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If you have unresolved feelings
about your mother (or father), making them part of your mindfulness practice
can transform what has been a hindrance in your life into a teacher.
If you choose to follow the path of
meditation, you are likely to encounter what are sometimes referred to as your
"karmic knots"-those physical and emotional traumas you have
accumulated throughout your lifetime. For instance, when you sit in meditation
for a lengthy period, physical tensions in your body caused by stress or old
injuries may manifest as a stabbing pain between the shoulder blades, an aching
neck, or throbbing legs. Similarly, all your unfinished psychological issues
will appear either as physical pain or other body sensations, intense emotions,
voices, or as disturbing images that arise seemingly from nowhere. There is no
way to avoid these experiences, nor should you. By allowing these sensations
and emotions full expression while mindfully paying attention to them, you
become free of them. The release of these knots can be described as an
unwinding that allows the difficult experience to complete itself. There is no
rushing this process, nor knowing when it will be over.
There is one category of karmic knot
that may be especially hard for you to deal with, as it is for many people.
This is the emotional-some would say psychological-trauma that may have
occurred within your family of origin. It may involve your mother, father, or
both. This trauma may have been caused by a parent who was absent or
overbearing, who committed inappropriate actions or failed to take positive
action, or who took too little or too much interest in you. Or it may have been
the interactions between your parents that was traumatizing to you. In
meditation it is all grist for the mill of mindfulness.
A trauma involving the mother or
father is sometimes referred to as a "wound" because it damages the body-mind,
needs proper healing, and often leaves a scar or weakness in your body or
emotional makeup. No wound is more charged for both men and women than the
mother wound. Your relationship with your mother or whoever provided your
"mothering" is the primary relationship in your development, and it
inevitably conditions much of your life. It is easy to assume that if you had
some difficulty in this relationship you have outgrown it, but do not be too
sure. In my experience as a Dharma teacher, I have been surprised to discover
how often yogis of both genders and all ages report being overwhelmed by
unresolved feelings about their mothers. If you don't acknowledge and make
peace with these feelings, then she is forced to stay caught forever in your
mind and heart as a negative "mother image," preventing the
possibility of an authentic relationship.
Many times I have listened to
yogis-men as well as women-tell heart-rending stories of disinterest,
inappropriate entanglement, or devastating disapproval from their mothers of
such magnitude that they are still distorting the yogis' lives. "What am I
to do?" they ask, "How do I stop getting caught?" The good news
is that any trauma, including the mother wound, can become part of your
mindfulness practice, but the bad news is you cannot avoid the suffering this
mindfulness will encounter.
Yoga
of the Mother Wound
The dharma teaches us that while you
are on the cushion all thoughts and feelings can be received and worked with
mindfully. There is a series of techniques and reflections you can use to
practice what I call the "yoga of the mother wound" to transform what
has been a hindrance in your life into a teacher of the heart.
"Transform" does not mean to fix or make go away whatever trauma and
scars you may be carrying from childhood; instead, you slowly develop a new
relationship with your difficulty, such that it is no longer a controlling factor
in your life. What may seem like an intractable wound may even become a point
of inspiration and deep understanding for you.
In one sense it is radical to think
that what has injured you is an opportunity that contains the seeds of your
liberation. But not so in another, for two of the valuable ingredients you need
for a strong practice are focused attention and intense energy. Any highly
charged, unresolved issue from your past can offer you both of these
ingredients. So, how do you make a deeply emotional wound your yoga? You begin
by staying alert to those times you find yourself clinging, constricted from
aversion, or caught in wanting in some manner connected to difficulties with
your mother. You remind yourself to treat this difficult memory or emotion as
your yoga practice. Your intention is to become more flexible in your emotions,
to let loose of anger and defensiveness, and to stop suppressing your feelings.
Just as each posture in hatha yoga
is a physical form to help your body find flexibility, so it is with how you
begin to treat strong emotions around your mother. I mean this quite literally.
