A dream come true has landed in my lap. A stunning north Berkeley home with an expansive, beautifully landscaped garden, has been gifted to me as a home base for a month. A month! It was exactly the vision I put out last year, then as part of my personal practice, I completely let it go. I am learning to follow the thread of the Tao, the non-doing, non-planning part of self, and surrender to Life. And honestly, it can still scare me, even when an opportunity for expansion arrives. I feel fear when old conditioned stories arise, or replay old hurt from past hopes, never met. I consider work demands at the practice. Then it dawns on me my son is NOT a garden guy. I think about: the mango tree ready to harvested, the avocado & gardenia need feeding, there are 5 pineapples ripening and may need staking, a saline pool which needs to be monitored, bird feeders to fill, compositing protocols, and all of my hand watered potted plants. Part of me hears, “blah, blah, blah,…” but there is another part that feels like a middle path can be found.

    Oh man, last week was rough. Not awful, mind you, just mucky, gritty, and devoid of color. Part of me wants to blame my first northern winter away from the tropics in 20 years, or a post-holiday slump, or perhaps even the phase of the moon. Honestly, after decades of working with how to Master inner challenges, figuring out ¨the reason¨ things went ¨dark¨ isn’t as critical or efficient as making the tiny adjustments that return us to an open, engaged self. A self that feels open to life, love, and joy- despite the vicissitudes of life.

     

    Musing Centered Expansion

     

    So, what adjustments did I make to return to a more open-hearted state during such a heavy time? The first was to stop resisting the fact that life felt heavy and listless, to quit railing against the machine. In essence, I had to discontinue giving energy to my mind, which was agitated and saying things shouldn´t be the way they were. I had to surrender and accept this ¨now,¨ thereby letting my body offload some accumulated tension.

     

    Centered Expansion

    This doesn’t mean there isn’t engagement with arising challenges. And in this case, the challenge is how to be grounded and expansive at the same time. By saying yes to the opportunity, the mind kicks in. Can I trust? Could I be OK with my fruit on the ground? Could I leave my patients who had just returned to the office? What if an early hurricane comes? So, I decide to fully open up to this opportunity, and do the following processes:

    1. Notice and sense what arises in the body-mind
    2. Ground in honoring legitimate concerns
    3. Sit with, and feel, each concern through
    4. Take the action that generates the most peace

    This helps me identify which is a lesson in letting go, or which would be worth opening up to a solution.  I approach it from the razor’s edge of what feels balanced; neither rushing nor avoiding. The barometer of what feels in alignment with the Tao/Center/Witnessing Presence, seems to be Peace.  Expansion often generates resistance. For some, it’s freezing or feeling rooted in place, unable to make a choice. For others, it’s leaping as if the thrill is the only way; then either denying potential issues, or mopping up after the fact. But the Tao is the center between the poles, honoring that expansion and contraction are part of the same cycle. Neither pushing away, nor grasping/clinging.

    Centered Expansion

    This doesn’t mean there isn’t engagement with arising challenges. And in this case, the challenge is how to be grounded and expansive at the same time. By saying yes to the opportunity, the mind kicks in. Can I trust? Could I be OK with my fruit on the ground? Could I leave my patients who had just returned to the office? What if an early hurricane comes? So, I decide to fully open up to this opportunity, and do the following processes:

    1. Notice and sense what arises in the body-mind
    2. Ground in honoring legitimate concerns
    3. Sit with, and feel, each concern through
    4. Take the action that generates the most peace

    This helps me identify which is a lesson in letting go, or which would be worth opening up to a solution.  I approach it from the razor’s edge of what feels balanced; neither rushing nor avoiding. The barometer of what feels in alignment with the Tao/Center/Witnessing Presence, seems to be Peace.  Expansion often generates resistance. For some, it’s freezing or feeling rooted in place, unable to make a choice. For others, it’s leaping as if the thrill is the only way; then either denying potential issues, or mopping up after the fact. But the Tao is the center between the poles, honoring that expansion and contraction are part of the same cycle. Neither pushing away, nor grasping/clinging.

    Centered Expansion

    We close our hearts for all sorts of reasons: biological, mental, emotional, relational, situational, etc.. Unfortunately, when we are closed down, our interactions can engender harsh reactions from others, spiraling us further down and promoting unhealthy interactions. Instead, if you can allow the sensitive part of you to softly be with the pain, you´ll watch it slowly ebb out of the body. No fun of course- until, through lived experience, there´s an ¨ah hah¨ at how fast and efficient it is to ¨be with the discomfort,¨  just long enough to face it, feel it, then watch it flow out. Mastery doesn´t mean that waves of suffering stop moving through you; it means allowing dark days to occur and trusting in a return to the light.

    ¨The less you open your heart to others,
    the more your heart suffers¨

    Deepak Chopra