Saturday, April 7, 2012

The Gift That Keeps on Giving, in loving memory of my Mother

At a recent Hare Krishna gathering, I heard an incandescent phrase, so eloquent in its simplicity.  "Every act is either an act of love or an act of pain."  Unfortunately, I don't know the source.   When I heard it, my breath caught for a moment, a grand epiphany.  My mind kept affirming yes, yes, yes!   I remember, of course, the great Christian teaching, "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you."  But, that first phrase provides for me the foundation for the second.  I've been reading Marcus Aurelius' "Meditations" off and on for years and this phrase prompted me to go back to them.

What I found was truly compelling.  For instance, "We are the other of the other" and:
"When you wake up in the morning, tell yourself: the people I deal with today will be meddling, ungrateful, arrogant, dishonest, jealous and surly. They are like this because they can't tell good from evil. But I have seen the beauty of good, and the ugliness of evil, and have recognized that the wrongdoer has a nature related to my own - not of the same blood and birth, but the same mind, and possessing a share of the divine. And so none of them can hurt me. No one can implicate me in ugliness. Nor can I feel angry at my relative, or hate him. We were born to work together like feet, hands and eyes, like the two rows of teeth, upper and lower. To obstruct each other is unnatural. To feel anger at someone to turn your back on him: these are unnatural.” 

I used to consider myself one of the good folks, making charitable donations to worthy causes, trying not to pass a homeless person without giving some money, helping friends and neighbors when asked.  These kinds of things are very good as far as they go, but I finally realized that I was unconsciously making value judgments about myself and these others.  I would often say "There but for the grace of God go I."  But, I came to see that this was a 'cop out' in a way. For, I didn't offer money to every homeless person I encountered. Some appeared drunk or too well dressed to be 'worthy,' a huge value judgment there.

Now, I have been blessed with a new way of looking at myself and others. It's so simple, yet so profound. There is no such thing as 'other.' I've paid lip service to this concept for a long time, but it's transforming truth has finally penetrated the many walls built up over my lifetime - walls of resentment, anger, regret, despair, unfairness, envy, self-righteousness. The list goes on and on. These are 'the acts of pain' that were inflicted. Of course, there were 'acts of love,' but like many people, I didn't focus on those nearly as much. So, when I look at others from the perspective of only two types of possible acts, I see myself. As Marcus, the Stoic, so succinctly put it "we are the other of the other."

With this new way of seeing came a number of transformations in my life, both large and small. My brother, Jim, and I have a much younger friend, Paul. Jim knew him first through AA. They both have been in sobriety for several years now. I met Paul for the first time about two years ago when he did some much needed repair work on our house. He impressed me immediately. I was drawn by his thoughtfulness and quiet grace. I knew he had been a supportive presence for Jim. We became fast friends. When he asked me for a loan to expand his business, I didn't hesitate. He paid back seventy five percent of it in a little over a year. Then, some major setbacks overwhelmed Paul. The AA men he tried to help by giving them jobs did substandard work, some relapsed and others stole clients from him. An unusually rainy winter brought work for most small home improvement contractors to a standstill. This went on for weeks. Paul had to stop taking a salary and could no longer afford rent for a single room. I could see that he wasn't eating enough. I asked Jim what he thought about inviting Paul to live with us rent-free. He agreed and Paul moved in.

It's been a blessing on both sides. With our various infirmities, Jim and I barely make up a functional person these days. Paul is always watching out for us, making repairs around the house, mowing the lawn, doing laundry, etc. We have become a real family, eating meals together and sharing our ups and downs. I'm convinced that this is sacred abundance at work. The more you give, the more you receive. It is literally the gift that keeps on giving.

Living through this experience has made me aware that once you commit to abundance, you find that it is all around you. Despite the loan losses and costs associated with adding a new family member, I find that there's always enough money. Not a windfall, but there is no insufficiency.

Abundance attracts abundance. Back in May, I had to have the remainder of my upper teeth extracted and was fitted for a full denture, not an inexpensive undertaking. It worked well until March and then suddenly lost suction; it kept falling down. My dentist was very puzzled and decided it needed to be relined. I knew this would cost around four hundred dollars. Instead, he charged me nothing for the hour he spent taking impressions and paid half the dental lab fee. I was so touched by his generosity that I tried to thank him. He gave me a hug and said you deserve it.

