Thursday, September 30, 2004

What is Matter?

I saw What The Bleep again last night at the Metreon. Freakin amazing. Blew me away harder than the first time I saw it. This is definitely one of those movies that require multiple viewings. It's packed with goodness. It'll have you sitting in a daze after the last credit rolls away, blown away with a universe of new possibilities you haven't considered before, questioning everything around you.

This is what I saw the night before belt testing.

Tonight I tested for black/red belt, the last one before black belt. As the past several nights of testing have been as well, tonight really and truly sucked ass. The vibe felt like mud. I could tell the moment we started that this would be one of those nights where just getting hyped would be the big accomplishment in itself, much less doing anything impressive.

That's a shame, really. Because when we're on, we're REALLY on, doing some amazing, freaky shit. But tonight, it was mostly about just getting our legs off the ground and not getting hurt.

It was also, for me, probably the greatest success I've ever experienced in a test.

We all have days when the world just feels like "ugh". You want to crawl back into bed or chill in front of the tv or just take it easy. You do NOT want to do mad-sparring with your posse on the dojang dance floor. You do NOT want to be breaking things with your hands. You most definitely do NOT want to be vaulting your 240 pound ass into the air to do any fancy kicks.

So the test is this: in the worst of times, can you still do it? Can you conquer the malaise? Can you create the reality of your CHOOSING and transcend the world you perceive around you?

Most of my testing kinda sucked. I just consider that context for what was to come. I'm glad to say my sparring went pretty well once I made a DECISION to bring up my energy. (Shortly after we started, a friend whispered in my ear, "Bring it up, but keep it under control." Very smart words. Transcend the night, but not so much that I go wild.)

I completed a knife hand break for the first time - someone held the top of the board (only the top, which meant less leverage and required a faster strike) and I sliced it in half. I did it but it hurt like hell. Looking at my fingers now, I have a strange purple bruise covering my FOURTH finger and the inside of my fifth. Bottom line: little bitta energy, lotta brute strength.

Later we stood around a candle, punching and kicking to put it out. Now, this is something I've gotten pretty good at. I can usually punch out a candle on the first try. This is pure energy - no matter how fast you punch or how windy you make it, the damn candle is not going out unless you bring up the energy. Tonight: nothing. Everyone else got it but not me. I never did put that fucking thing out. Well, except when I kicked it across the room by accident.

So there's context. Sitting in a funk on the floor with a big glowing "L" on my forehead, I heard Master Johnson ask who wanted to break. I felt no need to volunteer. I felt complete. Actually, I really, really wanted to mope. But I didn't. I CHOSE to stay present, not thinking about the candle (the past) or a possible break (the future), just observing the present and focusing on my own energy.

As someone else prepared, I decided to try something fun, mostly cuz I was feeling like a smart-ass, as in "if I'm such a loser with a stupid candle, let's see if this energy shit really works." There's a meditation I do that involves sitting in silence for a long period of time until my awareness starts to float up, then transition through several "levels" or states of consciousness. The whole thing takes me awhile nowadays. Or so I thought.

For shits and grins, and to help me get out of my funk about the candle, I decided to see if I could do the transition just sitting there in the middle of testing. So I closed my eyes and started traveling. Instantly, I felt the most amazing thing - a separation of spirit and mind, or spirit and body. My essence, my consciousness, began to travel. It shifted through several layers. For kicks, I sought out this mysterious but magnificent "source" I've encountered several times in the past. And I found out. I allowed it to fill me. I started opening up, feeling a swell of energy through my body. I started shifting.

Cracking open my eyes again, I saw the matrix. The intangible world we pretend is matter, aka the material plane, aka reality.

It's not.

I looked at the room from the perspective of someone not in it, someone sharing not quite the same dimension. Master Johnson must've sensed this, because as the other guy prepared, he suddenly asked if I wanted to do a break. I said sure, mentioning that I wanted to break big bricks.

Big Bricks: extremely heavy, extremely thick, much harder to break than the "small" ones (which are still big and heavy). In the past, I've tried twice to break a stack of 4, and failed both times. At my last testing, we ran out of the big ones and I didn't even get the chance. So for well over a year, I've had an old score to settle. It also means I had a PATTERN of failure that I needed to literally break through.

