betrayal of our own naiveté when we face the spiritual
shadow.
In
the closing chapter, I explore those parts of ourselves that we typically sacrifice
in order to participate in a religious community or to obey spiritual doctrine.
I suggest that by doing spiritual shadow-work we can reclaim those lost parts
and, as the mystics of all traditions teach, develop through the stages of religious
innocence toward a more mature spirituality.
By
doing so, we can build bridges between our emotional and spiritual lives, which
are all too often perceived as separate means for separate ends. Today the inner
journey needs to include psychological growth, that is, ego development and shadow
awareness, so that our spiritual practices can be augmented with the safeguards
of psychology.
***
This
book explores the deeply felt desire for union with the divine in whatever faith
or language it appears in you. This hidden yearning lies at the root of religious
belief and faith. It is the heart of religion, not the mind. It is a feeling for
the eternal, a taste of the infinite that sweetly lingers or emotionally seizes
us with rapture or despair.
Religion,
wrote William James, is the feelings, acts, and experiences of individuals as
they stand in relation to whatever they consider the divine. Theologies grow out
of these felt experiences, he added. And I suggest that it is the strength of
these feelings of yearning and desire, longing and hope that determines the degree
of our religiosity and the depth of our soul's desire.
This book will not examine the content of theological or philosophical beliefs.
Instead, it examines the inner worlds of those who feel holy longing, the experience
of the holy, which promises participation in the greater mystery. Therefore, as
the inside story of religious longing, it cuts across denominations and links
them to a more universal experience.
William James also wrote that as an individual grows in self-awareness, she may
begin to be influenced by another dimension through a longing or desire for it:
"There is an unseen order and our supreme good lies in harmoniously adjusting
ourselves [to it]. This belief and this adjustment are the religious attitude
in the soul."
This inherent need of the soul -- to turn to face the holy and to be changed by
an experience of it - is purposeful and meaningful, according to Carl Jung. It
is an inborn striving to open our limited personal selves to the archetypal and
transpersonal realms. Just as Freud posited a will to pleasure, Adler wrote of
a will to power, Frankel advocated a will to meaning, and Maslow postulated a
will to self-actualization, I suggest that there also lies within us a will to
transcend, a longing for the eternal.
Although psychology is my lens, this book does not reduce spirituality to psychology
or reduce the ineffable to words. Instead, I intend to use psychology to explore
spirituality, rather than to explain it. I believe that our early personal histories
and unmet emotional needs influence our adult spiritual quests and religious desires.
They are a necessary part of our exploration, but not a sufficient explanation.
The same
is true for biology. In the early part of the last century, before the advent
of neuroscience, William James pointed out that "medical materialism" attributes
St. Paul's conversion to an occipital lesion due to epilepsy, St. Teresa's ecstatic
visions to hysteria, and St. Francis of Assisi's asceticism to a bad gene. Today
we know that there are neurobiological correlates to our emotional experiences,
such as depression and anxiety. And there are brain correlates to heightened spiritual
experiences as well.
In
"Why God Won't Go Away," neuroscientist Andrew Newberg described
using brain-scan technology to map the inner worlds of Tibetan Buddhists in meditation
and Franciscan nuns in prayer. Whether the subjects called their experiences loss
of self or unity with god, respectively, they felt a sense of transcendence when
activity in the frontal lobes increased and activity in the parietal lobes (which
define our feeling of orientation to a physical self) decreased. That is, when
this latter area is deprived of information for drawing a line between self and
other, we feel a sense of boundless awareness.
This
machinery of transcendence can be set in motion by ritual behaviors such as chanting,
singing, and drumming, as well as prayer and meditation. That's why, Newburg concluded,
god won't go away even in our age of reason.
Hard-core
rationalists may use this data to support the thesis that god is merely a perception
generated by the human brain. Hard-core religionists might argue that these findings
offer evidence that the brain is wired to experience the a priori reality of god.
But I suggest that neuroscience has not explained away the mystery after all.
Biological correlations are not the same as causes. The soul's longing is embodied,
perhaps even wired into the brain. But that doesn't mean it's caused by fleeting
chemical events in the bodymind, even though it is reflected in those events.
Thus the revelations of high-tech brain images can deepen, rather than dispel
the mystery of god in the human brain.
At
the same time, this book does not romanticize spiritual experience by singing
its praises and cleansing it of all dangers and darkness. Instead, it aims to
acknowledge the pervasiveness and worthiness of our holy longing and to place
it in the broader and deeper context of human evolution: you will see that your
soul's desire is not separate from the vastness of life, but that it participates
as an innate and vital part of it.
Archetypal psychologist James Hillman posed a guiding question for this book:
what does the soul want? He suggested that the soul wants something that is not
what we think it wants. So, we seek that wrong thing - money, power, sex, food,
alcohol, drugs - and turn up empty-handed. We are left, again and again, with
the ineffable, the mystery. And our yearning burns in us.
Words - such as holy longing - evoke feelings and images that activate meaning
for us. When I first saw those two words in the title of Goethe's poem, I felt
startled. He had found language to signify what I had always felt: my longing
was holy; my longing was for the holy. The words lived in me for many years before
this book was born.
In
this way, words act as potent symbols that bridge the known to the unknown. As
Russell Lockhart put it, words are eggs. They crack open, giving birth to new
forms of life.
For
this reason, an examination of the roots of words, their invisible histories and
multiple meanings, can be helpful in uncovering what the soul wants. Donna Marie
Flanagan, in an unpublished thesis for the Chicago Jung Institute, examined the
root meanings of longing, "to feel a strong desire or craving, especially for
something not likely to be attained." She pointed out that even this basic definition
conveys an image of distance in time or space. It also implies that the one who
is longing is discontent.
Yearning,
a cousin of longing, means to long persistently, wistfully, or sadly. It's related
to a Latin word meaning to cause to wish. It's also related to a Greek word that
means grateful and is tied to the word eucharist, the holy sacrament. Therefore,
Flanagan said, yearning is related to a wish being caused by an Other and also
to being gratified by a symbol of the divine.
To
crave has its roots in to demand, which is linked to craft. A visceral craving
that counters the ego's rationality requires our craftiness to satisfy it. Flanagan
pointed out that craving brings to mind hunger and thirst, which are common images
of longing.
When
we glean these root meanings of longing, we can contemplate again the question:
what does the soul want? And we can understand more deeply the hidden power of
religious yearning. It does not involve finding the object of our desire and satisfying
our hunger, like being satiated after a rich meal. Rather, it means holding the
tension of our longing, returning it again and again to our own souls, so that
ultimately it may reveal its secrets. It means tracking spiritual desire like
a faint footprint, not to trap an object but to catch its scent and follow it
deeper into the landscape of the soul. Although at times it may be frustrating
and even painful to hold the tension of your yearning rather than to submerge
it, when you align with it you align with the force of evolution itself.
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