In Hardship, Choose Bewilderment Over Cleverness

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Hand-drawn art by Meghna
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In grappling with degenerative autoimmune disease, I often wished for a speedy redemption, for something meaningful to come out of my pain and suffering. But every time I tried, I’d be humbled by exhaustion and confusion. One day, I received the following dream:

I dream that a tree of great significance is struck down by lightning. A bolt from above splays the giant tree in a star-like pattern. It is a numinous event which stops me in my tracks.  Before I can take in what’s happening, men come efficiently and quickly to buck up the tree into firewood. It all feels too fast and unfeeling, as if the grandeur of this loss isn’t being properly recognised.

One never imagines one can be struck down by lightning, but such as it is, disease is indiscriminate. An intervening force from nature shatters our deeply established way of life. It is swift and unforgiving, and everything we took as solid and reliable is splintered like a twig in an instant.

Sometimes, an efficient inner force wants to step in and make something useful of it all, turn it into “fuel for transformation.” But another, quieter voice urges us to stop. Don’t commodify this loss. Don’t be so hasty to make the events of heartbreak meaningful. Not before the magnitude of what’s been destroyed can be witnessed in its entirety.

In some interpretations, this crisis is also seen as liberation. In some way, what has been torn down was also a prison. And while our fall to the earth will result in incalculable suffering, there will be a new way to live on the other side of recovery. But please, let us not turn this heartbreak into something useful just yet. If we do, we will be tempted to walk in old ways. We will rely on tired words. We will make memes of ourselves. Easy, digestible phrases that fill a short term longing for solutions. 

Instead let us truly bear witness.  Let the fog of confusion obscure our clarity for a time. To not know how – or where – we’ll live. To be fumbling and full of grief, because what we always counted on has been struck from our horizon. And we may never be as magnificent again. 

Acknowledging this isn’t pessimistic, but rather grounding. Lightning and ground are collaborators, after all. Once you’ve been struck, you no longer live in the “upper chakras” alone, believing you are the creator of your reality. Or that some higher power is only benevolent, and rewards people for good. Instead you learn the paradoxical nature of life and death. 

With your nose in the dirt, you take inventory of what’s been lost, and what remains. Allowing what’s essential to reveal itself like a wild animal returning to its place of origin after a long exile. You realise that no matter how established and tall your tower was, it had fatal structural problems. A bolt of truth has revealed the injustice and inequality in the “tower way-of-life” and you won’t be able to envision a better world until you fully grieve the grandeur of our losses.

Yes, a new constellation in consciousness will emerge from this carnage, but we need to let ourselves be disoriented first. So let’s not rush the redemption. As Rumi puts it, “Sell your cleverness and buy bewilderment.” Because in cleverness you rely on known ways of making the world, in bewilderment a new vision always, eventually, emerges.

Seed Questions for Reflection

What has helped you bear witness while facing a fog of confusion? In times when you haven't been "hasty to make events of heartbreak meaningful", what new lessons did life reveal? Share a time when you fully grieved the grandeur of a loss, and felt bewilderment in returning home after a long exile.

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Add Your Reflection

19 Past Reflections
JD
Jul 27, 2024
Often times, because things go "our way" we tend to become proud and start to believe that we are the masters of our destiny. A self-made person. And then reality kicks in. By the whim of fate we are struck by some higher forces of nature. Disease, unemployment or death of someone dear and relevant. The rational mind will try to make firewood out of the lightning struck tree as soon as possible.
However, as Toko Pa Turner suggests "we need to let ourselves be disoriented first". In so doing, a new perpective may be gained. There is hidden wisdom and even beauty and wonder in what appears to be a calamity.
NA
Naila
Jul 25, 2024
I have just lost my first ever pet, my cat Fifi, she was only 3 years old to kidney stones and kidney disease! It was all so unexpected and sudden, as it said in the reading that your image of your perfect world comes shattering down in the blink of an eye is exactly what has happened with me and my family, a week ago we were a perfect loving family of 2 cats and their parents and now my whole world has been crushed! The hardest part of it all is, we had to let her go, we had to euthanize her! We let our baby girl go in front of our very eyes! And in the aftermath of it, I keep asking myself did I do the right thing? Should I have kept her for longer? She was just THREE! What went wrong? May be I wasn't good enough of a parent?

It hurts like hell! I don't know what to make of it all? I am very far from being making meaning of losing my Fifi! And, all I want is, to take the time to grieve, to mourn, to cry the loss of my most beloved one!
GU
Jul 25, 2024
Getting burnt and not be scarred ?!
Is it in the nature of things for Being to manifest thru endurance and acceptance of pain ? As though this suffering becomes like an oil to burn the wick brighter ?
PH
Jul 25, 2024
I never felt clever, and I'm not sure I've ever felt so bewildered as I am today due to the loss of my husband's well-being. A battle with Alzheimer Disease has diminished him greatly, and he was one always wise. He always knew the right way to think and act. He was a rock, and it's hard to live without him in totality. The lesson I derive is to try to emulate the way I saw him maneuver through life's difficulties. If bewilderment means feeling lost, weakened, and bereft, then I am bewildered, but I am trying my best to do the right things. When we have lost our North Star, difficulties are not easy to navigate.
SH
Susan Hamilton Jul 26, 2024
Dear Pat,
Your grief and loss went straight to my heart. It's a special kind of heartbreak when someone you love has Alzheimer's because you keep losing pieces of them.
I lost my father to Alzheimers, which isn't the same as losing a husband, but it gives me an inkling.
It was the small things that got me through the days: the first sip of tea in the morning, the cat curled up in a basket of clean laundry, the moon shining through the cherry trees when they were in full bloom.
Kind people told me to remember my father as he was, but I also want to remember him as he was then. And what I remember is love. The love of his friends, the love of his caregivers, the love between us. Even when he didn't know who I was, he knew I was someone who loved him.
Emulating the way your husband maneuvered through life's difficulties not only honours him, it also means you haven't lost your North star. He is still helping to guide you.
Sending you much love,
Susan
MB
Jul 23, 2024
Many Thanks to Toko-Pa Turner!

