
The Perfection of Imperfection
by Joan Tollifson
Meditation is so very simple. Reality is always
right here, immediate. But the mind creates a web of complications that come to
seem more real than the actual sounds and sensations and listening presence that
is this moment. Apparent embodiment in a particular perishable form, with a
complex brain, is undoubtedly at the root of our illusory sense of separation
from the totality, and all our subsequent human problems, for it is in thinking
about and identifying with the body that we seem to be vulnerable and alone.
Paradoxically, the body also offers the way home, for it is in fully meeting
whatever appears as pure sensation (without interpretation) that we discover the
emptiness of form — the undivided wholeness of being that has no solidity, no
boundaries, no limits — that which no word or image can capture, in which
every thing is included. By going into the very core of whatever appears, we
begin to turn our attention from the particular objects to the seeing. In that,
no obstacles or problems remain.
The appearance of the body has been a koan for me
throughout my life. I was born without a right hand, so from early on I have
been dealing with myriad reactions, internal and external, to ideas of
"imperfection" and "abnormality." When I was a toddler,
people would stop my mother on the street and tell her we were being punished by
God. Children would stare and point and ask questions. Adults would hush them
up. In high school, I was not a hot item with the boys. Growing up, the only
cultural images I saw of disabled people were negative: Captain Hook or the
Easter Seal poster children seemed to be my choices. Understandably, I did not
want to think of myself as disabled.
As a young adult, I drank excessively, smoked
cigarettes, took drugs, lived recklessly on the edge, and nearly died. I
cultivated a kind of wild, rebellious, belligerent, tough identity. I
understand, as a result of my own experience, that people don't willfully choose
to commit crimes or become addicts and abusers. And I understand from my own
life the healing power of love, acceptance, and caring attention.
Waking up, I went into therapy and began to discover
that being disabled didn't have to mean that you were ugly, incompetent,
pitiful, evil, or better off dead. I didn't have to be Captain Hook. I got
involved in the disability rights movement, worked with other disabled people,
and began to see my identity as a disabled person in a positive light. In the
same vein, I became a proud lesbian-feminist. Certainly this was an improvement
over self-hatred and self-destruction, and perhaps a very necessary step. But
who am I really?
Delving seriously into Zen meditation several years
later was another turn because Zen is the end of all identification. I resisted
this emptiness tooth and nail. I clung to my identities, to the stories
constructed by life-saving progressive politics: stories about the strength of
the feminine, the virtues of being gay, the revolutionary potential of
lesbianism, the righteousness of this or that cause, the suffering and
oppression I'd been through. These were better than the old stories in which
women were inferior, gays were mentally ill, and whatever troubles we had were
the result of our own personal failures. However, these new stories were still
fictitious abstractions. They had their usefulness, but many of us held on to
them as reality itself. I didn't want to question this new picture of how the
world was that made me feel righteous and superior. I was afraid that if I did,
maybe I'd be back where I was before therapy, before women's liberation, before
disability rights, back in the old story of worthlessness, the one that
culminated in alcoholism and rage and near-death.
It was (and is) a slow, lifelong (yet always
instantaneous) process, discovering that there can be a letting go into a deeper
truth where there is no story at all, no identity, no "me" to protect,
no "other" to blame, no history to cherish. In this new perspective, I
don't know anymore why I became a drunk or why I sobered up. All stories,
including the one I've just told, are recognized as fiction. Fiction and
imagination are wonderful. We can enjoy stories, but we don't need to become
entranced by them in ways that cause suffering to ourselves and others. That's
what waking up is all about, as I see it. Not knowing anything. Then anything is
possible.
This awakening is about coming alive to what is
actually happening right now. In this aliveness, the body and the whole world of
form is more vibrant and present than ever before, but it isn't solid anymore.
Concepts and images don't stick. The stories (and the people we apply them to)
are no longer fixed. In this openness that no longer knows what everything is,
there is freedom. This not knowing is love. In this open being, every moment is
devotion.
Flower, car horn, rain, contraction, headache,
person, word, thought, wheelchair. What is it? Zen invited me to listen to each
moment and wonder. The mind divides and evaluates. It provides answers. It
imagines bondage and liberation, desirable and undesirable. In sitting quietly
and listening without explanations or ideas, I discovered that there is no body.
If there is just listening and experiencing, what is the body? Where is it?
Where does it begin and end? Meditation reveals that the body is a painting that
appears and disappears in imagination. It seems solid when we think about it, or
if we look into a mirror (and think), or look at another person (and think), but
in quiet sitting we can actually experience the body as permeable, borderless,
empty space. And we can experience how nothing is separate from this space.
We can also see clearly how different bodies arise
at every moment, not just physiologically or sub-atomically, but
psychologically, image-wise. One moment I feel athletic, strong, beautiful,
flexible. Another moment I feel clumsy, weak, unattractive, stiff. Whatever body
image or sensation appears, there is always the possibility to see it,
experience it, and not identify it as "me," not take it too seriously.
In high school I took a class in filmmaking. In the
first class, I remember the teacher had us look at our thumbs. We sat there in
silence, gazing at our thumbs. Minutes ticked by. We shifted restlessly in our
seats. Three minutes. Five minutes. Ten minutes. Finally the teacher asked how
many of us were bored. A lot of us raised our hands. He told us that if we were
really seeing, we wouldn't get bored. He gave us homework assignments that
involved sitting in front of trees and looking at small sections of bark for an
hour, or watching grass blow in the wind.
