Saturday, October 29, 2011

Mudita and the Fine Art of Enjoying Others Sermon







(Sermon delivered 10/23/11 at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Tallahassee)






There are only two kinds of people in the world...Those that say there are two kinds of people in the world and those that don’t. haha No, but seriously, I had a dear mentor growing up at a church in Orlando (who was one of the most amazing people I’ve ever met and I’m not just saying that to make this story sound more interesting) that would say that there are two kinds of people in the world: those that enter a room and say, “HERE I AM!!!” and those that come in to a room and say, “THERE YOU ARE!!!”.



Do you see the difference there? Can you think of examples? Tougher question: which are you? Here I am or there you are? Which do you think is more popular? Who do you think everyone wants to be around? Furthermore, which person do you think is happier?



But it isn’t just about being popular and happier. It’s also about bringing joy to a dark world. What do you think is the single greatest gift that you can give the vast majority of people that you bump in to? Your wife? Your husband? Your coworkers? Your friends? The cashier at Walmart? Certainly different relationships necessitate different approaches, but there’s a theme I’d like you to become fully aware of if you’re not already. Look around you. Look in the mirror. What’s the greatest unmet need in others lives? In your life? Let me give you some possible options, we’ll rule some out and then see what’s left. Ok, things that you can give to benefit the people around you with:


  1. Advice on how to run their life better or do their job more productively. 
  2. Some essential, saving knowledge that will transform their lives, prevent eternal damnation, help them lose 20 lbs, look ten years younger, become better parents, husbands, wives that are more productive, better looking, happier and in amazing health.
  3. The exalted privilege of being around you. 






I believe we’ll have to think of some better options...On this morning, I’d like to introduce you to, what I believe to be, the single greatest way you can love the people around you, serve their greatest unmet need and find the greatest means of fulfillment possible--enjoying others. We’ll look a little at Christianity, a little at evolution (O, how I do love that pairing :)) and a little at the teachings of Buddhism to gain some guidance and insight and at the end there will be a time for reflection and application.



And to start off I’d like for you to consider the relationships you seek out. I suggest that those people offer you something that you need. So, think of someone that you really, really enjoy, like gut, deep down enjoy--someone that feeds your soul, makes you more of a human, more of a man, more of a woman. Why? Why do you enjoy them? What is it that they offer you? And, maybe, in turn we can start to offer that to others. What deep longing within you are they able to touch? Why do you like them?



Is it because they’re funny? Or, is it because they think you’re absolutely hilarious.



Is it because they make you smile? Or, is it because when you’re around they can’t stop smiling.



Is it because you respect them? Look up to them? Or, is it because you’re their hero.



Is it because they’re interesting or because they’re interested?



Entertaining or entertained?



What’s sexier than feeling truly sexy?



Think, if you will, of the people (maybe a teacher, a friend, relative or mentor) that have made an impact on you. Was it just that they were cool that they made an impact on you? Or, was it that they thought you were the coolest. They believed in you. They thought you were the deal. You brought a smile to their face.



You were enjoyed.



Uber (and I mean uber) conservative theologian John Piper puts it eloquently with this hypothetical story which I think is quite telling.



Suppose on this day I bring home a dozen long-stemmed roses for Noel [who is his wife]. When she meets me at the door, I hold out the roses, and she says, “O Johnny, they’re beautiful; thank you” and gives me a big hug. Then suppose I hold up my hand and say matter-of-factly, “Don’t mention it; it’s my duty.”

What happens? Is not the exercise of duty a noble thing? Do not we honor those we dutifully serve? Not much. Not if there’s no heart in it. Dutiful roses are a contradiction in terms. If I am not moved by a spontaneous affection for her as a person, the roses do not honor her. In fact, they belittle her. They are a very thin covering for the fact that she does not have the worth or beauty in my eyes to kindle affection. All I can muster is a calculated expression of marital duty.

Here is the way Edward John Carnell puts it:


Suppose a husband asks his wife if he must kiss her good night. Her answer is, “You must, but not that kind of a must.” What she means is this: “Unless a spontaneous affection for my person motivates you, your overtures are stripped of all moral value.”




So, what’s the right way for that story to go? (wait for responses.) “I’m giving you these roses because there is no greater pleasure than for me to see you happy. I’m only happy when you’re happy. Your joy is my joy. Your pleasure, mine.




Meaning, she/he needs to be enjoyed. Relished. Adored. Cherished. Savored. Found to be captivating.



Piper further elaborates this mentality in a spiritual context by submitting that, “God is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in Him.”



