Carpe Diem

Over the past 10 years, I’ve explored the concepts of existentialism, buddhism, mindfulness, and Freudian psychology. During the 5 years I was active in psychoanalysis, my therapist promoted these ideas in various ways during appointments. In doing the math, I averaged 3 weekly sessions and thus, over the course of 5 years, I completed roughly 600 sessions. There is no question that my psychological knowledge increased as a result. During my lifetime, I’ve always been ‘psychologically minded’ and naturally inclined towards philosophy.

Since coming off my relapse 2 1/2 months ago, committing to a fervent exploration of these topics has taken on new urgency as continued sobriety demands it. Alcoholics Anonymous as a primary framework for recovery just hasn’t worked for me but SOMETHING has to be substituted if I am going to make a go of this and enjoy a fulfilling life.

In questioning AA as it relates to me, there has been a nagging sense that powerlessness and the necessity of accepting a ‘higher power’ are anathema to basic logic. Science and empirical data overwhelmingly support my personal belief that nothing supernatural exists in the universe. While medical technology continues to change at an exponential rate, for some reason the predominant method of addiction treatment hasn’t changed much in 70 years. What other mental disorder has as its prescription that one must accept and turn their will over to a higher power, create a moral inventory, ask their HP to remove defects of character, etc., etc.?

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again. For those who find 12-step programs beneficial for their recovery, there is no judgement on my end. All I’m saying is that for someone like me, who has been struggling off and on with this major problem, it’s time to try other options.

Since September 15, 2018 I have been meditating almost daily. The cumulative effect of this has allowed for new insights into how fear has controlled my behavior. Borrowing a line from AA, I have lived life with regrets about the past and worries about the future. Usually at least once during each meditation session, brief moments of clarity have occurred where none of that matters. In those moments, a sense of freedom like I’ve never experienced before envelopes me. Because this takes place during a conscious effort, that effort being the meditation session itself, affirmation that it can be controlled takes hold.

Buddhism and the mindfulness approach have given a name and framework to my meditation practice. The first introduction to these concepts and anything related to philosophy took place over 20 years ago when I read Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance. I was really young when I read it and it was hard to understand. But something kept me from discarding the book and when finished, it had affected me somehow in some way that couldn’t be articulated. The discussion of Quality wasn’t really about traditional Buddhism but in hindsight it is obvious that the author, Robert Pirsig, was influenced by it.

In 2004 I was required to take a philosophy course for my college general education requirements. The course was a brief overview of many different schools of thought and it was then that an affinity for the existentialists developed. The theory that there is no meaning in the world except that which we as individual, thinking human beings apply to it resonated with me. I do not profess to be any sort of existentialist expert but I’ve read excerpts from Sartre and Keirkegaard and am currently attempting to read Nietzsche’s Thus Spoke Zarathustra. Admittedly, it’s a slow read as each word was chosen so carefully by the author. Most of the time I have to reread each sentence, paragraph, and section multiple times to fully understand what Nietzsche is trying to say.

Recently in my Facebook news feed, an ad for specific audio books kept popping up and the first on the list always seemed to be The Courage to Be Disliked. The title intrigued me and after a little research I was introduced to Alfred Adler. I ordered the book and am about 1/4 of the way through it. To be honest, I feel that the combination of meditation, Nietzsche and Adler might be the Drano I’ve been looking for to remove the nasty clog blocking my psyche. In other words, a breakthrough may be underway.

Adler was a colleague of Freud (often mistakenly referred to as a student of Freud). To summarize, Adler believed that the past didn’t matter in determining one’s disposition or personality; we all have the ability to choose our ‘lifestyle’ at any given moment. Lifestyle is used in Adlerian psychology and it is translated from a German word, lebensstil, meaning ‘style of life’. Essentially lifestyle in the Adlerian sense reflects an individual’s unique, repetitive, and unconscious way or responding to the main tasks of living: friendship, love, and work.

The power to choose my own values and the mandated freedom to act authentically in pursuit of those virtues is mind-blowing. The evidence for how this manifests can be exemplified by the long weekend just experienced.

In a fundamental sense, I’ve been afraid to go out and be around people and have acted accordingly for years. My time as a part-time restaurant manager gave me a social outlet but it was inauthentic to my values. I like intimate connection and intellectual thought, discussion, and exploration. Working at a restaurant / bar with a bunch of 20-somethings is not an intellectual pursuit. Because I enjoy and long for those intellectual experiences but lack confidence due to feelings of inferiority, I’ve used avoidance to mitigate the risk of being rejected or ridiculed for expressing my deeply emotional responses to literature, art, and philosophy. For me, a deeply emotional response is simply discussing how these things affect me on a personal level. The same fear is felt when it comes to intimate connections with other people in general, whether it is a romantic relationship or a male friendship; the fear of rejection still exists.