But I chose not to think about that at the moment. I felt sublime, I felt shifted. Utterly calm. At peace. My awareness sort of layered over the room like looking into a pool of water. I quite unexpectedly felt like if I was to ever break through, now was the time.

And yet, Master Johnson knew what the night was like. Everyone, EVERYONE, had missed their break thus far, needing two or three attempts to make it happen. So he instructed the black belt to set up three big bricks for me, instead of four.

As I prepared, another guy suddenly raised his hand and asked to do a break. He wanted to do four. He also wanted to prove something. It was obvious to everyone paying attention. Master Johnson chuckled and said "Set up 4 bricks". He knew, I knew, others knew, that this break was never going to happen. But the guy needed to experience that. We also knew that it needed to happen before mine.

Sure enough, for all the screaming and sheer strength, it didn't happen for him. 3 bricks, barely cracked, the fourth still unblemished, and one bruised and bleeding hand later, it was my turn. But I'd been bringing up the energy, tapping into this otherworld that I suddenly, after a night of shit, felt access to. Master Johnson saw it. "Four bricks," he said. A point needed to be made. He knew it, I knew it.

No fear. I chose calm. No apprehension. I chose the present. No bricks. I chose clarity. I chose to see past the illusion, to see beyond the veil.

This world IS an illusion, a collective make-believe experiment. We believe this matter exists, but what is it, really? As I prepared, I made a silent prayer: to experience matter as the illusion it is. And as soon as I sent my prayer, my intention outward, I shifted to gratitude, knowing that it's already been answered.

I threw some palm strikes to the floor with a shout. The first shout came from my chest, and I felt it there. The second and third came from my SOURCE, and I felt them there. "That's what I like to hear," said Master Johnson, who felt it also.

Approaching the stack, I chose not to see the bricks. The other students, without exception, touch the stack, feel it, practice a few strikes against the surface. But I chose not to validate the existence of the bricks. Instead, I simply held my hand above it and sent my energy out, through my arm, sensing the bricks, then feeling the bricks NOT THERE. I sent my energy straight through to the floor. I stayed there for a couple of seconds, until I knew a connection with the floor, with nothing in between us.

I felt no emotion, except perhaps amused. I didn't hope, I didn't think, I KNEW that I'd already broken the stack. I KNEW that I was safe and whole. I KNEW that this illusion in front of me meant nothing but dust and air.

As I felt the bricks dissolve under my stream of awareness, something "clicked" and I knew it was time. With another shout from my deepest depths, I put my hand down and passed gently through four bricks. I felt them crumble, one by one, beneath my palm, like breaking the surface of the water. A slight resistance, a slight tingle, as they dissolved under my hand. It all happened in a fraction of a second, yet I still feel it. I passed through the illusion and continued to the floor, where I'd been focused all along.

Eight cleanly sliced pieces fell to the floor. And the room erupted. Despite myself, I cracked a smile. A big one.

This was more than a break to me. It was a validation. As shitty and murky as this night felt, I proved to myself that it didn't matter. I have the power to break through far more than concrete.

I also proved that I am my own man. It was to be the only successful break tonight. Others after me tried, but it just wasn't happening. For several, it didn't happen at all - the first brick might as well have been solid steel. But for me, everything came together perfectly. Perhaps because I didn't have the chance to get nervous? Or perhaps because I was so shifted that I wasn't even there anymore. It all feels like a dream. And my hand felt so, so good after the break. Like a massage or a mineral bath. Safe and whole (though my fingers are still traumatized from the previous break).

In the end, I turned a night of failure into a night of firsts. And also reinforced, THROUGH EXPERIENCE, the knowledge that we do indeed have the power to transcend this material existence. And that's what it takes - first-hand experience. Reading is nice. Learning is even better. But to truly feel it takes experience.

So now the big question: what next?

Friday, September 24, 2004

come into the light, carol anne

Ok, now here's some cool shit: sungazing, also known as Living on Light. It's evidently one path to becoming a "breatharian".

