Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Awareness and the Prayer

Although surrounded by quasi-religious parents and extremely religious schoolmates throughout most of my youth, I really never felt even remotely connected to any of it.
I'd like pretend that it was my over analytical mind that could sense there was something wrong with it all but it was most likely just because I was lazy and completely disinterested in having the extra responsibilities that faith required. In fact, I think I grew to hate religion even before I understood why. And that feeling has intensified every single moment since. Every single one.

That is, until tonight.

You see, I've been unable to work for the last few months due to really messing up my back. I injured myself exercising back in September and literally every second of every day since has been clouded in pain ranging from medium to insane. I assumed it was just a pulled muscle or something and would heal relatively quickly but here I am 6 months later, doctors still have no clue what is going on and I’m currently awaiting an MRI scan that will hopefully shed some light on the situation. Luckily, my beyond incredible and amazingly supportive wife had an emergency fund setup for a situation just like this one, so we've been making out alright so far. But as the last couple of months have stretched on, with no apparent medical solution in sight, there was definitely a little bit of fear starting to seep in and boatload of guilt pulling in fast behind.

So back to earlier tonight. As it should happen, just when our stress levels were starting to peak, some much needed but completely unexpected cash basically fell right into our lap from out of nowhere. It's not a huge amount by any stretch of the imagination, but it will be just enough to give us a bit of breathing room during the next couple of months as we try to sort everything out.

So why am I telling you all this?

Well, you see, as I stood there tonight processing this great news I found myself closing my eyes for just a split second and, in my mind, saying the words 'Thank you.'

I had already opened my eyes and taken 3 steps before it hit me like a ton of bricks.

I had just prayed for the first time in years.

My instant reaction was anger.
‘Who the fuck are you praying to idiot? You don’t believe in that anymore, remember?'

Fortunately, I have been working on my awareness (as described by Eckhart Tolle) a lot over the past couple of years and was therefore able to quickly detect the anger, will it away, and start to analyze the situation backed by calmness, reason and logic.
After a quick moment of reflection, I recognized that this thankful 'prayer' had pretty much been the only religious act that I did willingly and happily throughout my life . As I let that thought dance around my mind, an avalanche of great memories began lighting up my brain. Most were either unexpected moments of happiness such as the one above or ones when I was in awe of something beautiful in nature; and all were connected by those two simple words I used to say whenever I was aware enough to realize the moment warranted it.

Thank you.
And right there, in that moment, I felt happiness and peace.

I think many people would abandon their thought process right there and say to themselves ‘see, maybe religion isn’t so bad after all.' But if I've learned anything at all during this journey towards awareness, it would definitely have to be that the more layers you peel back, the more meaningful each layer becomes. Besides, deep down I knew how I felt about religion and it was a pretty solidly one-sided argument; so this tranquility I was experiencing just didn't 'feel' like it was coming from a religious place.

So then what did it mean? If this wasn't a religion-based prayer, what was it? I quickly dove right back inside my mind and continued ripping the place apart looking for answers.

'Well if it wasn't a religious thought, who were you thanking? And why did you feel that sense of calm afterwards? The same one you used to feel while in the midst of the herd.'

Suddenly a single word flashed in my mind's eye: "Gratefulness"

'Gratefulness?' I wondered, 'Grateful to who?'

And suddenly, without so much as another thought, I was certain not only of the answer, but also of the fact that I was actually asking the wrong question. The key to it all was quite simple really; I wasn’t looking for a 'who', I was looking for a 'what'?

The thing that had suddenly become so obviously clear to me in that moment was that I was never thanking god in the first place. What I was actually doing was expressing my gratitude to life itself. I was being a humble servant to the beauty of randomness, a faithful believer in the wonderful unpredictability of life, and a devoted worshipper of the ultimate meaninglessness of our existence.

Because, with the risk of sounding like a Hallmark card, our time here is short and our lives are filled with moments we can't control. The important part is to pause within those moments, even for just a breath's length, and appreciate them for what they are: the composition of our one and only life.

