| Moon
Teachings for December 2000/January 2001
Can Spirituality Be Emailed?
By Dana
Gerhardt
I think it was Jane Austen
who, on learning of thousands dead in a distant war, said: “How happy
not to know any one of them.” Even then, the world’s suffering, if
collected into a single consciousness, could overwhelm the heart.
Against the media-flood of suffering in our time, most of us have constructed
“tune-out” coping strategies. But now there’s email. “I
don’t know what to do anymore,” said my friend “with all those heart-wrenching
emails.” I understood what she meant. I’d just gotten one
from a friend in Sweden, forwarded from Spain, about the oppression of
women in Afghanistan.
“Please do not ignore this
email,” it begins. This is the third time I’ve seen and ignored it.
Guilt-ridden, I scan the text. I’m always stopped by the same image:
rooms of depressed women, lying motionless, wrapped in burquas, unable
to eat or sleep, just wasting away. My thoughts turn to the email’s
sender: What does she expect me to do? What did she
do, besides multiplying these images in cyberspace? I consider
the petition I’m supposed to sign (I notice that my friend didn’t).
Even the original author of the email isn’t sure of its value: “I don’t
know if this is going to help, but take three minutes out of your life
to do your part.” I ponder the calculation that “my part” can
be discharged in just three minutes. I check my watch. My 10:00
am meeting starts in less than two minutes.
Enantiodromia is a
Greek word for “a thing turning into its opposite.” It’s what occurs
when
emails meant to engage our compassion serve to shut us down instead.
Campaigns that might enlist our hearts get lost in cyber-babble.
Or they simply exhaust us. A friend writes about a spiritual circle
organized during the recent election crisis. “As events began to
unfold, and everyone kept getting those constant emails, with endless prayers
and meditations, one of the members mentioned how ‘exhausted’ he felt from
the effort -- and everyone let out a sigh of relief. We all were
so overwhelmingly overwhelmed!”
Cyberspace is instantaneous
and loops repetitively. We might wonder how a genuine spiritual rhythm
can keep pace with this technological one. Compassion’s rhythm is
more like breathing. Or a beating heart. If we hear about the
suffering of someone we don’t know, we might need time to digest this news,
something that traveling through real geography can take care of. Cyberspace
creates no space really for traveling into our work of caring. There
is little time to feel, forwarding our email instantaneously, sending it
back into the same nowhere it came from. Discharging our part at
technology’s pace, we’re taken away from the true spiritual work of bearing
witness to the suffering of the world.
Reclaiming my own spiritual
rhythm was the least I could do. Last month I began putting such
emails into a special “full moon” folder. At the full moon, one’s
heart is full; one is most sensitive and connected; the world is ripe and
open; truths can be revealed. Sitting in the moonlight, I drew sacred
space around me, then one by one, read my emails. I used a Tibetan
compassion practice, tonglen, taking in each image of suffering
on the in-breath, and on the out-breath, sending imagery of compassion
and relief. It’s a different kind of “petition,” but may be
closer to earlier nuances of this word (first as “prayer,” and before that
“wing”). Did my full moon petitions take flight and accomplish something?
Did they help to change the world?
Spiritual action is not like
the political kind. What we accomplish is less straightforward.
All we can really know is how we find ourselves transformed along the way.
Reading
emails in my moonlit circle, in spiritual time, I was no longer exhausted,
nor afraid to care about things that couldn’t be fixed in an instant.
I could at least keep my heart open. And only wonder at the mystery
of whether this would help or not. I finally understood why I’d been
so undone by that image of lifeless women in their burquas. Without
diminishing the reality of their suffering, they also mirrored my own depressed
feminine soul, as overwhelmed by demands and opportunities as an Afghani
woman by the lack of them. How many modern women, like myself, move
like robots, at technological speeds: our humanity undone by a different
kind of fundamentalism.
So I have my full moon folder.
And moon by moon, I shall not be afraid to breathe for us both: the
Afgani women rendered lifeless and invisible; and the overwhelmed ones,
living like machines. And I'll breathe for whatever other sorrows
reach me at instantaneous speed, with the message “please do not ignore
this email.”
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