In hatha yoga, you learn to hold a particular pose in a relaxed manner; after
that, it is the form of the pose that stretches you. As with the yoga of the
mother wound, it is just the same; it becomes your emotional yoga. Each time
you encounter the tension, you identify it as being a particular form that has
appeared in the mind: It may be a memory, a current frustration, or a sense
that you lack the ability to achieve something at present because of how the
past has molded you. You stay mindful of the shape of the experience, noticing
the pain and any resistance that arises. Meet these feelings with compassion,
equanimity, and loving-kindness-it does not matter if the thoughts and feelings
are dark and unseemly. This is the yoga of softening the heart, surrendering to
what's true in the moment. Despite the discomfort it may be causing, you can be
with whatever is arising in your mind. It is only a thought that is emotionally
loaded, which in time will pass.
When you practice mindfulness of
thoughts and emotions, you are practicing what the Buddha taught as the
"third foundation of mindfulness." Mindfulness practice is
nonjudgmental; therefore, you need not feel guilt or shame over any emotions or
thoughts that arise. By repeatedly staying with difficult feelings and body
sensations, your perspective of the past shifts. You become far less reactive
and more flexible in your emotional responses. It is not that your history is
rewritten, but rather that the self experiencing that history is transformed.
When a trauma first presents itself,
your feelings may not be at all clear. However, all emotions are felt in the
body, so if you stay with your body sensations, they can bring you into direct
contact with feelings and help you identify them. Remember in doing this
practice that you are not claiming that your memories or feelings are the
absolute factual and unbiased truth about the past. Rather it is your actual
experience of the moment that is the object of your mindfulness, not your old
stories or your interpretation of how your childhood was supposed to be.
You may have certain hidden
misperceptions, which will hinder you in treating the mother wound as your
yoga. One error in perception is thinking it possible to have been a child
without having received wounding experiences. Learning to live life hurts all
children. Some amount of wounding is inevitable and in a certain sense
necessary. It is the severity of the trauma, the context of the wound, and how
it is handled that determines whether the mother wound leads to strength and
wholeness or ongoing trauma.
You may also secretly believe that your wound is
ugly, something to be ashamed of. But ask, do the wounds of your friends make
them any less attractive? Are you not inspired when they handle them in a
courageous manner? Why would it not be the same for you? If there is some part of
you that you find unacceptable, make it the object of your loving-kindness
practice. Above all, watch for the misperception that without realizing it, you
are wanting the past to be other than it was. This is the most insidious form
of want-ing mind; it is absolute delusion.
The
Four Functions of Mothering
You can bring more clarity to your
mother wound by reflecting specifically on what mothering means to you. There
are four basic functions of mothering-nurturing, protecting, empowering, and
initiating-and a trauma can occur in any of them. Although they are
interconnected, it helps to examine them separately in order to clarify the
trauma. Using inquiry into these four functions is most helpful in identifying
what you are experiencing in the moments of your daily life as well as during
meditation. Doing inquiry as part of your yoga of the mother wound is not the
same as psychological or therapeutic work. When you use reflection in this
manner, you have to beware of getting caught in the story or lost in thinking,
or embracing the idea of being a victim and assigning blame. Through practicing
mindfulness, compassion, and loving-kindness, you develop the four mothering
capacities within yourself. The practice of developing these inner capacities
is slow, but the effect is strong and easily felt. Keep in mind that
"fathering" also involves these same four functions, with some
differences. Ideally these functions are shared by both parents, with each
compensating for the other's weaknesses. If you struggle with a trauma around
the father, you can reflect on these same functions, and make your father wound
your yoga.
Reflecting on these functions will
also help you understand that no woman is only a mother and no man only a
father; "mothering" and "fathering" are done by women and
men who by their very humanness are less than perfect in what they can give.
For many people, this understanding alone is liberating. If you are a mother or
father yourself, you may discover that reflecting on these functions allows you
to be more fulfilled as a parent or that your own mother or father wound is
healed through your experience of being a parent.
Mother
As Nurturer
The first of the four functions of
the mother is nurturing, the giving of care that allows for life (symbolized by
the mother's milk), which encompasses meeting the wide range of physical and
emotional needs a child has in order to grow and develop. You know about a
child's needs for food, shelter, medicine, comfort, and relatedness; a child
who is not held enough develops into an adult with a range of physical and
emotional difficulties, just as an inadequate diet manifests as health problems
later in life. But there is a more subtle aspect of nurturing I call
"nurturing with joy," which celebrates the existence of the child as
a source of delight for the one who is mothering and which manifests in the
child and continues into adulthood as a sense of innate worth and spontaneous
joy.