So with the influence of Adler in my heart and the voice of Nietzsche in my head, I vowed to try something different over the past few days. Wednesday night my sister and I went to see At Eternity’s Gate, the movie that just came out about Vincent Van Gogh. 20 minutes into it my sister whispered how she thought it was terrible and proceeded to  fidget in her seat the rest of the movie. Upon hearing and watching this negative reaction, her enjoyment was taken upon myself and my own enjoyment began to suffer. I recognized those thoughts, stopped myself, and dismissed any responsibility I had to make her happy. We drove to the theater separately and I decided if she wanted to leave, she could leave. I thought Wilem Dafoe did a fantastic job conveying the angst of Van Gogh and was definitely going to stay till the end.

On Thanksgiving my mother, this same sister, and I went to an extended family gathering in western Minnesota. It was really a surprise that my mom wanted to go and in fact, I hadn’t talked to her since last May. She was the one that reached out to me as I had been AVOIDING her because I didn’t want to put up a false front in dealing with her. (I won’t go into my mom stuff here but it’s described somewhat in previous posts). I was determined to be authentic with my mom and with everyone else at the gathering. I had a lot of fun with my family and my sister decided to stay out there and ride back the following day with my cousins. On the way home it was just my mom and I and over those 2 1/2 hours I felt we connected in a way we maybe never have. It was nothing effusive or cathartic. But it was authentic and it was good.

On Friday I went to a coffee shop in Uptown to read Zarathustra. You may be thinking, so what? I realized that for some reason, I had a fear of being judged were I to go out in public and have people see me reading a book like that. So overcoming that was part 1 of the positive experience. Part 2 was just the fact that I was around other people in a venue other than work or the gym.

On Saturday morning I finally made it to my first Refuge Recovery support meeting. I talked about this Buddhist inspired addiction recovery group in a previous post but had yet to make it to one. I threw aside fear, went to it, and spoke about the fear during the group. Afterwards, I went back to the same coffee shop I went to on Friday and read Zarathustra for a few more hours.

Today I went to the Minneapolis Institute of Arts and spent considerable time examining paintings and sculpture in the way I like to do it. Usually if I go with other people (family), they spend just a few seconds in front of each piece and continue on to the next. I feel compelled to keep up and end up disappointed in the experience. Today I spent time really examining each piece of art and the nuances of each; the brush strokes, the peripheral details, and trying to understand what each artist was trying to convey before reading the descriptive placards next to them. In this way it was an exercise in mindfulness and I left feeling fulfilled, if a bit lonely due to the fact that only a fraction of the many people there were by themselves. However, it is definitely something I intend to do again as my slower pace meant only a fraction of the works on display were viewed.

So I conclude this weekend feeling very different than at the conclusion of most others during the past several years. I employed intentional effort in getting off the couch and out among other people. I took some small risks in showing authenticity and even experienced a small amount of rejection (sister and the movie). I made some new connections in a recovery support group that feels like a better fit for me. Finally, I explored my humanity and liked what I saw.

I do have fear that this is just a passing phase and I will regress back into isolation and the historical preference for emotional avoidance. But I’m hopeful because of honest cognizance of where that path leads. Ultimately it leads to relapse but before that it leads to resentment, self-pity, and feeling inferior. Wanting something different than that created enough internal conflict to the point I felt compelled to act. I have enough faith in myself to believe that tomorrow will be a new day that will have all the same opportunities as today and perhaps more.

Always a Short Story

The dungeon of her mind was a terrible place and just too much at that moment. Confines of the room fed on misery and soon, walls began to vibrate with contempt. The time had come to leave and the weight of her mood had transferred to the body; the effort to assemble herself felt colossal. First the shower, then the clothes, then the shoes.

Pausing at the edge of the door, the moment of choice. Certainty of comfort lay in one direction, continued angst and sadness in the other. Turning towards certainty, the immediacy of the need outweighed the inevitable conclusion. It wouldn’t end well, never did, never would.

Even after making the turn, heaviness continued and multiplied. Walking among the familiar sights and sounds of lower 82nd, the cold air and fading light of a winter afternoon added to the oppression. Powerless and out-of-control, each step taking her closer, the place called out in the impending darkness like a beacon to a lost ship.

