That's just the way it is!
Moods and meditation
Article
by Ole Gjems-Onstad,
Professor of Fiscal Law at the Norwegian School of Management and a Meditation
Teacher in Acem.
Acem International
Newsletter no 1 2000
Working with moods in meditation helps us see what forms
our lives.
It confronts us with the way we create our own destiny.
Do you consider yourself to be a "moody" person? Maybe
not. Yet in a sense everyone is. Every human being lives within a field
of characteristic moods. Often, however, we do not recognise these moods
to be what they really are: individual and psychologically determined
fields of resonance.
Our basic moods may have much greater power over us than
we realise. We tend to confuse them with objective reality. For example,
you may not experience yourself as an anxious person. Instead you see
danger all around you - no wonder you're afraid!
Moods can determine life choices. Reducing their power
is important for personal growth. In relation to our own emotional undercurrents,
we easily become nearsighted. We have no distance to them, and therefore
objectify them.
In meditation, moods are intensified and thus more easily
identified as the subjective undercurrents they are. Through meditation,
we can penetrate the blindness that our characteristic moods inflict
upon us.
Authoritative judgement
To meditate is to open one's mind. The repetition of the meditation sound
with a free attitude creates an inner environment in which the mind's
content is given an opportunity to become more naked and near. Most of
the time, meditation is pleasant and energising. But at times, it also
brings forth restlessness, uneasiness, and feelings of inferiority and
irritability - underlying moods that we tend to overlook, but that have
a profound influence on our everyday lives. Even in meditation, we do
not always recognise them as being subjective. Instead, we treat them
as authoritative judgements on the meditation process, the external conditions
surrounding the meditation, or the way in which we are meditating.
We cannot observe our moods at a distance the way we
observe clouds that move across the sky. Moods take a grip on us. When
we are irritated, we become captives of the irritated mood. We direct
our irritation towards something external.
Sometimes we have a strong feeling that we are not meditating
properly. Others are surely doing it better? We may understand these negative
judgements of our own meditation in two ways. Most often, we feel that
we quite simply are meditating poorly - according to some "objective"
standard. We mistake our feeling of inferiority for a realistic and valid
judgement. At other times, however, it may dawn on us that our feeling
of inferiority is a part of our psychology. We feel the meditation is
going poorly because it has opened us to our negative self-images.
Everything is wrong
During long meditations, we may at times become captive of aggressive
attitudes towards the chair we are sitting on, which is intolerably unpleasant
and hard. In addition, the room has not been aired properly. To compound
the aggravation, those who sit around us incessantly cough, move about
and disturb us. Everything seems to be wrong.
To begin with, we easily take these moods seriously.
Gradually, we discover how our mind fluctuates during longer meditations.
The same chair sometimes irritates us, sometimes not. The chair is the
same, but our mood has changed. The way we perceive people sitting around
us also changes. At times we are disturbed by their coughing, at other
times we hardly notice any sounds at all. Again, this has to do with the
actualisation of underlying moods during meditation. Moods express themselves
through our judgement of the surrounding world. It is surprising how
objectively this can be perceived even for experienced meditators. You
are a stupid meditator. The chair is hard. People are making an enormous
amount of racket.
Good meditation
By turning our awareness away from the objective experience of the
world, and towards the mood as a subjective phenomenon, we pass a threshold.
Meditation becomes an introspective voyage of discovery.
When we meditate, we should not take the judgements
of our moods too seriously. The fact that something inside tells us that
we are meditating poorly does not necessarily mean that our meditation
is unsuccessful. On the contrary, it may mean that we are meditating
well and have opened our minds to moods and feelings that are usually
suppressed.
The mood wants us to give up. What is the point in meditating
when we aren't able to do it properly anyway? Over time, we may realise
that this inner climate indicates that we should continue. Something that
is lying there smouldering in everyday life becomes painfully clear in
meditation.
Moods as destiny
In everyday life, the moods may express themselves in a scarcely identifiable
feeling that we do not quite master life. In meditation, this vague mood
can vibrate more clearly, as a naked string.
This emotional undertone has a strong influence on our
daily life, even if it is less clear to us there than in meditation.
A feeling of inferiority can determine choices of vocation, friends and
partner. Our basic mood of anxiety can be transferred to our children,
who may experience the world as unsafe. Aggressive behaviour patterns
are passed on from generation to generation. Getting to know one's moods
in meditation is to see more clearly what forms us, and how we create
our own destiny.
The fog of history
How may we stimulate this shift - from the objectifying perspective
to focusing on the contribution of our subjectivity? Guidance is important.
The existential benefit in discussing uncomfortable chairs
during guidance may seem rather limited. But at times, surprisingly great
insight may be gained by dwelling on the mood we were in when the
chair became so important. What does it remind us of when we feel like
this?
Many believe that it is very important to understand
why we feel the way we do. What is it in my individual history that
causes me to have this type of inferiority reaction, irritability, anxiety,
or whatever? Understanding the cause of our moods may provide a potential
for substantial change. But much of our personal history remains in a
fog that cannot entirely be penetrated. Our very early history, which
is so important and formative, and which contributes so much to our basic
moods, is enshrouded in a perceptual mist, and is inaccessible to memory.
What is me, what is them?
Comfort may be found in the fact that whether we are able to remember
the causes is not decisive for growth. The important thing is to understand
who we are today. What moods influence me, what do they make me do, how
is my perception of the world formed by my subjective distortions? What
is me, what is the others, and what is the world?
This is what discussions of meditation during guidance
are about. Which moods do I experience in meditation? How do they draw
me towards distorting my meditation, or even to discontinue meditating
altogether? What similarities are there between these moods and the moods
that shape my daily life?
By understanding the connection between our subjective
moods, perception of the world, choices in action and in life, we delve
deeper into our existence in the world. Who am I? How do I choose to live?
Meditation can be unusually helpful in this process.
Universal processes
Modern literature is often very good at depicting subjective moods.
At times, we may get the impression that man is nothing more. Everyone
is sitting on his or her own emotional heap of subjective moods, and I
can never understand what it is like for you to be you.
In a well-known American novel about modern urban man
of the 1980's, the main character is in a crisis. He thinks that other
people cannot really imagine what things are like for him: "They can't
imagine what it's like for you to be you, they can only imagine themselves
being you." (Jay McInerney: Bright Lights, Big City). Layer
after layer of subjective moods contribute to separating us from one another.
This is true, but not completely.
To work with introspection is to make use of universal
aspects of man. Each individual's awareness of his own subjective moods
may differ, but the introspective process nevertheless has common features.
The voyage of discovery, and the unmasking of the subjective filters separating
us from the world, is something we can recognise in others. To meditate
is not merely to become aware of the peculiarities and subjective traits
that characterise each and every one of us. We also open ourselves to
common human processes that unite and provide a deeper understanding
of what human beings have in common. Meditation helps us to gain access
both to what is unique to ourselves, and to certain basic common characteristics
in the human condition. In this interaction between the individual and
the collective, meditation may awaken a deep fascination.