Into the Demon's
Mouth
Like the
great Tibetan saint Milarepa, we can learn to face our fears with
clarity and kindness. Aura Glaser tricycle
The spiritual journey involves stepping into unknown
territory with a hunger to know what is true. One of the essential
elements of such a life is the understanding that everything we
encounter—fear, resentment, jealousy, embarrassment—is actually an
invitation to see clearly where we are shutting down and holding
back. At some point we realize we can’t manipulate life to give us
only what we want: the rug gets pulled out regularly. So what do we
do? Although our deep-seated tendency is to reject the unwanted in
an effort to prevent suffering, it turns out that all the ways we
resist actually limit our lives, bringing us pain. And yet how do
we find the courage to open to, and accept, all of what we are and
all of what is arising in our body and mind? How do we tap the
confidence to live with that kind of openness and receive what is
arising in the moment, just as it is, with clarity and kindness?
How do we let life, with all of its disappointments and sorrows
soften our heart? In the Tibetan tradition there is a story about
the great cave-dwelling yogi Milarepa that illuminates the often
bumpy road we travel in the process of releasing resistance and
making peace with ourselves.
One day Milarepa left his cave to gather firewood,
and when he returned he found that his cave had been taken over by
demons. There were demons everywhere! His first thought upon seeing
them was, “I have got to get rid of them!” He lunges toward them,
chasing after them, trying forcefully to get them out of his cave.
But the demons are completely unfazed. In fact, the more he chases
them, the more comfortable and settled-in they seem to be.
Realizing that his efforts to run them out have failed miserably,
Milarepa opts for a new approach and decides to teach them the
dharma. If chasing them out won’t work, then maybe hearing the
teachings will change their minds and get them to go. So he takes
his seat and begins teaching about existence and nonexistence,
compassion and kindness, the nature of impermanence. After a while
he looks around and realizes all the demons are still there. They
simply stare at him with their huge bulging eyes; not a single one
is leaving.
At this point Milarepa lets out a deep breath of
surrender, knowing now that these demons will not be manipulated
into leaving and that maybe he has something to learn from them. He
looks deeply into the eyes of each demon and bows, saying, “It
looks like we’re going to be here together. I open myself to
whatever you have to teach me.” In that moment all the demons but
one disappear. One huge and especially fierce demon, with flaring
nostrils and dripping fangs, is still there. So Milarepa lets go
even further. Stepping over to the largest demon, he offers himself
completely, holding nothing back. “Eat me if you wish.” He places
his head in the demon’s mouth, and at that moment the largest demon
bows low and dissolves into space.
One of the things I love about this story is that it
doesn’t feed our romantic vision of spiritual life. We sometimes
imagine that if we just lead our spiritual life the “right” way, we
won’t encounter life’s sharp edges. We will be on a direct path to
ever-increasing tranquility and joy. We are not prepared for all of
our unfinished business being exposed, all of our unresolved trauma
pushing up from the depths like a geyser of black mud. The story of
Milarepa feels much closer to the truth. Working with all that has
been pushed down is a central part of the spiritual journey. And
when those demons appear, it is not so easy to just relax and let
go. We usually try a number of different approaches to get these
uninvited guests to go back to the dungeon. This story takes us on
a journey that includes the well-worn strategies and habitual
maneuvers we attempt—and ultimately abandon—in the process of
genuinely opening to ourselves and our lives.
The first stage of this journey is awareness. We
begin to see what is happening. Milarepa comes back to his cave,
and finds that it is full of demons—maybe they’ve been there all
along, but now he clearly sees them. We experience this dawning
recognition as we begin to see the things we have been running
from, hiding from, or trying to push away. Our patterns of
avoidance and denial can take so many different guises that often
we don’t even really see them until our awareness begins to deepen.
It may be 20 years before we realize, “Oh, I became a doctor
because I wanted my parents’ approval.” Or “I am always taking care
of people because I want others to need me.” Or “I was the life of
the party because I felt empty inside.” A lot of times we look at
the things that we do without recognizing that what’s really
driving us is a need for approval, a need to be needed, or a need
to fit in. And sometimes our most obvious destructive behaviors
conceal something else that is even more difficult for us to
acknowledge. We may, for example, be willing to acknowledge our
anger, but unwilling to look at the fear and vulnerability beneath
it. So we “work on our anger” without touching the raw place
underneath.
I remember years ago when I was living with one of
my closest friends how appalled I was when I realized how
competitive I was with her. She was getting the attention I wanted
for myself, and I was burning with jealousy and resentment. I
thought of myself as a loving person who wanted the best for my
friends, and the situation revealed a side of me I didn’t want to
know. Even more upsetting was the growing realization that beneath
that jealousy was a deep sense of unworthiness. I came to see that
I craved that attention in order to feel good about myself, and not
getting it felt annihilating. There was no escaping this
situation—I felt like I was in a pressure cooker, and it was
incredibly painful. But not being able to hide or run away, I
gradually discovered what compassion for oneself really means, and
how it really is the basis of an authentic and openhearted
life.
