meditation

Meditation for Writers Remote GrubStreet Class by Maria Mutch

My upcoming GrubStreet workshop is Meditation for Writers, happening through March. I did a short class on this in October—and I’m amazed that these months have gone by (the last blog I wrote was in July). There was a need to both quiet-down and expand in other directions, and I think so many of us during COVID have experienced this, the opportunity (the demand, maybe) to do things differently. It’s been an intensely creative time, as I’ve been working on my next book and projects, and so there was on the one hand the outer—and sometimes inner—turmoil of this time period and ferocity of politics and disease, but on the other, also exciting things happening and the joy of making.

But back to this class! I became a certified meditation teacher because of this exact possibility: bringing it into the writing workshop. It’s hard to express how much I’ve loved this process, seeing what a difference meditation can make to writers, and in particular, how much effect it can have on VOICE. What I often encounter when working with writers, either in workshops or one-to-one, is a challenge around voice, and the accompanying ideas: the right to speak, the right to explore ideas, the right to play, be curious, give life to the vision that’s inside the mind (the one that writers often long to work with but hold back for various reasons). Writing can be so damn tough. Not everyone is called to create, and certainly not everyone is called to be a writer; it often requires enormous stores of energy, grit, a willingness to be intensely vulnerable (and I don’t necessarily mean here the baring of souls; this vulnerability can simply be a fear of working with an authentic voice, being true, a fear of being seen as different or unconventional). Because that’s what happens when we work with the real voice, the deep one. We end up discovering aspects of our own originality, and that can sometimes mean the writer is required to really stand in who they are.

Enter meditation, and this online class, which is for any genre of writer and any level of meditator. We’ll be covering foundations of meditation and mindfulness practice, and exploring each week how these ideas can be applied to writing. For more info and to register, click the button.

Anxiety in the Time of COVID by Maria Mutch

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I ordered this Buddha months ago and didn’t imagine that it would make its arrival during a time when its box would have to sit in quarantine for a few days or that its presence would resonate so much.

I have an abiding interest in anxiety. I used to have anxiety disorder, and OCD as well, which began in early childhood (is there anxiety that doesn’t begin there, in some way?). I use the past tense not because I’m entirely convinced of it but because it doesn’t feel right if I use the present. I do still experience anxiety, mildly, but then more acutely, especially as of late, but it’s so radically different and mostly ephemeral that I consider the disorder part to be in the past (years of lifestyle and diet changes, plus heaps of meditation have been more effective than I can say). Regardless, I have a deep interest in the thinking mind, which is so often, for so many people, the anxious mind.

And this time, the one of COVID, is excellent for the study of anxiety; because wow. Every emotion, actually, seems heightened to the point of the surreal.

I can attest that each day here is a ferocious mix of being alive, gratitude, fear, sadness, anger, peacefulness, all of it on rotation. I saw the Instagram post of a friend who has a history of addiction and she talked about the full gamut of emotion, including swearing, picking fights with her partner, fear and anger, but also joyfulness and everything in between, how some of the feelings are reminiscent of the rawness of being newly sober.

Maybe a positive effect of this virus is that some of us are confronting, and possibly integrating, their shadow and the shadow side of our existence, what it is to be human. This seems to me sorely needed. As much as meditation has been so vital to me, and my teachers and fellow practitioners a lifeline, there is something about meditation communities as a whole (and this runs the spectrum from Buddhism to yoga to secular mindfulness practices) that gets in my craw a little, which is a misunderstanding of how we’re supposed to treat the stuff of our emotional lives. By “stuff” I just mean all the phenomena, whatever we experience, the full range. I notice sometimes an ingrained habit of rejecting and repressing what is negative, a denial especially of anger, but also anxiety, even as the teaching at the core of many Eastern philosophies is one of acceptance and integration. This is at work inside of Jungian theory, too, the need to acknowledge shadow content, the full “seeing” of both our light and dark selves (and by extension the light and dark sides of how we perceive the exterior world). But what I notice in meditators sometimes, and the western Buddhist community (and this is unavoidable, really, because everything contains its opposite), is a smoothing over of legitimate wrinkles and maybe even a vague competition to see who appears the most “together” and calm—the least wrinkled. No one wants to slip up and reveal the colourful, fiery array of experience underneath.

Perhaps a function of this virus (not that I’m claiming to know), now that we are all saturated in anxieties, whether they belong to us or to other people, is that it has become universally more difficult to ignore what is prickling or dark or molten. I wonder if there’s a prior belief at work that to acknowledge difficulty is to lack gratitude, but real gratitude includes all aspects. It’s perfectly okay to be in this situation and not feel joy. A fake smile doesn’t seem helpful to me. Maybe a better state to cultivate is something like peacefulness, though not at the expense of allowing the full emotional range, including all the feelings we find untenable, and chief among these are anger and fear. We have to acknowledge that these states exist in the first place, in order to let them go.

