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Chapter no 50

Eat, Pray, Love: One Woman's Search for Everything Across Italy, India and Indonesia

The next morning in meditation, all my caustic old hateful thoughts come up again. Iโ€™m starting to think of them as irritating telemarketers, always calling at the most inopportune moments. What Iโ€™m alarmed to find in meditation is that my mind is actually not that interesting a place, after all. In actuality I really only think about a few things, and I think about them constantly. I believe the official term is โ€œbrooding.โ€ I brood about my divorce, and all the pain of my marriage, and all the mistakes I made, and all the mistakes my husband made, and then (and thereโ€™s no return from this dark topic) I start brooding about David . . .

Which is getting embarrassing, to be quite honest. I meanโ€”here I am in this sacred place of study in the middle of India, and all I can think about is myย ex-boyfriend?ย What am I, in eighth grade?

And then I remember a story my friend Deborah the psychologist told me once. Back in the 1980s, she was asked by the city of Philadelphia if she could volunteer to offer psychological counseling to a group of Cambodian refugeesโ€”boat peopleโ€”who had recently arrived in the city. Deborah is an exceptional psychologist, but she was terribly daunted by this task. These Cambodians had suffered the worst of what humans can inflict on each otherโ€”genocide, rape, torture, starvation, the murder of their relatives before their eyes, then long years in refugee camps and dangerous boat trips to the West where people died and corpses were fed to sharksโ€”what couldย Deborahย offer these people in terms of help?

How could she possibly relate to their suffering?

โ€œBut donโ€™t you know,โ€ Deborah reported to me, โ€œwhat all these people wanted to talk about, once they could see a counselor?โ€

It was all:ย I met this guy when I was living in the refugee camp, and we fell in love. I thought he really loved me, but then we were separated on different boats, and he took up with my cousin. Now heโ€™s married to her, but he says he really loves me, and he keeps calling me, and I know I

should tell him to go away, but I still love him and I canโ€™t stop thinking about him. And I donโ€™t know what to do . . .

This is what we areย like.ย Collectively, as a species, this is our emotional landscape. I met an old lady once, almost one hundred years old, and she told me, โ€œThere are only two questions that human beings have ever fought over, all through history.ย How much do you love me?ย Andย Whoโ€™s in charge?โ€ย Everything else is somehow manageable. But these two questions of love and control undo us all, trip us up and cause war, grief and suffering. And both of them, unfortunately (or maybe obviously), are what Iโ€™m dealing with at this Ashram. When I sit in my silence and look at my mind, it is only questions of longing and control that emerge to agitate me, and this agitation is what keeps me from evolving forward.

When I tried this morning, after an hour or so of unhappy thinking, to dip back into my meditation, I took a new idea with me: compassion. I asked my heart if it could please infuse my soul with a more generous perspective on my mindโ€™s workings. Instead of thinking that I was a failure, could I perhaps accept that I am only a human beingโ€”and a normal one, at that? The thoughts came up as usualโ€”OK, so it will beโ€” and then the attendant emotions rose, too. I began feeling frustrated and judgmental about myself, lonely and angry. But then a fierce response boiled up from somewhere in the deepest caverns of my heart, and I told myself, โ€œI willย notย judge you for these thoughts.โ€

My mind tried to protest, said, โ€œYeah, but youโ€™re such a failure, youโ€™re such a loser, youโ€™ll never amount to anythingโ€”โ€

But suddenly it was like a lion was roaring from within my chest, drowning all this claptrap out. A voice bellowed in me like nothing I had ever heard before. It was so internally, eternally loud that I actually clamped my hand over my mouth because I was afraid that if I opened my mouth and let this sound out, it would shake the foundations of buildings as far away as Detroit.

And this is what it roared:

YOU HAVE NO IDEA HOW STRONG MY LOVE IS!!!!!!!!!

The chattering, negative thoughts in my mind scattered in the wind of this statement like birds and jackrabbits and antelopesโ€”they hightailed it out of there, terrified. Silence followed. An intense, vibrating, awed silence. The lion in the giant savannah of my heart surveyed his newly quiet kingdom with satisfaction. He licked his great chops once, closed his yellow eyes and went back to sleep.

And then, in that regal silence, finallyโ€”I began to meditate on (and with) God.

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