Life - My life, my truths
by Tammy T Stone
Everything is change. It is a truth
which is hard to feel in our daily
experience of the world. We want
things to change so we can be happier
and more fulfilled, but at the
same time we cling to our ways, hoping
change will come anyway. Einstein said
something about this being the essence of
stupidity, if I remember correctly.
More and more, I think that the key to
navigating change – if we are seeking it – lies
not in leaping forward blindly, but in finding
balance, or the thread between who we were
and who we are now, what we knew and felt
before, as well as in the present moment.
Even though my life seems drastically different
now, I have come to realise that the seeds
of these changes have been there all along.
It may not seem like that at first glance. Three years
ago, I had a great job working in the film industry in
Toronto, and I was pursuing my PhD in cinema and
philosophy. I have always been a lover of the written
word, intellectual ideas, and a bit later, in the power of
movies to embody ways of seeing and being in the
world. Though I could let loose and have fun –
especially over drinks and karaoke – I definitely
gravitated to the more serious side of things. I managed
to turn every conversation into an analysis of life,
its myriad problems and challenges, and dissected
everything from reality TV shows to geopolitics with
fervour. I always seemed to want to get at the deepest
essence of things.
Spiritual longing
I am not saying that I was missing the point entirely,
but I think that all my reading, and all my intense conversations, were telling me that I was looking for
something I did not know how to find. I would never
have used the words ‘spiritual longing,’ but there was
a profound, buried desire for what seemed totally
beyond my grasp, ease, contentment, fulfillment, and
the big one – happiness.
Throughout, I constantly attended art films at the
local cinematheque and watched everything that came
my way through work. I was drawn to films with
existential themes, in which characters are constantly
moving about in a confusing world, unsure of themselves
and the direction their lives should take. Many
of these films bordered on the negative and bleak, but
they were also redemptive – they showed me that this
almost desperate search for meaning was universal.
Cinema helped me see, through the eyes of their
film-makers and characters, what I needed to see
myself – the world is really a playground in which
anything can happen, but also that it is so easy to trap
ourselves in prisons of our own creation.
By the time I was laid off from my job – a lucky
circumstance, though it did not seem that way at the
time – I knew with a primal kind of instinct that here
was my big chance. I did not know for what, but I was
being guided by my intuition, and this time I was not
going to ignore it. It is safe to say that since then, life
has guided me in completely new directions, in direct
proportion to my belief that it could.
Take the time I was in Ubud, Bali, a couple of months
after losing my job, and deciding to give up my
apartment in Toronto to travel in Southeast Asia. I had
lived in Bangkok years before, and had loved it. I felt
comfortable there, and thought that it would be a good
place to start my journey, which at the moment, had
no known end.
I was in a bookshop in Ubud to exchange books, and
I could not find anything at all. About to give up, I did
a strange thing, and looked behind the books in the
back of the shelves, to see if anything was hidden there
by accident. I found Sri Aurobindo and The Mother’s
Our Many Selves: Practical Yogic Philosophy (which I
discovered later was a difficult book to find among Sri
Aurobindo’s writings.)
I had never had any interest in yoga books until then,nor had I heard of the authors, but I took it
anyway. I asked some new friends later if
they had ever heard of this book, and one of
them, a Theta healer, was beside himself.
“Where did you find that? Not here in
Ubud, or I would have snatched it up long
ago. Sri Aurobindo is a genius. I can’t believe
you found a book by him here.”
The journey begins
The book is about how we need to acknowledge
that there is no single self, and that if
we can get the various parts of ourselves to
work together, we can achieve new heights
in life. I was deeply inspired and read the
whole book in a couple of days, and have
since been devouring Aurobindo and The
Mother’s work. I started a daily diary called
‘My Little Selves,’ and for months, I dissected
my character traits one by one, trying to find
a détente for my warring selves.
I learnt a lot from this exercise, and I
strongly believe that if I had not taken the
time to cultivate more awareness about
myself, I would never have been ready to
meet the man I met a couple of months later,
who is now my beloved partner in life.
Magic really does exist, though at first I
had to write synchronicities off as coincidence.
What is magic, after all, if not a
grounded belief that we can make our world,
and that we are not alone in it?
