
Everything is Radiant, Everything is Empty
Jun 20, 2017Innocence, Sin, and the Power of Relatefulness.
Our kitchen isnât just the heart of our house; with three practicing relateful leaders in one space, itâs a developmental crucible/dojo. We stand around telling each other the truth that we had not dared to see until this moment, while snacking on popcorn, going beyond empathizing while wiping down the countertops. In every single conversation one of us comes completely undoneâoften by another daring to be more vulnerably direct and honest, and both parties usually feeling loved by the process.
One evening a few weeks ago I ended up on the hardwood floor between the dishwasher and the stove (as I usually do when some old structure is coming undone); whining and feeling grateful. My friends had just shown me where I go into âexplanation mode,â a kind of abstract, disconnected voice that can apparently seem patronizing. Witnessing myself while it happened, I saw this âexplanation modeâ as a clever system to protect me from the loneliness of being misunderstood. I was isolating myself by speaking abstractly, so if I wasnât understood it wouldnât feel so painful.
Laying there on the ground with the faint smell of reheated pizza wafting from the oven, it had become obvious that this defense actually created the very loneliness I was (unconsciously) trying to avoid. In an effort to differentiate from it, I started hating on myself pretty hard for this habit. Then comes Blas, blinking heavily and mouth slightly ajar: âIt makes sense to try to differentiate yourself from that part but I'm wondering what's so bad about it? â And boom! My head was clear. I simply was, exactly as I was. Innocent. I remembered that there wasnât a knowing saboteur underneath my clever way to defend myself from the thing I wanted. Seeing it hadnât proved my unworthiness. I felt the innocent drive of being human and attempting to be something more. Perfectly on the kitchen floor, perfectly lonely and perfectly seen, devoid of all meaning and meaning-full, utterly empty and utterly full of being.
Everything is innocent. Everything is impermanent.
Relatefulness invites us to see the radiance of every expressionâlike Blas saw the beauty of my self-hatredâwhile continually opening us to how everything is changing in relationship to everything else, in every moment. Iâm excited to share this awareness because I think naming it enhances its impactâwhich will hopefully be obvious by the end of this article.
Iâm starting to see it like this:
(a) In welcoming whateverâs here, weâre training ourselves to see the innocence of everything. In my kitchen, we saw my defensiveness as a gift that offered me safety from feeling pain and loneliness when misunderstood (albeit probably no longer in a useful way).
(b) And in seeing how whatever weâre looking at (defensiveness, for example) is constantly changing by the nature of our looking at it, weâre training ourselves to see its emptiness. It doesnât exist unto itself. When Blas showed me a new way to see, the very thing I was seeing changed (even though it was me!)
Iâm not sure that the power of putting these two together is fully recognized by relateful and non-relateful communicators: both end up showing us the awareness that is here now, always aware and without condition, and both allow us to see how that awareness is not separate from the stuff we are aware of. (Iâll share a practice to help experience these subtle concepts at the end, and I think this will make more sense as we go on).
Loving the 'Sins' of Postmodernity.
The upshot is that we get to harvest the fruits of even the most impolite, impure, and taboo drops of experience.
What are often considered âsinsâ in postmodern, new age spirituality, such asâ
- Anger
- Judgement
- Aggression
- Separation
- Unowned experience
- âDirty languageâ
- Shaming others
- Hierarchy
- Imposing my view
- Inadequacy
- Not-enoughness
- and even trauma
âare not just seen as illusory as often practiced in mindful meditation practices (passing, changing, and therefore empty), but embraced as the very manifestations of consciousness. Eg: my unowned desire for you to think Iâm awesome after reading this article and the awareness of that desire are an inseparable event, heads and tails of the same coin.
Seen this way the âsins' become expressions of the awareness that is aware of them (including non-welcoming attitudes) and are therefore self-liberating.
You can try out this practice to grapple with this unusual concept. Take any of the above bullet points and see where you want to turn away and exclude it from your consciousness (as if we could). Instead, let yourself notice that youâre already aware of it and then you get to inhabit it, and be in love with it; nourished by it even as youâre completely broken apart by it.
Ahhh everything I say to describe it/this relationship of awareness and form, isnât it and isnât not it (and isnât both and isnât neither). Lol. Letâs try an example.
What this looks like in a Relateful event.
During one relateful event, Heinz had been feeling dull and powerless. He only spoke up when he thought others were being aggressively spoken to and shouldnât be, and he did so in a very polite tone. It came out that he was very judgmental of anger and aggression, considering them âsinsâ in the sense that they should not be allowed in relatefulness. Instead of judging the judgementâwhich is a grand temptationâthe group saw it as a clue leading us to a deeper intimacy with Heinz (the radiance of the judgement is that it leads us to deeper intimacy, but the emptiness of it is that the judgement didnât necessarily point to a truth about anger...).
After exploring this judgement, Heinz discovered that he was angry! Classic. Inside this anger was both a passion for the things he found important and a boundary (the radiance of the anger), both of which were previously inaccessible.