Now, I don't know how authentic all of this is, but it sounds really cool. And one website said this one guy who's been doing it since '95 has been checked out by scientists and NASA, even! So it must be real! Seriously, though, I'm keeping an open mind about it. I'm about ready to try anything to whittle this belly down.

The reason I noticed this is because Sacred Space in San Francisco is hosting "HRM", the guy who's been doing this since '95. I'm half-interested in going but it looks like an all day thing and I've nekkid leatha men to gaze at on Folsom.

In other news, I've suddenly got the organizing bug up my ass. I signed up with a Reiki group on Meetup.com and, noting the lack of an organizer, jumped in. So now I'm organizing Reiki folk in the bay area. (And I've never been to a meetup meeting.) Then I searched craigslist for other Reikers (my term) and found a pocket that will hopefully join up. Then today, walking down the street, noticed "Reiki" in a window and decided to strike up a conversation with a total stranger, which is quite uncharacteristic of me. All in the quest for connection with cool people.

Because that's what this world needs. Like-minded souls, united in positivity, hooking up and amplifying that vibe into this munged place we live in. I don't generally consider myself a social person. And since I moved to California 4 years ago (as of today, in fact), I've cocooned myself from all the mean people here.

Not anymore. We've gots to risk it. Take a stand. Be real. Get the fuck out the door and be something that's going to help this world.

Tip for the day and note to self #1:
Keep a stash of food bars in the car, as in the "Clif bar" suggestion from yesterday. I keep pulling up to opportunities in the city to feed someone with an empty stomach and bad complexion. But I keep forgetting to put those damn Clif bars in my purse. Dharma points for good intentions? Don't think so.

Tip for the day and note to self #2:
Stop dating fucking drama queens.

Tip for the day and note to self #3:
Keep breathing, bitzchness.

Thursday, September 23, 2004

A New Jus Bar

Let's face it. Burning Man changed my life.

One thing it did was take me out of this media-saturated reality and return me to the harsh, intense, infinitely fulfilling natural world. You're not supposed to leave anything behind in the desert, but I did: my interest in the bitterness of politics. Among many other things.

In the past, this blog has turned into little more than a bitter rant, like all the others out there, even when I try to shade it with compassion and meaning.

But I find lately that, while my fundamental interest in politics has not gone away, my approach to it has shifted dramatically. I'm not as interested in jumping into the mud and slinging it out the old fashioned way. In fact, I've lost interest in addressing political issues directly at all.

Because underneath the political issues, we find the same foundation as social issues, justice issues, environmental issues, self-development, hobbies, personal interactions, learning, family, entertainment, addictions, and on and on and on into every facet of human existence.

I'm talking about our view of the world around us. Once we pull our heads out of the everyday (job, food, entertainment, relationship, and of course, money), we start getting into those lofty issues that only certain types of people seem interested in looking at. Why are we here? What IS "here"? What is the purpose of this mundane life I seem to be living? Where the hell did I park my car?

So if I'm to continue blogging, I feel the need to shake things up a little. I may ramble a bit, but if in reading this you spark to a kindred spirit, let me know. Post a message. Plug into this fabulous thought-train of peace, love, and neo-hippie techno-groovalicious power vibe we call Manifesting Reality. Because we're already making things happen. We're already creating the world of our imaginations. Now we just need to realize that and change our freakin minds, because we're in the process of creating something that's so not cool right now.

Check back here for more on that subject.

But for now, some short term instructions:

1. If you haven't seen it yet, then make plans RIGHT NOW to see What the Bleep Do We Know? at your nearest available location. No, stop - did I say you could keep reading? I mean NOW! Check out the times and get back with me once you've bought your tickets (I use plural because you know you want to bring a friend).

2. Find the groove you like and chill, freak.

3. VOTE! FOR GOD'S SAKE VOTE!!! Register NOW. And once you're registered, then apply for absentee voting NOW. Because that's the best way to get counted this time around. Shite's about to hit it and the fan won't be pretty on November the 3rd. So vote now and make it count.

4. Spread the love. Do something mysteriously cool and charitable for a total stranger. Fold someone's laundry. Drop an extra quarter in someone's parking meter. Give a homeless guy a Clif bar. Be the good in the world that you keep bitching about not seeing. Because we need you.