If you did not receive sufficient
nurturing in childhood, as an adult you may feel an insatiable need, an
inability to take joy in others, or a lack of self-worth despite your
competency and confidence. These feelings may arise in your relationships as
well as when you are alone or on the cushion. You may agonize over your
behavior as a parent or in your romantic relationship because of these
childhood wounds. You may feel it is simply too late, that you are forever
stuck, broken, mired, or imprisoned in your inadequacy. You may believe your
fear of being abandoned or devoured, or your unquenchable neediness will always
define you. Never buy such a story or the feelings of despair or anger that
come with it, for it is only a story that is being created by your mind.
As you develop mindfulness, you find
your capacity to be in the moment includes the ability to nurture yourself and
others. The practices of loving-kindness, empathetic joy, and compassion can
feed your nourishing capacity. Finding teachers who nourish without creating
the codependency of excessive mothering can furnish further inspiration and
role modeling. Being mindful of the fear is in itself transforming. Observing
the thousands of ways in which you are nurtured and nurture others in the
greater community also break up the solidity and credibility of your wound's
story. Nurturing, as with all the functions, begins with the mindful intention
that this is a value, a particular energetic quality, or manner of relating to
yourself and others that you wish to cultivate. By giving up clinging to your
agenda that nurturing should be a certain way and instead simply staying with
your intention, you slowly develop an inner nurturer. In so doing, you will
change both your inadequate feelings and your story.
Mother
As Protector
The second of the four functions of
mothering is protecting. This is the instinctive and cultivated impulse to see
that no physical or emotional harm comes to one who is vulnerable. It is
symbolized by the warrior or guardian spirit. A child needs to be protected
from physical, sexual, and emotional abuse, and from the threat of all three.
Ironically, the first persons a child has to be protected from are the mother and
father and their destructive impulses. These destructive impulses might take
the form of excessive anger or emotional instability, for instance.
There is a subtle aspect of
protecting energy that gives the child the incredible gift of feeling intrinsically
safe, a feeling of trust in life. Unfortunately, quite frequently a child must
try to flourish in a home environment that does not feel safe, even though no
overt harm is done. As an adult the individual will often be at a loss to
explain the unsafe feelings that plague them.
If you did not receive sufficient
protection as a child, as an adult you may feel that there is "no one in
your corner." You may have a memory of some traumatic event or environment
that recurs during meditation. You may have developed an elaborate compensatory
behavior pattern for your anxieties. You may be confused about the discrepancy
between your family's "factual history" of your childhood versus the
feelings you remember having as a child. For these reasons, in making the mother
wound your practice, you focus on the feelings arising at present. They can be
worked with, released, and transformed. The past is not so easy to work with.
It is comprised of outer and inner events that are now immutable, hazy in
recollection, or maybe even inaccurate.
There is no "magic bullet"
that will dissipate all your past trauma or create instant feelings of safety.
But if you continually bring attention to feelings of fear, loss, and confusion
as they are arising and receive those feelings with compassion, they will begin
to lose their grip. Gradually you will discover that they come less often, with
less intensity, and stay for shorter periods of time.
Mother
As Empoweror
The third of the four functions of
the mother is empowering the child, encouraging and teaching independence and
self-confidence. It is symbolized by the queen, who elevates her subjects and
facilitates the beginning of their coming into their own power. The mother uses
her royal power over the child with fairness, patience, generosity, and a
commitment to preparing her child to become her equal or even to surpass her.
The ability to perform this function comes from the mother's own
self-confidence and love and from embracing the view that it is her sacred duty
to empower her young. Empowering is achieved by encouraging self-reliance and
providing education, discipline, and learning opportunities for the child. You
are empowered to try, therefore to make mistakes and still be fully accepted.
Your interests are met with enthusiasm; the importance and joy of hard work are
recognized and encouraged. Failure is treated lightly, while curiosity and
integrity are held in high regard.
In fairy tales, when the queen
neglects or is afraid to allow the young their power, the kingdom becomes ill
and languishes. In real life, this is seen in the mother who neglects or is
even afraid of her child becoming powerful, so that a host of problems develop
through neglect, constant criticism, or creating dependency.