Upon expression the anger turned to aggression (the emptiness of the angerâit so quickly transformed upon contact that we can start to see it as not having much substance to begin with). This was a healthy form of aggression that wanted to move toward what mattered to him (the radiance of the aggression) and fostered no hostility to others.
This aggression found expression in ripping off his shirt and wrestling (with yours truly) in the middle of the group (the emptiness of the aggression), which was HOT. You can imagine it, sweaty muscles, judo takedowns, grunting, a cheering crowd. It excited a primal, tribal reaction from the group, bringing out a wide range of previously hidden emotionsâincluding sexual desire.
The whole endeavor ended in an incredibly loving hug between myself and Heinz. He felt he had re-embraced some core aspects of his masculinityâhealthy forms of power, anger, aggression, passion, and boundary setting (heretofore utterly repressed, and therefore projected onto everyone else, everywhere in his life). According to him and those who know him, he showed up in a completely different way from then on.
Another example: the sin of Christianity.
Hey you know how itâs secretly taboo to mention God and Christianity in postmodern spiritual groups?
From a mystical Christian view we could say that relatefulness shows us how God is in everything we see (including these ânon-relateful expressionsâ) because God is in/as us; that all of these are âforgivenâ in the true sense of the wordâthat they could never separate us from Godâs love.
You might also be turned off by use of the word âsin.â There seems to be an unspoken ruleâespecially in Europe where only 11% of the population is âchurchedââthat itâs not OK to use Western theological language. Not OKâisnât that the definition of sin?
An Ever-Present Choice: Judge or Embrace.
Etymologically the word âsinâ just means âmissing the markââlike literally missing the bullseye in archery or spear throwingâand we donât always hit the radiant-emptiness awareness bullseye all the time. Hereâs where the practice of relatefulness again feels so supportive: in every moment we notice ourselves or others missing the mark (ahem, sinning), we are reminded that we can choose to judge or embrace it:
- Judge it as an unenlightened act (and therefore separate emptiness and form, awareness and objects in awareness, God and humanity) and weâre exactly where we startedâno worse off.
- Embrace our falling shortâsurrender to it, enter our vulnerability and share it with othersâand we see that even our falling short is a beautiful expression of the divine.
The divine is in the embrace, nay, the divine is in the awareness, nay, the awareness is the embrace⌠ah, itâs so hard to describe! But you all know it donât you? Youâve felt those places that were locked away from others, maybe even your own awareness. Youâve felt parts of you so terrifying to expose to the light of consciousnessâthen bam!âsuddenly someone saw them and didnât judge youâand these parts shone radiantly powerful and simultaneously devoid of any of the substance you thought was going to destroy you. Or maybe youâre a new you that isnât threatened? Either way the emptiness is apparent upon reflection.
Relatefulness embraces the divinity of not-being-relateful.
This is true of all âRelateful sinsâ tooânot getting someoneâs world, not being in the moment, being in your head, telling a story, not speaking your feelings, trying to get somewhere. Everything we see in others that is ânot-being-relatefulâ can be seen as something evil/shameful/simply not as good as we are, something to exclude from our practiceâor something showing us a path to deeper intimacy and wider presence.
I hope these ideas can facilitate a different awareness in relatefulness, and especially a different attitude to all of the things that we avoid or try to exclude (including avoidance and exclusion).
Bonus: Want to play? Hereâs an Attempt at Experiencing this Awareness Now.
Iâd like to experiment with more actively directing your awareness now to this vantage point of the not-two not-one not-both not-neitherness of emptiness and form, if youâre up for giving it a try. Note that each of these steps is intended to guide us to an awareness, and isnât the awareness itself.
- Notice that these words are not a thing in and of themselves.
- This writing is an interaction between me, your understanding, cultural norms, rules of grammar and particles on a screen, etc.
- Look closely at any of these parts and see if they are ephemeral as well
- The particles on the screen are themselves quarks that are themselves stringsâŚ
- Even the ideas these words represent arenât actually a self-existent thing.
- Try noticing anything at all right now, and see if it exists unto itself at all. This is roughly my understanding of âthe emptinessâ of everything.
- Notice what notices this. You might see the awareness that is aware of these words in you.
- When turned onto itself, what is this awareness like? What are its qualities?
- Mine seems to be vast, infinite and void of substance. Yet inside of this vast void of awareness the room Iâm in arises, my âmeâ arises, the taste of coffee arises, these concept and their words arise.
- You might notice that you are this empty awareness. You are the infinite, timeless presence in which all things arise, including your awareness, including the meaning you make (or donât) of these words. You can rest as this witnessing presence.
- As this awareness, notice various objects arising in you-as-awareness (the room, the âme,â the coffee, etc.). Now letâs see that these objects seen are not in fact separate from what is doing the seeingâŚ
and suddenly the distinction collapses, so that we are one with the computer screen, and the computer screen is seeing itself.
I am the taste of coffee and the taste of coffee is self-aware.
The meaning-making habit happening now is an inseparable expression of the void in which the meaning making habit is aware of itself.
With love, Jordan
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