Oh, shame, too. This can seem to be a lot of work: untangling (which is really just witnessing) all those shame threads and allowing them to dissolve away. Many of us grew up in families and cultures steeped in shame; and we were taught to be deeply ashamed of well-earned anger and rage, as well as that background murmur of nameless anxiety that is the soundtrack in many human minds.

When I was ten years old I was placed in a hospital, in an oxygen tent, for three days, because I was having an anxiety attack. In rural Nova Scotia, at the the end of the seventies, there wasn’t much of an awareness of childhood anxiety disorder—anxiety was the very last conclusion the doctors came to. I wasn’t given any sort of treatment, just released from the hospital with the words to my mother, “Something scared her.” The only available response to that seemed to be distraction, and so I was taught to neglect unlikable feelings, hiding the anxiety away from myself rather than investigate it. Question it. I recall being asked what had scared me, but, of course, I couldn’t articulate what was going on. Anxiety is a nebulous territory, lacking edges and borders and sometimes even a name. It can be hard to see. Its root is often a field of experiences and impressions, not always a single event. Even a single traumatic event would fall against an already existing background of mental formations. So I couldn’t say what was going on, especially because I was only ten—how to account for that wordless, unshakable fear, the one that stole my breath and caused me to think unequivocally that I wasn’t getting enough oxygen? There is nothing more primal than that.

For people with anxiety, COVID is an especially potent enemy (though it’s not really an enemy, of course, just another life form doing its thing; maybe we should call it a teacher), because it’s not only invisible but can cause difficulty with breathing. The virus moves so stealthily and quickly that it has covered an entire globe. It travels by air literally—drifting on currents and boarding planes to cross oceans and jump security checkpoints. Its network has the vastly intricate pattern of our own blood vessels and neural pathways. We recognize it even if we can’t see it, we know its gregariousness and naked desire to spread. It appears to have our own predilection to be unsatisfied.

The thing about the emotional low points that many of us have been experiencing, or at least glimpsing, is that those of us who are sequestered with partners, children, relatives, roommates, etc. are having the experience of those emotions in front of other people. We are replete with witnesses; overrun with them, in fact. Which can feel rather raw, and further complicates the aspects of shame already present. Even asking for a figurative time-out reveals the need for it.

I attended sangha via Zoom the other night and it was amazing how well it worked. Meditating this way, seeing everyone in their own habitat, was incredibly effective and even joyful. But during the night, as with so many people right now, my dreams were vivid, difficult and seemed endless. When the sun rose and I finally got up, I felt better, and it strikes me that the relaxation of the night before served as a portal to an anxiety that needed to be witnessed. Pulled into the light. I clearly identified too much with the story of it, though, and wrestled, but eventually I was able to relinquish it and the need to control everything.

This is the background for so many of us: the need to arrange external events so they look more like something we would prefer or at least recognize. The practice then is one of letting go, over and over and over, each time the anxiety (and the shame about the anxiety) comes up. It occurs to me, also, that perhaps I was repressing the anxiety during the previous day because I wanted, frankly, to be alone with it.

Which brings me to something that has been tremendously helpful. I don’t know about you but I have rarely journaled so much in my life; I haven’t always ascribed to the use of journals—I’ve kept them on and off since age ten, but I’ve always had notebooks where I’ve used a looser format of drawings, diagrams, scribblings, notations, especially about books I’m writing. COVID-time, however, has given me a renewed sense of the usefulness of detailed journaling and, to sort of paraphrase Julia Cameron, signal one’s location to the universe.

Meditation & Writing (plus coronavirus, politics,...) by Maria Mutch

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I just finished teaching a class at GrubStreet in Boston, a six-week course that combined meditation and memoir. I’ve rewritten this next sentence numerous times, trying to find the way to describe such an extraordinary experience. That’s the thing about creativity in general, though; so much of that energy lies beyond language, beyond our attempts to conceptualize. Suffice to say, the students showed up every Friday evening (!) and each time, we spent three hours exploring the foundations of meditation (vipassana specifically) and then weaving that in and through memoir, covering everything from voice to structure to managing the often unwieldy material of a writer’s life experience (which, after all, is the content of memoir, and which makes memoir workshops inherently different from ones that focus on fiction). As it turned out, this weaving was organic and intriguing—the two subjects “spoke” to each other almost effortlessly. It made so much sense.