That the universe gives us what we need
when we willingly participate in our own
well-being, is a lesson I have come to learn,
though sometimes it is admittedly hard to
remember. I find that having an intention
really helps to keep you going on a path
toward meaning, even when it seems that the
road is completely obscured in fog, and
sometimes in a blinding storm. For me, that
intention was to understand the true meaning
of freedom as deeply as I could.
I realised that leaving home to travel was the modest but all-important beginning of
my search. The real journey to freedom
starts once you can prepare yourself to start
looking within, and discover how many layers
of conditioning are coming between you
and freedom, how you are rarely who you
think you are, and who you desperately want
to hold onto.
Also within the first few months of my
travels, I met two beautiful human beings
who introduced me to reiki and meditation,
respectively. I was not looking for the former
at all and the latter only vaguely. However,
once I had my first reiki treatment, I knew
this was something I needed to pursue. I had
such a strong physical reaction just from
being lightly touched on my skin that I felt
compelled to explore further. I enrolled for a
reiki course with the same teacher who gave
me the treatment. I came back for the course
a few months later, and it was here that I met
my partner.
Just before doing this course, I did my first
ever meditation of any kind – a ten-day silent
vipassana course. To say it was difficult
would be an understatement. However, I was
enthralled by how the body could shift from
being so ridiculously uncomfortable, to being
light and free, to back again, all in a few concentrated,
meditative hours – and the
emotions – coming and going, following the
ebbs and flows of the physical body’s conditions.
It was just the beginning, but I was
fascinated.
My partner, as it turns out – of course – has
been a meditator for a long time, and when
we met, things seemed perfectly aligned.
Though we have varied backgrounds,
we were now both at a point where we
wanted to go deeper within ourselves, in
hopes of undergoing the process of selfunderstanding
and trying to be positive
forces in the world.
India calling
Both of us had strong desires to visit India on
an extended basis, again feeling intuitively
that we could learn a lot in this vast, intoxicating
country. So, we visited, and visited
again. We spent almost a year in India overall,
a land where sadhus, gurus, Bollywood
stars, upper crust business people, cows and
elephants, seem to co-exist comfortably and
with ease. India was a revelation, and the biggest
mirror we have ever found. Whether we
were happy or miserable and fighting, there
was always someone around to point us out
to ourselves.
In India, we continued to study various healing
modalities, and to do meditation retreats. I have made
some important discoveries that have really helped me
along the way. I have learnt, along with a character in
one of Paulo Coelho’s novels I read, that we should not
be afraid to embrace change in life because the core of
who we are can never be annihilated – the important
stuff stays. I have learnt that the important stuff tends
to be things that have made us happy, which means
that at heart, we are happy creatures who sometimes
get confused by the world into thinking we need to
worry all the time. I have also learnt, through various
healings, doing more yoga in all its forms, and through
my own practice with meditation and reiki, that the
body’s capacity to heal is stronger than its capacity to
get hurt. Our bodies are intelligent, and are designed
to be well. The discoveries have been a real blessing.
Applying them to my life in a continued way and offering
them to others is the challenge. But the more time
I spend in countries like India, so different from my
own, so vibrant and luminous, the more I am inspired
to embrace a new way of living.
I think my experiences with cinema are a perfect
reflection of what is going on with me at the moment.
As I mentioned, I used to have very rigid ideas of what
I considered good cinema to be –the darker, the better.
Watching happy or emotionally cathartic films was
something I enjoyed, but these were guilty pleasures I
did not consider part of my ‘real’ understanding of
cinema. Over the last couple of years, I have genuinely
fallen in love with Bollywood cinema (even without
subtitles, I am thoroughly entranced), and find myself
attracted to films with happy messages and spiritual
themes. At first I was disturbed by this change in me,
and thought it meant I was losing myself somehow.
Then it hit me: I have not lost anything. The important
stuff stays. What has happened, I think, is that my
heart has opened in such a way that there is now room
for the more positive and inspiring side of being alive.
What can be bad about being more open, about losing
that constricting feeling I would often get when I
gravitated toward the negative?
A move from the head to the heart, from trying to
fathom the world of faith and spirituality intellectually,
to trying, piece by piece, to live in this world first-hand
–what a rewarding trajectory this has been. In many
ways, the journey is in its infancy, but that is what is so
exciting, to grasp how much more is to come.
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