When we don’t acknowledge all of who we are, those
unacknowledged parts will land in what Jung called the “shadow”
that we then project onto others. This is one way of seeing
Milarepa’s encounter with the demons. He was encountering his
shadow—all that he had suppressed and rejected in himself—in the
demons.
Often when a painful feeling arises, we
short-circuit that experience; we don’t listen to it. We’re afraid
to touch it. We turn on the television. We spend hours on the
computer. We eat a bag of chips. We go to a movie. We shop. We
drink too much. We find some way to keep ourselves busy and numb.
We have many ways of distracting ourselves so that we don’t feel
the full impact of pain. Instead of being accepted into
consciousness, the feeling goes underground and enters the cells of
our body. It doesn’t go away; it goes in. Anyone who has had deep
body work, has done intensive meditation practice, or has engaged
in somatic practices on their own has likely experienced how the
body reveals our history in surprising—and sometimes
unsettling—ways. Things we’ve long forgotten, our body remembers
with impeccable accuracy. We may imagine that spiritual awakening
is something separate from our physical embodiment, but awakening
and embodiment go together. To be embodied isn’t just about feeling
comfortable in our own skin—it’s about a complete opening to
life.
This is where awareness comes in. With awareness,
even if we shut down, we see ourselves shutting down. That in
itself begins to illuminate the territory. We may not be able to
stop ourselves from doing the habitual thing, but we are watching
ourselves do it. Most of us, when we do become aware of something
unwanted in ourselves, have a knee-jerk reaction to it, and do just
what Milarepa first did when he saw those demons. We ask, “How can
I get rid of this thing?” This second stage on our journey is one
of our habitual maneuvers. We see something, and if we don’t like
what we see, we want to expel it. We recoil. We judge. We attack. I
can’t begin to count the number of times I’ve sat with someone in
therapy who wants me to help them figure out how to get rid of
whatever they don’t like about themselves. And sometimes this
tendency can be even worse in those with long years, even decades,
of dedicated spiritual practice.
We come upon our greediness, jealousy, or
impatience, and the next impulse is to go to war with it. We don’t
realize that all the while we’re strengthening the thing we’re
fighting against. It’s like trying to push a beach ball into the
water. Holding it down requires a huge amount of energy, and
inevitably it pops back up with equal force, taking an
unpredictable direction. But if you give the beach ball space and
let it be, it will float effortlessly along the surface.
Some years ago I read a piece by Chögyam Trungpa
Rinpoche in which he described the spiritual warrior as someone who
is not afraid of space—not afraid to experience oneself, and one’s
world, fully. If we’re afraid of who we are, we continually feel
frantic about filling that space, anything to avoid that persistent
unease beneath the surface of our lives. The fearlessness of the
warrior comes from stepping again and again into open space, with
body, breath, and heart exposed. It is the fearlessness that is
willing to be intimate with fear.
As Milarepa’s story unfolds, we find that there is a
discovery process at work. When the direct attack fails, as it
inevitably does, he tries another approach—indirect manipulation.
He begins this third stage when he decides, “I’m going to teach
these demons the dharma.” There is subtle fix-it energy at work
here. The indirect manipulation looks like a greater acceptance and
accommodation, but it is still rooted in the rejection of
experience. We are still bent on avoiding and getting rid of what
we don’t like. We still don’t want to face our most undesirable
parts, and we’re secretly hoping that maybe we can pass directly
into freedom without doing that. There is a lot of room for
self-deception here; this is where we can get caught in spiritual
bypassing. We begin to use our spiritual practices and all the
things we’ve learned to perpetuate a disconnection from experience
and a disembodiment from life. Our idealized image of what it means
to be a spiritual person doesn’t allow for self-knowledge that
contradicts it.
So the ego moves into a high-rise. It’s possible to
live for a long time in a luxurious penthouse in the ego’s
high-rise, while all the lower floors are rotting and decaying. If
you’re lucky, before you die the whole thing will collapse and
you’ll find yourself on the ground. The transcendence experienced
at the level of ego’s high-rise is not embodied. It has not
penetrated the matter of our lives. The “gone beyond” of
prajnaparamita, the perfection of wisdom, is not this. True
transcendence is the deepest form of intimacy because nothing is
excluded from its embrace. Transcendence is union. In the union of
form and emptiness, our bodies and minds and the whole phenomenal
world are not rejected but rather are found to be direct
expressions of the sacred. In spiritual bypassing we use spiritual
practices and beliefs to avoid dealing with our painful feelings,
unresolved wounds, and basic needs. Avoiding our full humanity
actually stunts our spiritual growth and prevents real spiritual
maturity.