Translation: God is happy when we’re happy and we’re happy when we find our happiness by enjoying God.



You’ll notice the contrast this way of viewing Christianity has standing next to other ascetic forms of spirituality. Life isn’t about how much suffering you can endure, it’s about enjoyment--gluttonous, hedonistic enjoyment...of the right thing--God. And in the same way that Piper could see God as most loved when we most enjoy him, so are people most loved when they’re most enjoyed.



And I think this is insight is absolutely backed up and proved true (if you will) by the pragmatic logic of evolution.



In my reading of evolution this logic of life--symbiosis, synergy, win-win, non-zero sum interaction--this mutually beneficial, mutual enjoyment is written on nearly every helices of our DNA. From the very beginning our success and survival has been deeply enmeshed and entangled in our ability to cooperate and seek a mutualistic outcomes.



For just one example one could look to a study done in 1964 by Whechkin and Masserman. One way of stating the point of the study was to see if animals care about each other. They used Rhesus monkeys who were trained to receive food by pulling a chain. Once habitualized, the food delivery system was modified by connecting it to an adjacent cage that had another rhesus monkey in it that had electrodes fixed to its body. When the chain was pulled food still dropped down, but the neighboring monkey was also severely shocked. It didn’t take long for the food receiving monkey to realize the connection and lose all taste for food. One noble rhesus monkey starved itself for 12 days to avoid hurting its friend.



We’re all connected.



“No man is an island.”



Interdependent web of existence.



We have porous emotional states. What I feel, you feel. What you feel, I feel. Don’t you feel tense around tense people? Aren’t you uplifted by an ebullient friend? Aren’t *YAWNS* contagious? We feel what others feel. So, why not try to make others joyful so that we’re joyful?



Much of the idea for this sermon came as a response to several key conversations with Amy Menard, our former music minister here. It started as debate between we two logophiles about the best antonym for the word schadenfreude--or the enjoyment of an other person’s pain. The word we landed on was the Buddhist term ‘mudita’ (at her suggestion).



Let me tell you about ‘mudita’. Mudita is part of the Brahmaviharas which can be translated as the “heavenly dwellings” or the “abodes of Brahma”. They are four virtues accompanied by meditation practices to cultivate them. Mudita, a part of this set, can be translated as vicarious or sympathetic joy. It is the highest form of enjoying another person--the enjoyment of an other person’s joy.



Most of what I found in my research on this topic of Mudita centered around combating the opposite of this reciprocal joy--fighting envy, fighting bitterness, fighting anger, fighting fighting! But, in the same way that, “Look forward,” is better advice for a tightrope walker than, “Don’t look down,” so I’ll try to give you a couple ideas to focus on building this skill up rather than tearing down its opposite. Let me give you three character traits of someone that embodies this philosophy of mudita. People that really understand how to love others by meeting their greatest unmet need--to be enjoyed--are good at...


1. Being playful.






Have you ever stopped to appreciate that humans are THE most playful of all the animal kingdom? None other even comes close--no otter, no puppy, no kitten. It’s what we do. At every age, those that stay connected to this deeply human aspect of ourselves, challenge, laugh, have inside jokes, flirt. They enjoy the dance and repartee of relationships.



2. They’re curious.



They genuinely want to know more about a person. They’re fascinateable. I remember asking my youth minister growing up how a person knows that they’ve “met the one”--while I was in teenage star struck love. His response for when he knew he wanted to ask his wife to marry him was when he thought that his wife was the most interesting person in the world--that he couldn’t stop thinking about her, talking to her, talking about her, learning more about her. He truly enjoyed her.



3. They’re capable of adoration.



Which is something not everyone is. People that exemplify mudita have heroes, people that they look up to. They have mentors, even if those those mentors are completely unaware of it. They aspire to be like other humans that are living life darn well. They can step aside and let others enjoy the spot light, the throne, the pedestal. They live the Bible verse, “In humility consider others better than yourselves.”





They’re able to celebrate other’s victories and successes.



They love it when the other guy wins.



Enjoy others because it’s good for them, but also because it’s good for you. A 1976 study by Langer and Rodin on elderly patients in a nursing home who (among other things) were given a plant to care for were half as likely to die in a year and half’s time and showed marked improvements in mental and physical well being in as little as three weeks. Caring for others is caring for yourself (within boundaries).