One night I was lying on the floor in our dining
room in the dark, watching shadows move on the wall. My mother came in, a bit
upset, and asked me if I had finished my homework. I told her I was doing it.
Lucky for me I could honestly say that. Otherwise I would have been told to get
up and get to work. I'm not criticizing my mother; it was her job to do that.
That's part of what parents and teachers have to do, they have to socialize
little open beings into functional members of society. But in the process, we
come to believe that the imaginary constructions of convention are reality.
Meditation is returning to that original seeing that
is playful and interested in exploring. We turn from mental fantasy and story
line and trying to figure things out, and open to this exact moment as
unconceptualized sensate experience (smells, sounds, sensations, just as they
are, without analysis or labels, without judgment). As we experience what is
actually happening, we find that nothing is solid, nothing is bound or limited.
By turning our attention to what is apparently most concrete, we discover that
it is actually empty, spacious, and not even there. In the mental stories, we
appear to exist as substantial, discrete, continuous individuals, heroines or
victims of our narratives, struggling with problems that seem very tangible and
real. In simple, direct experiencing, we are not there anymore as separate
entities. The drama is gone, our problems dissolve into thin air because only
thought kept them going. There is pure listening, without meaning or purpose.
The mind is uneasy with this lack of identity and drama, and we may discover a
surprising reluctance to let our troubles go. Thought quickly begins weaving
another story. But there is always, in every moment, the possibility of seeing
the story for what it is, and of waking up to bare presence, to just what is.
This is very simple. It requires no particular body position, no especially
quiet setting, no special costumes or decor, no years of grueling work. It is
available every moment, everywhere.
But when spirituality gets institutionalized, often
what tends to happen is that people begin inventing and sanctifying special
costumes and correct postures to be in while "doing" it. I have no
objections to formal meditation, nor to robes and rituals, but I wonder if these
complicated systems may sometimes create an atmosphere where people who are
different begin to feel that they are less than fully authentic. People with
disabilities can't always get into the official costumes or the correct
postures. Certainly if we imagine that waking up requires any particular
circumstance we are missing the point.
I've lived for several years now at a meditation
retreat center where all the traditional forms have been dropped, where sitting
in an armchair is perfectly acceptable for anyone, where there are no particular
postures or costumes to get into. I've learned here beyond any shadow of a doubt
that real meditation can happen in any clothing, in any position, in any place,
in any body. Even calling it "meditation" can be a step away. For me,
this has been enormously freeing. It has helped me to see that meditation is
every moment, not just something I do in a special place, in a particular form.
It is simply being here.
Babies and animals automatically live this way. They
approach my arm, the one that ends just below the elbow, without ideas. They
aren't frightened or repulsed by it. They don't feel sorry for me. They don't
think I'm heroic or amazing. They see the actual shape of what's in front of
them without concepts and labels. They don't see it this way because they're
practicing meditation or trying to be enlightened. It just happens. And the same
simple seeing happens for us, too, every moment. The only problem is that for us
it tends to get obscured by our belief in the reality of all the thoughts that
arise, and particularly by our belief in the central thought of "me"
as somebody separate from the totality, somebody who is somehow incomplete, not
quite right, and in need of fixing.
Disability is a problem if we want to fix it, if we
think we should be other than how we are. It ceases to be a problem as soon as
we see it simply, the way the baby sees it. The physical difficulties and
discomforts may still be there, the social injustices and all the rest. But none
of this has to be a problem. We do what we can to relieve pain, to improve
physical functioning, to change oppressive social conditions: aspirin,
acupuncture, surgery, wheelchair ramps, legislation, consciousness raising,
whatever. But perhaps it can be done without expectations, without attachment to
our personal ideas of how everything should be, without idealism and blame, with
more openness and compassion. As we rest in what's actually happening, we
discover the complete perfection of imperfect existence. Physical imperfections
and limitations lose their sting, and the imperfections of society (the
prejudices and bad attitudes, the flawed responses) become less bothersome as
well. We do what it makes sense to do, but we don't feel personally attacked and
victimized by life's injustices in the way we once did. We come to realize the
impersonal nature of the whole thing. In meditation we quickly discover that all
the behaviors and attitudes we hate "outside" of us are there in our
minds as well; the same reactive, defensive, conditioned processes are going on
in all of us. There is no "other" to blame. Everything is happening on
its own.
Living with disability (like all forms of upset and
disappointment) is a gift if we work with it intelligently, as an opportunity to
see and question our images, ideals, expectations — our basic desire to be
different than we are. As these mental constructions become more transparent and
begin to unravel, beauty reveals itself right here and now where we least
expected to find it. Meditation teaches me that perfection is life as it
actually is from moment to moment. Asymmetrical. Messy. Unresolved. Out of
control. Imperfect. Terrible. And miraculous.
"Enjoying the Perfection of
Imperfection," by Joan Tollifson, from Being
Bodies, edited by Lenore Friedman and Susan Moon.
© 1997 by Lenore Freidman and Susan Moon.
By arrangement with Shambhala Publications, Inc., Boston
www.shambhala.com
Joan Tollifson's book,
Bare-Bones
Meditation, is recommended on the "Books"
page.