There was still time for an adjustment but really, she felt no desire to make one. What has begun must be finished, any correction more agonizing now that the initial decision was made. Wanting to believe this to be true, even if it wasn’t, looking down was easier than looking up. Concrete and dirt stared back indifferently while faces penetrated the determined facade, exposing the bewilderment of being in this same orbit of thought yet again.

Rounding the corner, the beacon came into full view with bright lights and bustling activity. Even as her pace quickened, this last segment stretched out timelessly to provide one last moment for redemption with thoughts of truth, love, life. Hurry to get inside. Once there, it would be too late to choose anything else. With no alternative, inevitability of conclusion defeats hope.

No matter how she tried to suppress it, her hand trembled at the counter. Hopefully he didn’t notice but if so, it wouldn’t matter. By the time she walked out the door, excited fear had turned to shame. The worst feeling yet. She cracked the cap and the paradox of the moment became clear: what was most feared was also what she longed for. As the liquid flowed freely into her mouth, throat, and stomach, oblivion would wipe anything away.

Losing My Religion

I was born in a small town in western Minnesota that was comprised almost entirely of descendants of northern European immigrants. It was a farming community, the people were friendly, and the steeple of the Lutheran church loomed large in both the literal and figurative sense. The church itself was a grand structure, having been built in the late 1800’s. My immediate family and I lived there for the first ten years of my life and I distinctly remember Sunday school classes and discovering that we were all sinners who could only find salvation through Jesus.
After moving to the twin cities metropolitan area in 1980, the first questions arose as to whether God was real. They didn’t stem from any one event other than a developing adolescent mind that began to compare conflicting teachings of science and Christianity. Reconciling the two was difficult and explanations of how to do so varied according to the teacher. Each end of the spectrum unequivocally taught that the other was wrong, and in the middle, efforts were made to fold one philosophy into the other.
My family exemplified the spectrum. During my early teens, the Lutheran confirmation process deemed that besides the weekly Wednesday night classes, one Sunday church service was required each month. I didn’t like attending any of it and would always wait until the last Sunday of each month to make the church service. For some reason it was important to my parents that I achieve the confirmation right-of-passage even though their own personal devotion was questionable at best, as shown by their willingness to drop me off and pick me up for the service without attending it themselves. I have an aunt and uncle who jumped on the evangelical bandwagon around this time. They both had been addicted to drugs and alcohol when they met and somewhere along the way Jesus entered their lives. Eagerly they sought to spread The Word and intrusively attempted to convert my grandparents, aunts, and my mother.
At the age of sixteen, I was placed in a 12-step treatment program for marijuana addiction and taught that I was nothing without a “Higher Power” and that only by hitting “rock bottom” and accepting that power into my heart would I be able to recover and live a prosperous life. Of course, the only spiritual practice known in my limited years involved Christianity and my evangelical aunt and uncle sought to capitalize on my predicament so they could save another soul.
I read the Bible, prayed each day, and went to services vastly different than the Lutheran version I was used to. For me, the idea of spiritual experience is extremely ambiguous even to this day. I can honestly say that something positive happened during that period, for which I am grateful. However, the questions still lingered regarding whether God was real and when those popped up, my religious education highlighted this lack of faith. For the boy who already thought he was fundamentally flawed, these feelings were more than discouraging. Rather than explore those questions objectively, it was less painful to abandon the practice.
When I first met my now ex-wife, winning her love meant validation of most of the uncertainties felt about my identity and character. Besides being intelligent and beautiful, she had very strong connections with her family, which I admired and longed for with my own parents and siblings. Her mother and father raised Suzanne in the Pentecostal tradition and she still had many of these extremely conservative viewpoints.. In placing her high on the pedestal of redemption for my low self-esteem, it was easy to fall back into my evangelical experience and adopt those same viewpoints as guiding principals. It proved to be deceptive not only for self-truth but also to her. But in wanting to follow a path of commitment and devotion, in reality towards her rather than any deity, sobriety of four years was celebrated and it was the most outwardly productive period of my life. It showed what was possible without self-destructive behavior even if the accomplishments never penetrated the facade enough to change negative core beliefs. In hindsight it is easy to see how I felt like an impostor; at any moment the jig might be up and exposure of the flawed, non-believing sinner would rip the scab from the old, shameful wound of overall deficiency. With this fear of exposure as the dominant guide for behavior in my marriage, it became a self-fulfilling prophecy in 2010 and the marriage crumbled as descent back into addiction took hold.