You know, one of my favorite things about being UU is feeling freed to enjoy people as they are. I can give up on my power trip of trying to convert everyone, change their mind, change their way of thinking, prevent their eternal damnation. And as of right now I’m thoroughly convinced that if you really want to change someone, then sometimes not tyring to change them but instead loving and accepting and -enjoying- them exactly as they are right now may be the most effective way to actually change them for the better.



I think of the significance of enjoyment often with teaching and working at a school. I work at a local school for kids with emotional/behavioral problems that are unable to make it in a mainstream school. What’s the most important thing I offer the kids? Is it knowledge? Just another fact they’ll forget after a test? Critical thinking skills? While those are definitely important and I can’t reduce my job to one thing, I do think that the most fundamental gift I give my kids--as people, rather than just students-- is to enjoy them, enjoy their learning process, enjoy asking and answering important questions, enjoy their brilliance. I’d like to ask you, what’s the most important thing you offer your friends, lover, coworkers, children?



But, enjoying people can, at times, be really, really, really, really difficult. And even that’s kind of an understatement. That’s kind of one of the ways you know that it’s the right thing to do--it’s hard. Getting the focus off yourself and on to enjoying another person can, in addition to helping with nervousness and social anxiety (I totally focused on this to deal with my nervousness today) can be the greatest means of loving another person by meeting their greatest unmet need and let you tap into the deepest well of joy possible in your life. After one song we’ll focus on fostering this practice through mudita meditation.



***SONG INTERLUDE



Gratitude is the key to happiness. If you want to be happy, you absolutely have to be grateful. And enjoyment is active gratitude. Enjoyment is active gratitude. It’s gratitude in the moment, NOW, viscerally experiencing the object of gratitude.



To foster what we’ve spoken of today I’d like to give you several meditation practices. The reason that they’re called ‘practices’ is that we’re practicing having these emotional states until they’re second nature, automatic, sincere and deeply held.



The highest form of enjoyment that we can foster is the enjotment of another’s joy--mudita. In order to work this emotional muscle I’m going to give you several phrases to repeat as a part of mudita meditation and I challenge you to consider four categories of people for each mantra phrase--someone you already enjoy dearly, a neutral person (an acquaintance, someone you don’t have strong feelings about one way or another), someone who it’s very difficult to enjoy, and lastly all beings, everywhere. And I’d just like to remind you that if something is difficult then often you know you’re doing the right thing. :) If you’re having too much difficult focusing directly on the image of the difficult person, imagine that they’re beside you and that you’re wishing the below phrases for “us/we”.



Focus on feeling sincerely the emotion and not just repeating the words. Let it seep deep within you. Open the expanses on your heart. Allow yourself to be vulnerable. Let yourself feel again.
Bring to your mind the image of the person you easily enjoy. Repeat in your heart:
May your life be free from suffering, worry, futility, loneliness, pain, loss.



Bring to your mind the neutral person:


May your life be free from suffering, worry, futility, loneliness, pain, loss.



Bring to mind the difficult person.


May your life be free from suffering, worry, futility, loneliness, pain, loss.



Connect yourself to all beings, everywhere. Sense the room expanding to infinity reducing the distance of all beings to zero.


May your life be free from suffering, worry, futility, loneliness, pain, loss.



Bring to mind the person you enjoy.
May your good fortune continue and increase. May you be happy. May your life be filled with joy, hope, success, love, fulfillment. May you be happy.



Bring to mind the neutral person.



May your good fortune continue and increase. May you be happy. May your life be filled with joy, hope, success, love, fulfillment. May you be happy.



Now the difficult person.



May your good fortune continue and increase. May you be happy. May your life be filled with joy, hope, success, love, fulfillment. May you be happy.



Now all beings, everywhere--known and unknown.



Lastly, I want you to take out your phone while the next song is playing and I challenge you to text the person you truly enjoy and tell them one thing you truly enjoy about them.



To quote the very quotable Winston Churchill, "We make a living by what we get. We make a life by what we give."

Monday, September 26, 2011

Pupil Dilation--How It Works

Did you know there's an eye within your eye?  Tis true.  The top layer of your retina contains cells called photosensitive ganglion cells that both receive and process light separately from your normal rod and cone cells that form the images we see.  About 1-3% of the nerve cells cells within your eye (ganglion cells) have evolved to see light for a couple special reasons.