It is only once we do that, that we can truly be grateful - and not to some imaginary deity who will send us to hell if we don't - but to the incredible variance of the universe that has allowed each one of us to end up in this place, in this time, doing the only things that truly matter: living, loving, and being loved.

Because really, at the end of the day, what else could we possibly need out of this life?
In my opinion, absofuckinglutely nothing.

I am.
I, am.
I.

8 comments:

  1. Nice first post. Looks like we agree on everything but Tolle.:)

    I'll be watching for your next post.

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  2. I have also often stopped to say "thank you," and then wondered who I was thanking. Unlike you, I come from a large, VERY religious fundamentalist family. I am a closeted atheist. They know I don't go to church and that's enough of a problem without declaring all out war by telling them I don't even believe anymore, and probably never really did. But anyway, I like your thought process. It makes sense to me. I look forward to reading more.

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  3. Loved reading this post. And I absoultley agree that saying Thank You isn't for God but for the life we are living and the outcomes of it.

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  4. Found this from your twitter account, so I just gotta say... "Cool story bro" ;)

    But seriously, I think everyone that's had some kind of religious upbringing has a story. Mine isn't as dramatic as yours, but I think the sense of freedom and relief that comes with finally casting out the fantasy is something that we'll all personally remember, in our own way.

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  5. Great post. I've had a similar experience a few years ago when I was flying around a bit and found myself irrationally "praying", in a way, hoping the plane would take off and land ok. It was just a moment of being very afraid. But I realized like you did, that it was merely an expression of this fear, a hope. I have seen my Christian friends pray, and I can say that all that they're doing, mostly, is externalizing a wish/hope for themselves. They're just directing it at a deity, whereas you and I have realized it's just a way of calming the self and expressing a feeling. In your case, a gratefulness, and in mine, a fear. Glad you recognized it for what it was :) Thanks for sharing openly and honestly your story - I'm glad I found it via Twitter! I really hope you are able to figure out the issues with your back/hips pain and get better soon.

    Take care,
    @jaredscheib

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  6. Yes, grateful for life and for the goodness of other people who share the planet with us. We don't need an imaginary deity to account for the goodness that surrounds us. Nor do we need an imaginary archenemy to account for all the bad stuff that happens.

    I hope your health improves, and I'm grateful that you continually peel back the payers--it's so importnat that we don't stop with the standard explanations to really important questions. It's far too easy to attribute to God anything that we can't comprehend. We can do better than that. Thanks for sharing your experience and your thoughts.

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  7. I wonder if it's time that moves forward
    Or if we simply imagine it's motions
    As if the past was a fabrication of our minds
    Like an illusion born out of our perceptions.

    Yet between the time it begins to the time it ends
    We learn to love and as we learn to judge we learn to hate again.

    And through these passing images of time
    We capture stills of instances we can't leave behind.
    Like all those moments of first sights.
    And the glorious memories of first nights.

    It's seems that time gives us these moments of perfection
    Filled with passion and dreams of infinite devotion.
    But it's only when we refuse to take them for granted
    that our lives becomes filled with these moments in time.

    I wonder if when we'll finally realize
    The value of a moment held in time
    We'll allow ourselves to perceive
    Our lives as the product of our dreams.

    And from the time it begins to the time it ends
    We realize how meaningless they are if we don't achieve them.

    Still through these passing moments in time
    We hang on to those we should have left behind.
    Like all those moments of last sights
    And the tortuous memories of last nights.

    Through all these moments of passions
    That makes up the fabric of our lives.
    I always dream of that first moment of perfection
    Through which life took us out of time
    To somewhere in between.

    Get well BRO!

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  8. I don't see anything wrong with appreciating for what it is. Maybe the gratefulness is a reflex, and in my opinion not a bad one. Life is short, but it's the longest thing we do. Might as well make the most out of it.

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