I’ve always struggled with the thinly-veiled Christian dogma of AA. AA works for many, many people and my beliefs are in no way an attempt to disparage the love, encouragement, sense of community, and overall success that others have experienced through participation in that program. While I have had great experiences in AA, the framework of the program as a means to stay sober have failed me. The first response to that statement by the avid AAer might be along the lines of “you haven’t worked the program hard enough”, or “you haven’t truly accepted that you are powerless”. For me, therein lies the problem.
My argument regarding the Christian aspect of this program can be summarized as follows: what other mental health condition, as defined in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, has at its prescriptive core the idea that powerlessness must be accepted, a higher power must be believed in, a moral inventory must be taken (is it a moral problem or a disease?), etc. etc. until a spiritual awakening has finally been experienced in step 12? The meetings start and end with a prayer. There is a single book that is revered to the point of being holy. And perhaps most discouraging for me, if any dissent from the framework of the steps is expressed, it means the dissenter is in “denial” and is bound to relapse lest he try harder to get his mind right.
So this time around I’m trying something different. I am comfortable calling myself an atheist and do so in the broadest sense of the word in that I believe no deities exist. However, there are fundamental concepts that I believe are required for me to stay sober, and on a broader, philosophical level are required for the vast majority of the population to live meaningful lives.
Let me state that I would currently classify myself as a naturalist, meaning that there are a set of principles which govern the order of things but that all of those are natural, biological, and scientific in nature. Human beings have no supernatural authority over any other living thing, be it a plant, bird, or bacteria. All living things are here by natural selection and this time we are alive is all we have; there is no afterlife.
Functioning communities are what have allowed human beings to thrive as a species. The earth is 4.5 billion years old and science has shown that the first creature to walk on 2 legs existed only 4 million years ago. If we even want to call that first creature remotely human, that means we’ve been here only 0.1% of the time our planet has existed. Somewhere during that evolutionary process, maybe a few hundred thousand years ago, banding together made more sense for survival than did going it alone. Even now, we see other species flocking together for a greater chance at survival (think birds flying south in the winter, or wolves or lions). It makes sense that human beings have a biological precedent of living in communities. Hunting, gathering food, and staying warm are all easier when we do it together.
Addiction allows for a dissociation from our biological needs. When I am sober and alone, I am uncomfortable to the point that I am motivated to do something about it. When I can get high or drunk, it is easy to be alone. So even as a naturalist, my involvement in a community is necessary to stay sober and survive. As alluded to in several other posts, it is still difficult for me to abandon fear and go into an unknown social situation but I have accepted that this is necessary.
Another practice of AA that I believe important in my recovery is found in the 11th step, where it says “sought through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with God as we understood him…”. Meditation has proven to be a remarkable addition to my recovery program. It is hard to explain to those who haven’t done it, but my daily meditations are now 20 minutes. It seems that the first half of those sessions involves calming my mind and gradually slowing down the thoughts that come at me from all directions. By paying attention to the thoughts but not indulging in them, patterns start to become apparent and themes of subconscious motivation are brought to a conscious level. Once that has occurred, I can dismiss those themes. When that happens, there are very brief moments experienced that I would define as “clarity”. In those moments I am neither defined or identified by events from the past or predestined to any outcome in the future. In remembering those moments I can dispute self-destructive thoughts and patterns that come back again as the day goes on.
By really believing that I am not defined by what I have or have not done in the past, along with the existential principle that the full responsibility of the life I call my own rests solely on me, a sense of freedom is felt unlike anything felt before. This life is not a trial run for the afterlife, this is all we’ve got. For me, addiction absolves me of taking real responsibility for my life. If I am experiencing pleasurable feelings, it becomes easy to let time pass without motivation to make the most of it. By using the disease of addiction as an excuse, it becomes easy to fall into the same trap as the Christian who believes on a fundamental level that they are a sinner destined to sin. Confession and repentance is all that is required to make things right.
This has been a long post but one that I’ve wanted to write about for a long time. I can’t say that it came out exactly as expected but it’s a start. For me, themes of naturalism, existentialism, and Buddhism are all swimming around in my head. I’ve explored all of them to some degree but none of them on a deep level. Meditation seems to tie them all together in a way I can’t fully articulate at the moment. Tonight I am going to try a new meeting called Refuge Recovery, which is based of Buddhist principles. In researching it earlier this weekend, apparently the founder of the movement has recently gotten into trouble because of sexual impropriety. Given how excited I was to learn about this AA alternative, it was disheartening to see this blemish on a great idea that could fill a personal void that has existed for a long, long time.
But then I remembered that life is an ongoing process of change, with ongoing difficulties. Not just for me but for everyone.