There have been a few negative experiences in my living a life of abundance. They involved fairly substantial monetary loses as well as psychically painful losses in the betrayal of trust that took place. Two of Paul's former workmen, both of whom he warned me about, seemed to be in immediate need of help for rent and living expenses. It turned out that one had relapsed back into his old drug habit and the other was a scam artist. The interesting thing was that I didn't harbor any deep feelings of anger or revenge, just sorrow that other fellow human beings could fall in such a way. This was hugely transformative for me, no judging, rather something that bordered on compassion. Others' pain, no matter what form it takes, should lead to acts of love. This, of course, is the ultimate goal and gateway to the Divine.

I am at the stage of life now where reviewing its' trajectory seems like a sensible thing to do; time is certainly getting shorter. My first and greatest teacher of the power of sacred abundance was my mother. Sadly, I didn't realize it at the time. She was the kindest person I have ever known. Not that she didn't have faults, she had her share. She had been trained as a nurse in Canada during the Great Depression. As a new graduate, there were virtually no jobs in Ontario for nurses. She came upon an ad in a nursing journal seeking a new graduate for a position in Long Island, New York. She promptly came and found herself in a surgeon's private hospital in his house, of all places. He turned out to be a well trained practitioner, but performed a number of major operations that the small facility and staff were ill equipped to handle. There was a well to do rather forbidding looking woman, a judge's wife, who came in for a radical mastectomy. This was a very dangerous procedure in 1932. Another patient required urgent attention causing a major delay in admitting Mrs. McGuiness. My mother could imagine how angry and upset she would be and approached her with trepidation asking if she could make the lady a cup of tea. Mrs. McGuiness replied "Yes, if you'll have one with me."

This gave my mother an opportunity to explain everything that was involved and what she could expect post-operatively. They went on to chat about their families and other non-threatening subjects. The next morning, after Mrs. McGuiness recovered from the anesthetic, she told my mother that she had never been so terrified and their tea and conversation gave her the strength to face it. One simple act of kindness and they were life long friends. I was only about five or six, but I still remember visits from Aunt Patricia and the tea chats they always had. Mother's nursing career was full of similar incidents. I didn't find out about many of them until after her death when I went through letters she had saved from other patients she had touched with her kindness.

As I look back now over my formative years, there were so many finespun instances of Mother's compassion that eluded my frenetic adolescent mind. In fact, my adolescence extended well into my twenties. I think that grace showers those of advancing age with transcendental memories such as these if we strive for open caring hearts. Just the other evening, I noticed a young woman attending our Hare Krishna group for the first time. Since she seemed very quiet and overwhelmed by the size of our group, I sat with her and we chatted about our backgrounds and what she could expect at the session. Shortly after, a very old memory popped into my mind. Every month my mother used to attend a monthly woman's guild group that supported a local hospital. She noticed a very young woman sitting alone and looking at the older members with quiet trepidation. Mother sat with her and invited her to come over to our house for a visit any time. Jean showed up the next day with her one year old boy, Ronnie. She knew no one else in town at this point. The visits became a weekly ritual until Jean's children were teenagers. When Mother became an invalid during the last two years of her life, Jean resumed the weekly ritual.

Of course, there were many charitable contributions. I remember one very special case. She sent monthly money orders to an Indian priest for years and they corresponded about his mission to the untouchables. The money came out of her modest household allowance. She never asked my father for more money and made sure that we children never lacked for anything. I remember that she rarely bought anything for herself, except the essentials. She lived in sacred abundance all of her life. Her rewards weren't monetary, but her currency was far more durable. The many lives she touched with goodness, mine in particular, were her legacy. Even my difficult father began sending monthly stipends to the Indian priest's successor.

1 comment:

  1. My mother departed her body twenty six tears ago this past February. Her birthday is later on this month. For this Easter season, after finally finding the way back to my own path, I feel she would be pleased even though it has been very different from her own. For, you see, she always had a direct link to the Divine. Our labels differed, but she always held the Way in her heart. To anyone who may chance to read this piece, a Blessed Easter to you.

    Clare

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