  1. To set your circadian rhythms.  Ever noticed how difficult it can be to sleep with the sunshine pouring in your room?  I actually choose to keep my blinds open so that I wake up easier in the morning.  I had the effectiveness of this proved by travel quite a bit and having to deal with jet lag.  There's a reason for that.  These photosensitive ganglion cells talk to the pineal gland in your brain and, among other things, release or suppress hormones like melatonin which helps put you to sleep.
  2. Cause your pupils to dilate or constrict!
These aforementioned cells use a photopigment called melanopsin that detects light that is essentially blue (460-484 nm).  Why blue?  If I had to guess, I'd bet that's the frequency that makes it through the eye lid the best!  


Other interesting questions: How is it that our pupils can dilate due to psychological reasons and we don't experience our vision brightening?  What is the brain mechanism that dims our vision during psychological dilation?



More:

Pix:

Sunday, September 18, 2011

How Does Joint Cracking Work?

I'll give my best understanding here, but let the reader know that there does seem to be some ambiguity and contradiction in what I read on this subject.  Some of what you shall read is only my interpretation and hypothesizing about how the process most likely works.







Our joints are lubricated in a liquid called synovial fluid that

  • Is free of cells
  • Separated from our blood and internal matrix by a sturdy fibrous joint capsule 
  • Has non-Newtonian characteristics that make it more fluid with movement and use
  • Etymologically means that it has similarities to egg whites--'ovial' from 'ovum' for egg
  • When a joint is bent or torsioned that liquid has to move between the bone, the capsule and the surrounding areas.
It is this movement of the fluid that causes cracking.  For instance with our knuckles, by pushing them in one direction we pressurize the synovial fluid on one side of the joint.  This pressurized fluid is then rapidly released between the bones to the opposite side of the joint.  In the process a bubble cavitation (think cavity) is formed.  Cavitation happens when a shock wave of liquid moves so quickly that behind it it creates a vacuum.  This vacuum collapses with great force creating a loud popping sound we recognize as a knuckle cracking.  A very similar process happens much more intentionally with pistol/snapping shrimps: 
And boat propellers:
The controversy behind knuckle cracking shall some day be quelled as video MRI technology advances!

Some mo':

Pictures from: 

Sunday, September 11, 2011

How a Gyroscope Works

I mean, really!?  They seem magical.  Gravity defiant.  If you need a reminder watch this:



Start the gyroscope spinning.
But, it isn't just rotating in a circle.  It's also being pulled out by angular momentum.

These forces, if it were not for the sturdy nature of the wheel, would cause the pieces to fling apart.


So, just like a racing car has trouble turning, since it wants to go straight, so the wheel wants to keep spinning around and out.  Any deviation from this is met with resistance, thus causing the gyroscope to stabilize.  

This may seem terribly simple to many of you, but it was something I had to think through explaining recently and found that there are not many quality explanations on the internet. That and I wanted to doodle. :)

Monday, September 5, 2011

Science Meditation

I had a friend recently say that, "Creativity is the combining of ideas in a new way." (Jamie Riley paraphrase)  I think he's on to something there.  Creativity is the game "Apples to Apples"--making new connections between disparate ideas.

What I'd like to do is consider how two ideas--meditation and science literacy--might intersect.   Let me give a greenhorn's understanding of some meditation practices and then discuss how science can fit hand in glove with your own practice of meditation.

First, a story on how meditation saved my butt!!!

I was at a local meditation event listening to a guided meditation and my mind unprompted went where it often goes in these situations--to imagining the invisible electro-magnetic/atomic world around me.  I was imagining the atoms around the room bustle in Brownian motion, interact with photons, change quantum states, vibrate synchronistically through sound, circulate around the room in zyphers of wind and conviction currents, etc...and...suddenly...O SH%#!!!  I forgot to turn off a heating plate at my job at a chemistry lab!!!  Luckily I was able to call over and have it turned off, but I was so scared since I had it on for a few hours!!  Yikes!  Meditation saved my butt!  haha!

Ok, back to an over view of meditation so we can see how science meditation can fit in!