Sometimes because of
over-identification, the mother is willing to empower but insists that her
child be like her or succeed in ways that satisfy her own ego. This is a false
form of empowerment, a subtle form of enslavement. You may not realize that
there is a difference between the functions of nurturing and protecting and
that of empowering, but the difference is crucial. With nurturing and
protecting the mother is doing for you, whereas the empowering function allows
you to find your own power through doing for yourself. With your mother's
blessing, you become independent and self-confident.
If you struggle with empowerment,
then you may lament your anxiety and ineptitude, your perfectionism, or your
unwillingness to try new things. Struggles with self-confidence will be visible
in your meditation. It is as though a blessing was withheld, and it is
debilitating. Slowly, through your yoga of being fully mindful of the wound,
you learn how to give yourself the blessing of unconditional acceptance. By
practicing being with things as they are, you may discover that all your life
you have secretly been demanding that things be other than they are, and it has
stopped your growth. You may discover that the empowering mother you have
internalized is always critical, fearful, filled with aversion. Meditation
teaches you that this voice is mere thinking, characterized in Buddhism as
Mara, the one who erodes one's power through doubt, fear, and greed.
As your self-acceptance grows, you
will discover that what needs to and can change about you will do so. This
happens both because you have acquired the power to initiate change and because
you have the capacity to respond to life in a manner that allows the ensuing
experiences to reshape you. Those things that cannot change then become your
yoga. In time you realize that when consciously worked with, the limitations in
your life can become the gateways to freedom. You start to discover that
dis-identifying with the drama of your own story leads to a state of happiness
and peace that is not dependent on the conditions of your life being a certain
way.
Mother
As Initiator
The fourth function of the mother is
initiating, and it is the most difficult to understand. It is through acts of
initiation that you come to feel as though you are a valuable and welcome
member of your family. As you develop, it is this function that provides the
inner feeling that your life has meaning, and by the teenage years you
understand that you have the right to become the full expression of your own
unique life. It is also the initiation function that permits, accepts, and
celebrates your leaving home to start your own life.
A girl achieves the inner experience
of womanhood by way of initiation by the mother, who does this through how she
treats her own womanhood and that of her daughter. The father plays a key role
in initiation as well by recognizing the girl's power and her natural right to
become a woman. For a boy, it is the father who is the primary initiator into manhood,
but it is the mother who recognizes that the boy is leaving her side to enter
the company of men. She signals that this is appropriate, not a reason for
guilt, and she supports his bringing "mother replacements" in the way
of female friends and girlfriends into her house. In welcoming them she
acknowledges his independence.
When initiation occurs in a timely
and clear manner, it is a beautiful process, though often painful for the
parent. Most initiation takes place through symbols, rituals, and unspoken
behavior. When it does not occur, there is a sense of guilt, of staying a
youth, of not knowing or not feeling entitled to one's place in life. For a
mother to be effective in providing initiation, she must have somehow received
or found her own. It is the most selfless of all the aspects, for she is
encouraging a separation that leaves her without. This initiating power is
associated with the shaman, the goddess, the magus, and the medicine woman.
In seeking initiation you may be
attracted to teachers who claim superior understanding, who create an
impression of having vast authority, thus signaling what is often a false claim
that they can initiate. You may frantically want answers in your life, not
understanding that initiatory power will come to you if you treat your
questions as sacred. It is tempting to surrender your power to a teacher rather
than seek a teacher who will initiate you so that you gain self-empowerment.
You may be caught in wanting to have
energetic experiences on the cushion as a form of initiation. You may simply
want something to happen in your life that signals your aliveness, meaning, and
place. It is a call for initiation. It is much the same with teenagers who get
tattoos, pierce their bodies, form cliques, posses, or gangs, and carelessly
risk their lives and use drugs or fundamentalism of one sort or another to
initiate themselves.
It is not realistic to expect a
parent to provide all the initiation functions for a child. A parent only
begins the process of initiation, which can be viewed as a series of lifelong
developmental processes that are actualized through the use of rituals and
sacred space by various spiritual and societal leaders. If you were fortunate,
what you did not receive from a mother or father, you might have received from
grandparents, a caring relative, a teacher, or youth leader. Your experience of
the first three functions may have been less than "good enough,"
therefore you may never have had the momentum to seek initiation.
