In December I traveled to Thailand to do
ten day meditation retreat at a monastery and meditation centre called Suan
Mokkh. Readers of this blog might recall that the last time I did a meditation
retreat in Thailand, I spent a lot of it contemplating anger – directly. This time
was quite different. At the retreat itself, everything felt right, from the
lush green gardens dotted with tropical flowers, to the delicious Thai cooking
and the hot chocolate drinks in the evenings, to the natural hot springs we
could soak in to relax any knots in our muscles after a long day of meditation.
I felt I was exactly where I wanted and needed to be, and the world was
treating me very well.
My description so far makes the meditation
centre sound like a luxury resort, but of course it wasn’t all lazing about in
the pool. The day began with a wake-up bell at 4am, and more bells punctuated
each change of activity: sitting and walking meditation sessions, work periods,
a daily yoga class, some very entertaining dhamma talks, meals and rest
periods. The last meditation session of the day finished at 9pm, and we were
required to be back in our dorms by 9.30pm.
There is a distinctly ascetic dimension to
the place as well, reflecting the fact that this meditation centre is attached
to a monastery founded by a famous Thai monk, Ajahn Buddhadasa, known for his
very scholarly and pure approach to the Buddhist teachings. When he was still
alive, his supporters built an attractive, but still very modest (by Thai
temple standards) two-storey house for him to live in within the monastery.
After a few years, he moved into the toilet room, saying he didn’t need the
rest of the house.
One day we came back from evening drinks to
find the women’s dorm still locked. As we had all undertaken to maintain
silence for the duration of the retreat, we just stood in a slowly growing
crowd of women in front of the high metal gates, waiting. Soon enough they were
opened, and as we filed in one by one, I imagined us as inmates entering a
prison camp. It wasn’t just the lock on the gate of the dormitory that made the
comparison seem apt. Meditation retreats, especially large ones (there were
about a hundred people on this retreat) have an institutional quality, a sense
that you are being cared for and protected, and at the same time disciplined
into a manageable group, with individual expression and variation kept to a
minimum.
Entrance to the women's dorm |
To look at it another way, this kind of
retreat can be good for exposing the child that lives on in the adult,
unearthing habits and ways of responding that perhaps haven't truly changed
since we really were children, coping with a world that wasn’t as orderly or
carefully designed as a meditation retreat. Hopefully, the meditative mind is
strong enough to let us recognise these old, ordinarily masked habits and emotions
and to let them go, or take better care of them. It can be a salutary shock
just to face the fact that one is still capable of behaving like a child (and
not in a good way).
You may be wondering what kind of mid-retreat
tantrums I threw to provoke these reflections. Actually, I was perfectly
well-behaved; this retreat passed very peacefully for me. Thoughts and feelings
came and went mildly by; I didn’t get stuck in any whirlpools of emotion. There
were no internal fireworks of any kind, really – no extraordinary insights, or colouredåå
lights either. By the end, I felt well rested, if slightly disappointed that
nothing particularly transformative seemed to have happened.
But then… after the retreat, I had planned
a short holiday with a friend who was going to join me in Thailand. I’d booked
a short kayaking tour for us, and a nice hotel. When I emerged from the
retreat, I got an apologetic text message from my friend letting me know that
she had had a crisis and decided not to come. Initially I took this news calmly,
and sent a sympathetic and reassuring response in reply. But trouble was
brewing. Possibly the first sign that my inner child was preparing to make an appearance
was that although my friend asked me to fly to Singapore straight away to meet
her, I felt reluctant to abandon the planned holiday in Thailand. I thought I
might continue with the kayaking trip alone, and go to Singapore to see her a
bit later, taking the flight that was already booked.
From that point on, I entered the shadowy
counterpart of my contented retreat: nothing felt right. That night, I was the solitary
guest in a fairly remote guest-house in the middle of Thailand. The family who
ran the place seemed to tolerate my presence rather than welcome it. The
bungalow I was given was pretty, but damp and cold at night. There was a slug
on the bed sheets and a tap in the bathroom ran incessantly. Barking dogs kept
me awake late into the night; a crying baby woke me early. Oh the special
misery of not having a good time when you’re on holidays and everything is
supposed to be designed wholly and solely to please you…
At some point during that long night, my
inner child started wailing. I felt like I’d stepped into what should rationally
have been merely a shallow puddle of disappointment and abruptly found myself
sliding into a deep, murky hole of despair, with no way to save myself, as the muddy
walls of negative emotions threatened to close in over my head. I felt
rejected, resentful, unloved and toward the very bottom of the hole, unlovable.
I had descended into what Nietzsche calls
slave mentality, an attitude dominated by resentment, that sees others as
dominant, powerful, carelessly cruel, and views the self as weak, persecuted
and righteously pathetic. He contrasts this mentality with that of the noble
type, who focuses on the self as happy, proud, superior, and barely pays any
attention to the unhappy (but sometimes useful) other. The noble attitude seems
more attractive, of course, but regarded as a moral position, it is naïve and potentially
barbaric. And as psychological states, I suspect that master and slave
attitudes are liable to flip into each other.
Perhaps the energies of my inner slave, now
raging, had been building up in the form of a certain barbaric carelessness and
complacent sense of entitlement as I strolled around the retreat centre,
admiring the grounds and thinking about my next soak in the hot springs, or the
delicious Thai curry I would be served for lunch. Part of my inner child’s
problem seemed to be outrage that this level of care had not continued beyond
the walls of the retreat centre. Behind this outrage was the fear that perhaps
I wasn’t really a noble type after all, just a miserable slave.
Eventually it dawned on me that the only
thing that was stopping me from giving up my plans and going straight to
Singapore was a lurking fear that the real reason my friend hadn’t come to
Thailand was simply that she didn’t care about me or want to spend any time
with me. This wasn’t reasonable. There was plenty of evidence to the
contrary - she had offered to book a new flight to bring me to Singapore and pay
the deposit we would lose on the tour. Why wasn’t I paying more attention to that,
or to her heartfelt request for me to come and visit her?
At this point, I remembered the Buddha’s
teaching about the importance of friendship. Ananda, his close attendant,
suggests that friendship makes up half of the holy life, with the other half
relating to the discipline of monastic rules. The Buddha replies, “Do not say
so, Ananda, do not say so. Friendship is the whole of the holy life.”
5 comments:
What a lovely, refelctive and thought provoking post.
Funny enough I've also been doing some relection on friendship at the moment and have come to realise how important it is have friendships that are reciprocal and unconditional.
Its amazing for me that although helping friends in need can be tiring, its also very rewarding, makes me feel content yet challenging that sometimes I can't help them in their situation.
Look forward to your next post!
What a lovely, refelctive and thought provoking post.
Funny enough I've also been doing some relection on friendship at the moment and have come to realise how important it is have friendships that are reciprocal and unconditional.
Its amazing for me that although helping friends in need can be tiring, its also very rewarding, makes me feel content yet challenging that sometimes I can't help them in their situation.
Look forward to your next post!
Thanks for your comment, David! It's taken me a while to reply as I've been immersed in trying to understand the basics of neuropsychology - extremely interesting, but also complex stuff... Thanks, too, for being such a good friend to me (and my inspiration to start studying psych :).
Thanks for the valuable and insights you have so provided here...
adventures in Thailand
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