Dear Reader,
This one was hard to write. This topic, the third in my four part series on Wonder and Wander, is the most abstract and holds the least amount of grounding information. If at any time while reading this part you feel as though you are floating or failing to grasp the subject, enjoy that feeling.
I have a laundry list of ideals, ideas, morals, values and emotions that give me a healthy amount of pride that, honestly, gets in the way of everything that I do.
Every interaction that I have ever had has been influenced by my personal beliefs. What does this mean? It means that when I talk to someone, I listen to their ideas (I’m a good listener) and I then process them through a filter of my own personal thoughts in order to understand them. I put this person’s ideas up against the scrutiny of what I know the world to be.
Sometimes my mind says, “Yes, we learned about that, it makes sense, this person has good points that relate to our understanding, and this is probably a smart person.”
Other times my mind sits back and exhales a long blow of cigarette smoke before whispering, “I know nothing of this, I don’t want to know anything of this, and frankly this person doesn’t know the world the way we do so they’re probably wrong.”
I do not encourage either thought process, not anymore, and I’ll tell you why.
The first one, although seeming the better option, is actually the worse of the two. This seems like the right option because it is positive and accepting. However, it is only accepting of knowledge that I already see as true. It’s self-validation. Meanwhile, the second option is me questioning the world. The idea that someone is probably wrong only means that I am holding the ideas and ideals presented to me under the microscope. I am questioning new information. Sure, I’m not accepting the ideas, but I am acknowledging that the person I am talking to has ideas. In this way, these reactions are the exact same. In both veins of processing ideas that are presented to me, I am only accepting information that fits in with the way I see the world.
When I talk to someone and listen to them, I should understand that their view on the world is not going to be the same as mine. Maybe their view won’t even be similar to anything I have ever understood. But that does not mean that they are wrong. It also doesn’t mean that I am wrong. It just means that, here’s the kicker, we are different people and we have unique ways of seeing the world.
One of the reasons that I began to write this blog was to relate some of my ideas to an audience and hopefully find people who have similar ideas. It’s a nice way of having people feel as though they are not alone in this world. It’s a nice way to share and be shared with. That being said, I am doing this understanding one thing: Even though someone out there may read my ideas and reflect upon them and see them as similar to the way they understand the world, they will also interpret these ideas and make them their own.
The reason I try not to fall into the trap of minimizing my understanding of the world by comparing all of the new information I perceive against what I believe is that by doing so I am limiting my experience. That was a mouthful. All I mean is that by holding my own beliefs, I am, at least somewhat, limiting the way I will now experience the world.
Imagine I am in an argument with a loved one. They tell me that they want to hang out with certain people because those people make them feel comfortable. I tell my loved one that those people are not good to hang out with because they make me feel uncomfortable. Who is right and who is wrong? Well, both of us are equally right and equally wrong.
The same group of people that makes me uncomfortable at the same time makes my loved one feel comfortable. We’ve established that point, but because of our own beliefs, in this case my belief that the people make me uncomfortable, we are limiting out perspectives. Because of what I believe, I have a much harder time understanding that these people are capable of making anyone feel comfortable. I am closing a door on a bit of information and tossing away the key.
Let’s circle back to pride for a moment. There is a lot of pride in our world these days. Proud of our honor student, proud to be a (insert sports team here) fan, proud (insert nationality here). These are classic ways in which we limit our experience of the world. Because we fancy a certain sports team, we are blinded to the skills of nearly every other sports team. Because we hold pride in our honor student, we ignore the idea that that kid has a lot to learn. And pride in our nation only limits our ability to sympathize with the goals of other nations and, God forbid, the world in its entirety.
I went off on a bit of a tangent there, but it has a purpose. Just stick with me a little bit longer.
I called this part of my series ‘Wonder Lost’ because I believe that is an admirable goal. Wonder, in this case meaning to think, ponder, explore by extending curiosity and expressing an interest in the unknown, is a terrific concept. But when we wonder through the filter of our beliefs, and our pride and our understandings, then we cannot wonder freely. That’s where the Lost bit comes in.
Once, a little while back, I had a deep-set fear of death.
This fear would come out at night when my mind began to process the day, week, or month that was coming to an end. I would find myself lying in bed after I turned off the lights and closed my computer just to think about everything that would happen when I died. Eventually, I began to notice my health deteriorating and I decided to take action. I looked up the fear of death. I searched after ways to calm the mind, and to sooth the body. What I found coming up most prominently in my searches was meditation and chakras. I read all about the Earth Chakra and how it sat at the base of all the other chakras and focuses on fear. I resolved to attempt to open and clear my Earth Chakra.
The day that I decided this, I already felt better. I had never thought about chakras and I had scoffed at all my friends who believed in meditation more than once, but I was willing to try it because I felt as though my own belief systems did not support what I wanted to achieve.
I discovered that with each chakra there are syllables that one should hum repeatedly and continuously in order to focus the body’s vibrations. There are also certain foods to avoid and to eat throughout the day. You can also prepare by grounding your focus in certain aspects of your body throughout the day. For instance, the Earth Chakra recommends that you should establish a focus on your connection with the Earth. Every footstep you take should have weight to it, and you should understand that weight as a clear definition of your connection to the Earth.
That night, about an hour before bed I sat in the dark and the quiet and I began to hum those syllables and I tried to clear my mind. Again I found myself bombarded by my thoughts and feelings from the previous week. My mind swam with my concerns and the noise of my worries. But I struggled through. Eventually, and without even realizing it had happened, my mind quieted and I gained a numbing, floating sensation throughout my body.
In that state, I found my fear of death, I wrapped it in my consciousness, and I expelled it from my mind. Simple as that. When I awoke from this state, I felt lighter than usual, and that night, and every night since then, I have slept easy and without the fear of death.
Now, you can take my story with a grain of salt, or you can unabashedly absorb this as fact and give it a try yourself, if you haven’t already. The point I am trying to impress upon you, reader, is that I found myself exploring a concept that I had zero faith in. Raised Christian, abandoning all religion in college, and now adopting the views of Omnism, I have no learned faith in chakras and meditation. Regardless, I allowed myself to get lost, to lose all of my preconceptions and accept something that, if I had filtered through my understanding of the world, I would have turned away as silly fiction and I would probably still be awake most nights clenching a pillow in terror. Because I lost my prejudices, I am now a better person. Or, at least, I am now a person who is not afraid of death. Whether that means better or worse is up for debate. I like the sleep I’m now getting.
By allowing ourselves to Wonder Lost we are permitting ourselves to be curious without holding a metaphysical map of what is true and what is untrue. I encourage you, reader, to go out into the world and be curious and look for new experiences, but do it without your filter. I don’t mean for you to abandon all knowledge of the world that you have gained, rather be ready to absorb the beliefs that someone else holds. Talk to people as though the ideas that they have are more than possible, but that they are true. Believe that someone else’s beliefs have equal strength in this world as your own. Get lost in someone else’s wonder.
As always, thanks for reading. I hope you enjoyed Part Three of this series, and I hope to see you back for our fourth and final topic!
Also, if you want to learn more about the methods I used to explore my chakras you can follow these two links:
http://avatar.wikia.com/wiki/Chakras
http://www.wikihow.com/Open-Your-Spiritual-Chakras