So
I was sitting on the couch in the Green Room at Serenity Retreat (bear with me,
I will shut up about it soon, I promise).
It’s a little room Kim uses for sessions, meditation, courses,
stretching and so on – on the odd occasions when the weather doesn’t play
ball. I’d thumbed through the bookcases
but nothing had really caught my eye.
But then, when I got up to go, I noticed a paperback sitting next to me
on the couch. I assumed it belonged to
someone but, as everyone started leaving, it still sat unclaimed. So I went to put it back on a shelf but
paused.
‘It’s
probably meant for you,’ said Hilary with a smile.
‘Maybe
it is,’ I laughed and popped it in my bag.
But I didn’t really believe it – just went along with it for the smile. I was feeling a bit cynical back then…had lost
my faith a little in life bringing me exactly what I need; had abandoned the
trust.
And
when I got back to my patch of beach, I pulled it out my bag and took a
look. Loving What Is by Byron
Katie. Hmm.
And
the blurb reads:
Who
would you be without your story?
"The Work of Byron Katie is a way of identifying and questioning the thoughts that
cause all the anger, fear, depression, addiction and violence in the
world."
Hmm again.
Another self-help book with all the answers? But then I checked it out and, well, she wasn’t charging megabucks
for workshops or whatevers…in fact, you can do ‘the work’ for free on the website.
And
I started reading. And she was talking
about business.
'I can find only three
types of business in the universe,’ she said. ‘Mine, yours, and God’s.’
God’s?
‘For me, the word God means ‘reality’,’
she explained. ‘Reality is God, because it rules. Anything that’s out of my
control, your control, and everyone else’s control – I call that God’s
business.’
Ah,
okay. So that’s like me trying to keep the airplane up in the air by force of pure
willpower, when really I should leave it in the hands of the pilot and
God? Makes sense.
She
nodded. ‘Much of our stress comes from
mentally living out of our own business.
When I think, ‘You need to get a job; I want you to be happy; You should
be on time; You need to take better control of yourself, I am in your
business. When I’m worried about
earthquakes, floods, war or when I will die, I am in God’s business.’
Fair
enough.
‘Do
I know what’s right for my self?' she went on. 'That is
my only business. Let me work on that
before I try to solve your problems for you.
Just to notice that you’re in someone else’s business can bring you back
to your own wonderful self. And, if you
practice for a while, you may come to see that you don’t have any business
either and that your life runs perfectly well on its own.’
And
yes, I do believe that too.
And
then she lost me with her four questions malarkey. You’re supposed to take a thought about someone or somethingy and ask:
1. Is
it true?
2. Can
you absolutely know that it’s true?
3. How
do you react when you think that thought?
4. Who
would you be without the thought?
Ummmm.
‘Try
it,’ said Katie. ‘Don’t just think about it, write it down.’
Pfff! I’m too impatient for that…
‘It won’t work
unless you do, sweetheart,’ she said with a smile.
‘Oh
FFS, Katie.’
But
because I was on a beach and the waves were soothing me, I wrote. She gives prompt questions:
1. Who
angers or saddens or disappoints you?
What is it about them you didn’t or still don’t like?
2. How
do you want them to change? What do you want them to do?
3. What
is it that they shouldn’t or should do?
Be? Think? Feel?
4. Do
you need anything from them? What do
they need to give you or do in order for you to be happy?
5.What
do you think of them? Make a list. I.e. Bob is greedy. Bob is selfish. Bob drives
me crazy.
6. What
is it that you don’t ever want to experience with that person, thing or
situation again?
And
then you turn it around, finding how all those traits you find so revolting in
the other person are all there, mirrored in your own experience. Oh so
clearly. It’s kinda hard to explain in a
blog post without boring you beyond belief so, if it sounds like something of
interest, check out the book or the website…you can try out the process – what Katie
calls ‘the work’ - there.
I
came to love it. Try it on anyone – your
nearest and dearest (she says our families are our greatest teachers); the
random person who pisses you off at work; on the bus; at the school gate. Try it, above all, on your worst enemies, the
people who really REALLY piss you off.
‘There’s
no such thing as verbal abuse,’ said Katie firmly. ‘There’s only someone telling me a
truth I don’t want to hear.’ Oh yes! I'm with ya, sister.
‘Find
an enemy!’ she said joyously, warming to her theme. ‘They won’t give you
sympathy. You go to your friends for refuge, because you can count on them to
agree with your stories. But when you go
to your enemies, they’ll tell you, straight up, anything you want to know, even
though you may think you don’t want to know it.’
It’s
tough love, for sure. ‘If I think
someone else is causing my problems, I’m insane,’ said Katie with a shake of
her head. ‘Pain is the signal that you’re
confused, that you’re in a lie. I am everything they say I am. And anything I
feel I need to defend keeps me from full realization.’
And
finally, she said, when you drop all the lies, all the bullshit, all the
avoidance and the hiding, you become alive and you become free. ‘We are really alive when we live – open,
waiting, trusting, and loving to do what appears in front of us now.’
Really? ‘What we need to do unfolds before us, always…’ She promised.
Always? ‘We never receive more than we can handle,
and there is always just one thing to do.
Life never gets any more difficult than that.’
Okay,
Katie. :-)
Check
it out here: http://www.thework.com/index.php
PS – if, like me, you’re going, ‘Oh, but
what about serious stuff - like serious
illness, and debt and war and rape and so on’, she has answers for that too.
4 comments:
Sounds quite fascinating. And on can do it on-line? That is different. And worth a check.
Sounds like she is a force not to be reckoned with! I have to admit I do like thought process, and I do believe that life is what you make it, you either choose happiness or choose to avoid it and there are plenty of times I've chosen to avoid it! xx
I like Katie. And she's married to my favourite translator of Rilke, Stephen Mitchell. Thumbs up.
I wrote something like this days ago but it's complicated to comment here. Your site doesn't accept my open ID and the test-text for proving that I'm not a robot is near undecipherable. I'm not web-wise enough :)
I just got it from the library. I'll give it a go :)
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