One of the great spiritual hopes is that our spirituality will actually transform us. For four years now I’ve been doing insight meditation each morning and one of the promises this practice makes is that it will ‘train’ us to be present in the world in a richer way.
Barbara and I hiked yesterday afternoon. I had spent time last week planning a couple of hikes for us to take—this one, Roan High Knob in Tennessee, was the one I wanted to do most. High country (6,000 ft), grassy balds, long views, thousands of rhododendrons in bloom
The rhododendrons were certainly gorgeous, but the trail took us only through spruce and fir forest. Rich, ferny, mossy and moist. Lovely but close like a tunnel. None of the long, open, and longed for views. Some of the trail was actually asphalted. At one point a road bisected it, and a Dodge van was parked nearby with its engine and AC running for the benefit of the person inside. The temperature outside was in the 60s (the van was still running when we came back an hour later).
I also was stewing. The weight of disappointment was compressing my spirits. This was not what I had imagined, what I wanted, what I needed.
Still, in the spirit of ‘Presence’ I turned my attention back to the path as it was, breathing more consciously, smiling, and moving my feet forward on the alpine asphalt trail. For a minute and a half.
I still couldn’t believe our rotten luck. This was NOT how it was supposed to be. So I smiled and breathed and leaned into the moment again. And again in a moment was looping between regret and complaint, frustration and resentment. Remembering Jesus’ comment about a certain entrenched demon: ‘This one only comes out by fasting,’ which I took to mean ‘not without a lot of work,’ I said, Okay.
I’ll work. I’ll be honest about what I’m thinking and how I’m feeling. And I’ll be kind in the process.
There is a lot of ‘I’ in an account like this. There was a lot of ‘I’ in the frustration and disappointment impinging on an otherwise glorious hike. That was the sticky place and the arena for a good piece of work, gently plodding work with its rather proletarian ‘notice, welcome, let be, and be with’ over and over. It was also inspiring.
Continuing this simple cycle opened up that compressed and tight sense of self (at one point I also saw that I had somehow been able to blame Barbara for our bad luck because she had been impatient to park in the first parking lot we saw—as if that had anything to do with our having a wooded instead of an open hike).
All this stewing, however, gradually—and thoroughly—dropped away. Not repressed or glossed over but observed and heard. I did mostly miss half the hike by focusing inward. But only half. The return trip was stunning.
God of moist forest path and open grassy balds, I am profoundly grateful that ‘close’ or ‘open’ all paths are in you. Amen.