There was an article a few years ago in The New
York Times Magazine called “Enlightenment Therapy,” about a
Western Zen master who had his high-rise collapse. After living for
decades in what seemed to be a highly actualized spiritual
consciousness, he began experiencing terrible depression,
debilitating anxiety, and dark despair. His decades of meditation
had not healed his core psychological wounds, and his life was
coming apart. In desperation he went to see a therapist, and
gradually he was able to open to and heal some of the profoundly
fragmenting trauma that he’d experienced in his early life. His
depth of meditation had allowed him to “rise above” these wounds
until one day the wolves of his undigested pain came howling at his
door. He understood, over time, that his “talent” for enlightenment
experience was in part an expression of the ability he had
developed early in life to dissociate from pain. Through opening to
these buried conflicts he was able to move toward a genuine
friendship with himself, and a more authentic wholeness.
This capacity to see every situation in our life as
our path marks a shift from willfulness to willingness. This is the
fourth stage in the story. Milarepa relinquishes his solutions and
strategies and surrenders to the presence of the demons, and to
whatever they may have to teach him. At this point we begin to see
everything that arises as an opportunity to deepen our
understanding and to soften our heart. We view our life situations
as inherently workable. We are willing to be with our experience,
whatever it is, without judgment, without trying to fix it or get
rid of it. And somehow this willingness, this gentle allowing,
starts to calm things down.
In order to be with ourselves in this complete way,
we need to be in contact with our inner resources of
self-compassion and lovingkindness. Our capacity to turn toward
whatever scares or repels us, and remain present with it, depends
on our access to inner goodness. When we are able to connect with
this ground of inner goodness, it brings a level of confidence and
ease that can embrace our full humanity in all its complexity.
Without that, we won’t be able to stay with whatever’s arising.
This connection to our inner goodness is like the rope a rock
climber uses to stay in contact with the steep rock face. Without
that rope of connection, we can free-fall into self-blame and
self-hatred and actually intensify the existing wound.
Transitioning into this fourth stage requires a bone-deep
commitment to honesty. We really have to be willing to look at
ourselves, and this takes guts. We aren’t going to run away even if
we see a demon staring back at us in the mirror. We are going to
stick with ourselves no matter what, because we are more interested
in what is true than in what is comfortable. As we begin to really
look into our lives we ask, and want to know, “What is this
uneasiness I don’t want to touch?” “What is this unhappiness that
is always there despite all my accomplishments?” “What is this
anxiety that is always humming beneath the surface of my life?” We
have the courage and strength to move toward that which we may have
spent a lifetime hiding from.
Jung commented that we don’t become enlightened by
imagining beings of light but by making the darkness conscious.
That is the work at this stage of the journey. We’re retrieving all
the lost and exiled places in our lives. In truth, it is life
returning for itself. In our willingness to open, we are returning
for the life that is still waiting to be received. All that we
pushed aside is ever waiting to be received into the arms of our
clear-seeing tenderness. Rumi said, “When you embrace hurt, it
becomes joy.” Is this true? What happens if we soften toward
something when we would usually harden? At this fourth stage, we
begin to risk exploring the forsaken landscape of our lives. This
terrain can be highly charged, and sometimes we find we don’t have
the resources in a given moment to move any closer. We get
overwhelmed, and our brain starts melting out our ears, our belly
starts to flip, we want to vomit, and our whole system feels like
it’s crashing. So we are present to that. We reconnect with our
inner goodness, deepening our confidence, our well-being, and sense
of basic trust. And then we try again. We discover that the journey
is a dynamic process, full of alternating successes and failures.
And we discover that failures are not dead ends. Every time we’re
up against the wall, we’re also standing at a threshold. The
invitation to open to our experience—whatever it is from moment to
moment—is always there, no matter how many times we need to
rediscover it.
This ultimately brings us to the fifth and final
stage of complete letting go, where all resistance is gone. We no
longer demand that life be on our terms. Instead, we begin living
with the understanding that the source of wisdom is in whatever is
in front of us—it is in whatever is arising in this moment. Wisdom
is not somewhere else. It’s not in someone else. It’s right here in
our own bottomless heart.
So Milarepa lets go of that last shred of holding
back and places himself in the largest demon’s mouth. The demon
dissolves into space. In this space, wakefulness radiates with an
unconditioned compassion that, in the words of the late Zen teacher
Charlotte Joko Beck, “goes against nothing and fulfills
everything.”