Likewise, your mother and your
father may have suffered from their own lack of initiation such that providing
initiation was simply far beyond them, even though they were good parents in
other ways.
Initiation begins with finding an
identity within the family and community, then switches to initiation into
wholeness within your inner being, and culminates in a sense of unity with life
itself. Each stage of initiation is more subtle than the previous one, and the
unhealed emotional wounds become more treacherous to deal with at each level.
It is never too late for you to experience any of the stages of initiation in
your life. Both through your own explorations and by working with those who act
as elders, you can achieve a deeper symbolic relationship with yourself and
life.
Mindfulness
& the Mother Wound
There are a series of reflections
that may help you develop your yoga of the mother wound. For instance,
throughout human history, the tasks of mothering were shared by members of the
extended family, tribal elders, and family friends. The community had rituals
that helped in the process, including those that taught you to take comfort in
the earth or nature as the Great Mother. Unfortunately, nowadays there is often
only a mother and father to do all that needs to be done. Nor is there much use
of nature as mother or of group ritual. Is it any wonder that your mother may
have struggled with some of these aspects of mothering?
No matter how difficult your
relationship with your mother, there is still the singular fact that she
carried you to birth. The gift of birth forms its own strong bond. Likewise,
there is within your mother experience a level of sufficiency that brought you
to this moment. Your having this awareness and capacity means that the
mothering you received was good enough for you to go on from there to find your
own wholeness in life.
Maybe the most useful reflection is
to realize the gift of the negative. This points to the understanding that what
was not given or was poorly given is also valuable because of what it elicits
from you. Much of your wisdom comes from having to cope with the pain and
uncertainty you experienced as a child. The negative mothering experiences
helped form your priorities, taught you what was important, and gave you the
motivation to be different as a parent yourself. They are a critical part of
your inheritance; they forced you to know yourself and to develop a sense of
right and wrong.
If you do not receive the negative
as a gift, if you see it only as suffering, you reduce your relationship to
life and distort the richness of your life experiences. Moreover, you are far
less likely to make your life all it can be. It is this failure to manifest
your own values that would be the true tragedy. This understanding is a key to
your own empowerment. It allowsthe yoga to transform your mother wound into an
enhanced sense of aliveness and freedom. Can you feel this potential in your
heart? Can you cultivate this understanding with your own intuition?
As the yoga of the mother wound
begins to stretch both your heart and mind, more insights become available to
you. One is that much of what you took so personally is in fact quite
impersonal. What was done and not done to you or for you arose out of a set of
conditions in your mother's life. You need not carry the actions caused by
those conditions as a personal burden. Therefore, the wounds you once thought
to be intransigent are accessible and subject to change. The wounds do not
disappear, but they lose much of their charge. They fail to hook your mind and
imprison your heart.
Keep in mind that meditation is not
psychotherapy. These words are the offering of a meditation teacher, not a
therapist. In mindfulness practice, unlike therapy, the specific content of
afflictive emotions are not the focus of your attention.
Instead, the focus is on the mind
state that is arising. The teachings are concerned with finding freedom from
your wanting mind. They guide you to discover for yourself that happiness is
not dependent on the external conditions of your present, past, or future life.
You may well greatly benefit from working with a therapist as a supplement to
your practice, reflecting the principle that "you must first have a self
in order to give up attachment to it."
If you make the mother wound your
yoga, you may encounter a trauma that is not resolvable in the context of daily
life goals. Such extreme experiences are often viewed as the "sacred
wound." A sacred wound is that trauma which occurred so early in your life
or was so deep that it forces you into the spiritual life because it is not
possible for you to find the peace you seek in any other way. Because of the
motivation it provides, it is viewed as a gift, though a costly one that
renders many of life's ordinary rewards unsatisfactory and can lead you to
perform unskillful actions.
When you decide to embrace the
mother wound as your yoga and make it your teacher, a miraculous and unexpected
event occurs. As you find your freedom from being captured by the wound, you
also give your mother back her own life. Rather than simply being a label, a
set of responsibilities called "mother," she is allowed to be a
woman, a human being with her own story, her own gains and losses, and a life
trajectory separate from yours. It is not that she ceases to be your mother,
but that she becomes everything else she always was, except in the minds of her
children.
by:- Phillip Moffitt
Source:- dharma wisdom
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