What happened when I stopped resisting resistance
This morning, a friend asked, via email,"How are you doing?"I'm fine, I responded. Really fine. Then, I sighed. I am fine.All summer I've been watching myself like a nervous mother hen. What was going on with me? I kept asking - and writing about.But now, finally, I felt as if I was coming home.I was reading - and finally writing again. I was working from the back yard, seated at the French metal table my daughter had painted black, under the umbrella that my husband brought home to shelter me. I was eating good healthy food - and not in a deprived, "You have to do what's good for you" way - just because better food tastes better. (There's a recipe for my favorite treat: Raw chocolate mousse, at the end of this post.) And when exercise called to me, I wasn't arguing about it. I was just getting up and moving my body.This was a decidedly new home I was coming to.
- I was clearing closets that had sat stuffed with useless crap for years
- I was effortlessly shedding weight
- Best of all, two days ago, I celebrated my first ever stress-free birthday. I didn't punish the people I love with grand expectations and enormous disappointment. I didn't fuss when they made an imperfect fuss over me. Instead, I was delighted with every moment - every beautiful gesture, every phone call, every hug.
Something remarkable was happening, something new: Our whole family is voting for freedom.
- My son walked away from a soul-deadening internship the first day.
- My daughter found a relationship inside of which she can glow.
- My husband and I keep shaping and reshaping our story: Lately, I'm telling him, "It's your turn to live your creative life now," and asking, "How can I help to facilitate that?"
It's not that Resistance is gone. It's still here. Only now, I no longer confuse Resistance with inner truth.Resistance is a shape-shifter, a trickster with many masks. It's a dark diamond - with a kind of reverse 'glitter', a shadow of our genuine shine.I don't believe in the devil. If I did, though, the devil would be Resistance with its rubbery face. A seducer, leading us down dead ends with promises it never keeps, delivering emptiness: Couch potato butt, empty rooms, a pile of ashes where a roaring fire could have been.Resistance populates the world with vacancy.Of course, it only gets away with that because we let it. This summer, I discovered a wonderful secret: when resistance slimed up to me, I just let it be there. I didn't try to understand it. I didn't take it to therapy. I didn't push it away or shoot it with my happy-rainbow-ray gun, I just let it be there.I sat beside resistance and let it talk to me. As it talked, I treated it as I now treat any caller: I listened with curiosity. And the most amazing thing began to happen: it got out of my way.Used to be that resistance would flatten me. I'd think: I should go to yoga or I shouldn't eat that or I should call my mom, and resistance would whisper: You're too busy, too hungry, too tired, and right away, I'd start arguing. Leave me alone. Go away. Where did you come from, you stupid Resistance? which was all it needed to distract me. In fact, it was SO distracting - and so exhausting - to wrestle with Resistance that I'd have to give in, give up.I'd fall under a thick spell of powerlessness - chiding myself as I lay, inert on the sofa, wishing I had the energy to do what I wanted to do.Oh, Resistance is a tricky wizard.But this time, I found myself on a different path. This time, when resistance arrived, I didn't argue with it. I called my mom. I went to yoga. I didn't eat potato chips... Well, actually, I did eat some chips. Only now, instead of beating myself up about eating chips, I just blessed the damn chips. And you know how I did that? I enjoyed them. I savored every morsel.I did not resist resistance.