Types of meditations (as I understand it)
  • Mind Scape Meditation
    • Idea/mantra
      • Focusing deeply on a central thought.  Learning about it. Thinking through it.  Applying it. Making it real within your mind. Reveling in it.
    • Person
      • Meditate on a person you truly admire.  Why do you admire them?  What can you learn from them?  How can you honor their lives with your life?
    • Object
      • Symbolism
      • Essence
      • Function
    • Feeling
      • Become self aware.  Not necessarily judging what you're mind is feeling, just only observing, analyzing.  Becoming mindful of your brain--the vast expanse of neural experiences within.
    • Problem solving
      • Taking time to work through a problem--reviewing past actions, considering future options.
    • Thankfulness
      • Counting  one's blessings.
  • Bodyscape
    • Become aware of your body
      • What is your body feeling?  Pain?  Boredom?  Fatigue?  Why?  Analyze, don't judge.
    • Motion
      • Walk
      • Be mindful of the motion, the muscles, the action, the intention.
  • Surroundings
    • Become aware of your senses.
      • What sounds do you hear around you?  See?  Feel?
      • For a challenge, see if you can observe more than one occurrence at a time.  Can you do three?  It's supposed to not really be possible to pay attention to three things with any real level of depth.
Now, within these three realms of focus--the mind, the body, the world around us--how can the teachings of science inform and empower our meditation?  My understanding of meditation centers around awareness, mindfulness and science has empowered human awareness to a degree that former generations could not have comprehended--so revel in it!  Become mindful of the universe happening around you right now!

  • Mind
    • Consider the crackle of electric impulses within your mind--100 billion neurons buzzing, humming, communicating, resting, their amoeboid arms stretching out to form connections totaling 100 trillion
    • Consider the micro ocean of neurotransmitters chemically setting into motion the thoughts, sensation and actions of the body--just slight parts per billion that manifest huges changes
  • Body
    • Go from head to toe considering all the functions that are taking place in your body
      • Blood
        • Red blood cell oxygenation
        • White blood cells capturing invaders and consuming dead or defunct cells
        • Heart and its molecular muscle motors reacting to the power of ATP
        • Lungs filling, oxygenating, dispursing CO2
      • Liver, kidneys, pancreas, gall bladder, intestines, muscles and on and on!!!
    • Surroundings
        • Consider sound.  Become mindful of the sources of the sounds around you.  Consider the waves emanating from the source--the compression pulses of wave in the form of concentric circles growing larger and then reflecting and bouncing off the other objects in the wall.  Much like a 3-D version of the surface of a pool of water that has been disturbed.  Become aware of how that sound hits the curves and bowl of your ear, traveling down your ear canal to the ear drum, the three ear bones, the inner ear, the cochlea, the fluid and hairs within the cochlea, the impulses traveling from ear to brain, etc.  
      • The Electromagnetic world around you
        • The process of seeing
        • The invisible spectrum

    I have benefited greatly from these lectures by Dr. Feynman and really do hope you'll click on this link if for no other reason that to see that they exist.  Feynman has a brilliant way of bringing the invisible reality to life.: http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=richard+feynman+fun+to+imagine&aq=f
    • Neutrinos
      • There are billions of neutrinos flowing through our body every second flowing from the Sun.
    • Geographic location
      • Consider the forces that created the land around you.  Reverse, in your mind, time to undo the weathering forces, plate tectonics, igneous forces, etc.

    • Elemental  history
      • Consider the history of the elements around you.  Their age in billions of years.  Their star ancestry.
    • Evolution
      • If you're walking, consider an animal.  In your mind go through their evolution history, the epochs, bio-geography, the predators and prey its ancestors encountered.
    • Solar Power
      • Become mindful of how a seething ball of magnetized gas 93 million miles away is heating itself to astronomical degrees--27 million in the core-- by the crush of gravity as new heavier elements are created and releasing prodigious amounts of energy.  Electron motion becomes wavicle photons that travel through a void of space to a spinning ball held in rotation by the gravitational bending of space time.  This energy causes photosynesis, which powers plants, which power the animals we see and ourselves.  Everything is solar powered.
    • Space
      • See through the Earth and the physical features around you.  See in your minds eye the position of the Sun, the moon, the stars through the atmosphere and through the Earth.   See the core of the Earth, the upside down walking of people on the other side of the Earth, consider the distances of how far they are, imagine birds flying upside down, water being pulled "up", kangaroos hopping upside down in Ausatralia, the thousands of people in the air in planes being ferried from place to place, etc.

    So, why bother?  Why spend the time?  Why expend the energy?

    To me that's almost like asking, "Why love?"  To connect.  To realize.  To become one.  To stretch.  To unbound yourself.

    "The desire to be connected with the cosmos reflects a profound reality--we are connected; not in the trivial ways that Astrology promises, but in the deepest ways." --Carl Sagan

    Later note: There are two main kinds of meditation--focused attention and open monitoring.  Focused attention finds holds an object in conscious attention.  Open monitoring allows the mind and senses to wander, allowing thoughts and perceptions to come and go as they will.  Open monitoring with science might include being in nature and simply soaking up the sounds, sights, smells, and sensations.