Friday, December 26, 2008

How I lost my sap.

I started this blog about a year ago, feeling strong. Feeling like I was hitting a whole new level of consciousness. And then....Here I am a year later. Depleted of energy, knotted with stress, twenty pounds heaver. Here I am, once again, starting from the beginning. Somehow this practice just slipped away. My dedication to the practice just disappeared, after three years of steady commitment. And my life has kind of unraveled with it.

So what happened? Work came my way, money. I don't know, I just got more and more easily distracted every day. Found it harder and harder to just plant my feet on the floor and let the energy do its thing.

I'm happy for this blog now. To be able to look back and remember how strong that force was in me a year ago and to try and find my way back. And who knows. Maybe the process of beginning again will be more helpful to people who are curious about the path and thinking about starting it, than my breathless writing about my success and my peak experiences. As I begin again I can remember what it was like slowly building that energy, and I can reflect on why I keep being drawn back to it. Failure is part of the process. How can I know what I've accomplished, until I've lost all those accomplishments.

This blog can be like that open tai chi class I return to from time to time. Instead of a linear path, this is a circular path that starts in at any point, and anyone reading this can just jump in and start the path with me.

No big drama. Just starting again.

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

traumatic sprouts

This morning on the cbc I heard a scientist talking about the post traumatic damage to trees that is still going on ten years after the montreal ice storm. So many healthy boughs were frozen and fell off during that storm. Branches grew in their place, but these are tiny branches not quite up to the task of life as a major bough. They are more susceptible to rot, infestation, disease.
And they are much more likely to break off in the winter repeating the cycle again.
This strikes me a great metaphor for the cycle of trying to recover from any kind of psychological trauma. We create these behaviours in reponse to loss and grief and pain because we want to grow, we want to flourish, it's our nature. But they aren't up to the strain of life, so they die, only to be replaced by more behaviours, plans resolutions.
It's a rigged cycle, but we can't just not grow.
Today I had a completely different zhang zhuang experience. Yesterday was all about floating in the ether. But I forgot to mention something. I felt my body re-alligning. I felt and intense growing kind of suffering, almost like the fear and excitement of losing your virginity. It was terrified, but suddenly I felt my body and my psyche re-alligning and I felt my tan tien, felt exactly where it was supposed to be.
When I started practice today, I started from that allignement. But there were problems. This allignment forced a stretch in my spine that brought back memories of major back pain. That memory made me less willing to hold the position. If I disappear, lose self-consciouslness I'm afraid I'll shift in such a way that puts strain on my spine.
So I'm careful. I want to stay close to the new allignment, but I don't want to risk putting too much stretch on my lower back. All of this self-awaress makes the experience much more internal. I feel the energy collecting in my tan tien, like a water baloon holding me in place. I feel a cold energy, which is weird because the literature usually tells you that it's warm. I feel it still, and I also felt a cold energy begining to flow along my lower spine.
It's new growth, I feel it. But I have to protect it. I don't want rot to set in.

Monday, January 7, 2008

electric sea

Today I got it. A shift like learning to swim. I got that there was a lot of unecessary muscular pain in my body because I hadn't yet accepted, physically, that I was floating, not standing. When it hit me that what I was doing was closer to floating than standing, it was easier to let go of muscular tension.
But instead of water I feel surrounded by a sea of thick magnetic electricity. My arms held up at shoulder level, palms facing my face, are supported by this electricity, not by my muscles. When I accept this I let go of all the things about self that I think I need, muscular and intellectual control. Better to let the electricity do my standing and my thinking for me.
Does this mean that I'm not thinking? No. If I'm not conscious of my breathing, does that mean I'm not breathing. No my mind is thinking at another level. I have to remember that my brain knows how to do this without my guidance. My brain knows how to breathe. It also knows how to connect with the electrical field that is my birthright.
This is what is hard about getting there. Relaxing and allowing the bliss to happen. The bliss reminds me of other bliss. Bliss that has more often than not led to heartbreak and abandonment. This will not happen with this bliss. This bliss is always available to me. So available that I may eventually lose interest in it and just be happy to simply be. Something that my brain does know how to do if I give it a chance.