Beginning the class with meditation (and a really close look at its components) had incredible effects, not the least of which was making a container for the rest of the course work and all those deeply personal stories. I’ve written across genre (one memoir, one story collection, one novel, and—in my twenties and thirties—poetry) and often talk about the illusion of boundaries between them and how fluidly the territories can blend if we open up to that. But there are, of course, some intrinsic differences, and I was reminded of some of these during the class, including the often tangled and oppressive spaces that a writer has to enter when they work with their own conflicts and obstacles as material; also how alive that material is, most especially when it rings true. And that that authenticity has so much to do with the writer’s willingness to bring awareness into their work.

Something that came up repeatedly was the appearance of the Jungian notion of persona and shadow and this was so fascinating to witness. I hadn’t really considered, prior to this, the extent to which the ability to see one’s shadow (or at least some part of it) and invite it into the writing is so wildly important to memoir. I understood this in my heart, but wouldn’t have phrased it this way. I know how much meditation has made a difference in my life, and my writing life, and I could see how it made a difference in the way the students approached their work, how they were able to look at all aspects of themselves, including their shadow, even in the small time-frame of those six short weeks. And it was short—time flew, as they say, and yet the hours we spent tending to this work were so full. Each week, three hours didn’t seem to be enough. There was so much to talk about, and so much energy in the class and in the ideas.

I started meditating nine years ago, and even though my approach to it is mostly “goal-less” (or as without a goal as I can make it), I can see, looking back, that there has been a palpable energy in those nine years, an increasing, alive one that has shown itself in all areas of my life. In particular I can see its movement through my writing and the three books I’ve published while parenting a child (now a 22-year-old man) with Down syndrome and autism. Meditation, and extending the awareness developed on the cushion into the experience of each day, has transformed me, bit by bit, and my relationship to my writing and creativity.

The biggest changes occurred when I started looking into Buddhist meditation and vipassana (and I’m now in a teacher-training program) specifically and becoming better able to sit with the narrative that the mind produces, to see it more clearly. Writing a book-length manuscript requires the ability to sit not only with the narrative on the page but also the stories we tell ourselves about writing, how we’re doing, when we’ll reach the end, if we’ll have the stamina. Meditation also deepened my appreciation for some of the mechanical aspects, including getting up at 4:30 a.m. to write (happily, I might add; not happily every single day but happily on more days than you might guess), and it’s helped me handle self-doubt and periods of low energy. I already had a good respect for process, but my appreciation has deepened radically and it’s possible to see that the ups and downs of writing are just that: an undulating pattern that can just be, instead of being an obstacle.

Then there is the business of the exterior world right now (or the imagined exterior, since, at the end of everything, there are no real distinctions) and the various (perceived) marauding energies of the coronavirus and politics and the financial world and the intersections of these things. I felt my energy get low, in spite of going out on the trails as much as possible to recharge, and some constrictions in my body due to anxiety, and here again meditation and awareness have helped me navigate. We’ve been so trained to see viruses as our enemy, unseen forces that we long to corral and control with warfare and money. It’s easy enough to see that our treatment of the natural world—because we perceive ourselves to be apart from it—is the source of our on-going problems. We made an inflamed world and now we live in it.

Being here in New England, I see that while meditation is popular, it’s also equally scoffed at; meditation and mindfulness received a whole lotta press a few years back, and the cover of Time, even, and an entire industry has grown around it in terms of books and apps and cushions and retreats. Which is maybe not a bad thing, necessarily, but it seems that whenever we get our hands on an idea we make it so ubiquitous and watered-down that we end up drowning it. There are always polar ideologies: the nefarious forces in politics that are against civil rights, women’s rights, gay rights, etc. are met on the other side with people who advocate for the vulnerable. Unfortunately, many of those latter people mistakenly believe that meditation equals passivity and not taking action to correct the mistreatment of the environment and certain portions of the human and animal population. My experience of meditation is that it is necessary for living and for making change, that it is an alive process, one that gets taught and handed from person to person in an enormous and complex web of vitality. It seems to me that meditation and the awareness that it enables are at the heart of any really creative endeavour, any good doing, that non-doing and just being is vital to doing something well and with integrity and longevity. Meditation is this very simple thing (made complicated by some) that should be ubiquitous, because it’s our essence. It’s amazing to me how many people effectively argue themselves out of being fully themselves. “I don’t have time to meditate,” they say, “or just don’t want to.” And at one time, prior to nine years ago, I was one of them.

Many people who have heard about my class express surprise at the combination, and even my students and I laughed several times about the “weirdness,” though I can see it isn’t weird at all. After spending weeks preparing for the class and then more weeks actually teaching it, I feel that the whole idea of weaving meditation into writing makes so much sense that I’m only sorry I didn’t think of it sooner.