Thank you so much for your beautiful words and wisdom. I didn't know how to express this concept to others while I was in my disoriented state (with chronic Lyme) but always knew that the well-meaning support that people wanted to give didn't sit right with me. I especially love the clarity around any spiritual enlightenment that is automatically expected to be gleaned during and after recovery.
"Allowing what’s essential to reveal itself like a wild animal returning to its place of origin after a long exile."
This is such a powerful metaphor and completely respects the process of healing.

People used to ask me: "So what did I learn from this experience?". My answer: The opportunity to wake up every day and say yes to all that is my life.
SH
Susan Hamilton Jul 26, 2024
Dear Mia,
I copied your last sentence into my journal because I wanted to remember it: "The opportunity to wake up every day and say yes to all that is my life." Words to live by. Thank you.
You have a generous heart, Bless you for it.
MA
MaryJo
Jul 23, 2024
I can agree fully about the need to grieve. I had a sudden hearing loss that created permanent deafness. I lost music. I lost communication with friends, and especially children. And the price of trying to buck up and be a "good" deaf person immediately did not remove the missing grief, but prevented me in the longer run from creativity in this new life. I still struggle with this sudden change from being a hearing person to a deaf person and the isolation of being a full part of either community. I have learned a lot from this major change of my abilities, but I still feel the isolation.
EV
Jul 23, 2024
I feel as though I am in the midst of this now and all I want to do is process it as quickly as possible to get past it. Learn the lesson and get it out of the way. The alternative is/has been so painful. Thank you for this reminder that time is its own gift and just as the tree grew to its might, so the lightning did as well.
JS
Jul 22, 2024
This , for me, was one of the finest passages I read in Awakin Readings.... It helps us understand the dignity of grief, suffering, loss, and even Grace of God inherent even in those defeated in Life. Except Jesus, no other god-characters have truly won. They sacrificed spiritual victory to gain the historical victory in the worldly game. I feel a dignity of Divine in the Story of Christ who followed what he saw as Truth and found resurrection. He had to experience crucifixion and express bewildering - Father, why hast thou forsaken me? Thy will be done. This was the greatest expression of love from a human character in the Story for the Author of the Story. Here, Human won the Game, if we put it in such frivolous terms, against even God. Human transcended the confines put by Author by not trying to win and accepting defeat totally with no grievance and complete love. One friend once told me just suddenly - Acceptance is Grace. I understand the meaning of those w... View full comment
SH
Shaílesh Sheth Jul 22, 2024
Beautiful.
SH
Shaílesh Sheth Jul 22, 2024
So simple. So graceful.
SH
Jul 21, 2024
I loved this— thank you. Ghank you for reminding us what it is to live each moment without seeking escape - especially in the event of loss or suffering- to bear wigness, stay the course….proves more useful beyond imagination.
SH
Jul 21, 2024
In my volunteering as an "end of life " counselor , I do come across people struck with serious illnesses ( Mostly Cancer) and see them grappling with its aftermath. The usual question is "Why Me " ? What we fail to understand is, there is no answer to this question. Only after all the answers and questions have been exhausted, do we realise and accept that there is no answer and the only thing in our hand is to accept the situation, wholeheartedly, and then move ahead with whatever is in our hand. These are the people , who even in their death, bring so much of joy to others.
I guess the same is true of all our difficult life situations.
ST
Jul 19, 2024
Ahhhh! fully grieving the "grandeur" of loss and allowing "bewilderment"- seems like I rarely allow myself to go there but when I do , when I am on the earth wailing and weeping, when I accept how what feels like my great efforts and successes to heal myself and my world make such imperceptible progress toward my mission statement and true peace, I am humbled and leave room to fill with the joy and love of being human and alive.
DD
Jul 19, 2024
I guess bear witness means to stay with the feelings from a traumatic event, feel the feelings and reflect on them rather than quickly run from them. When I bear witness, what has helped me is trusting the process that is happening, knowing that I can learn from what is happening, being more self evaluating regarding what I contribute to my problem, remembering that confusion often accompanies growth, knowing nothing lasts. Life has revealed what I just said plus emphasizing that life does to me (or at least it feels that way) as well as I do to life, emphasizing that change is always and the duration of anything or anyone is very brief, and have more fun and joy. The loss that comes to mind is the death of a mentor I relied on, and the coming home is coming home to me and relying on me which is an expanded and deepened me that includes him.
JP
Jul 18, 2024
I love the wise Statement of Rumi: "Sell your cleaverness and buy bewilderment". We are on a journey and we need to keep our mind and heart open to see the bewilderment that unfolds spontaneously without preconceived notions. A mind free from the bondage of preconceived notions shines and helps us see the light. When I face a fog of confusion as I move on the path of life, I face it with clarity, calmness and courage. When I bear witness to what is happening in my life, I do not get attached to and bound by my desries and wishes, by ups and downs in my life.
It is very difficult for me to go through pain of several losses of people in my long life. Bearing witnees to such losses in my life has been very helpful to me. Witnessing and accepting what is happeng in my life has helped me to remain grounded and centered.
Practicing mindfunees with loving kindness, patience and perserverance has been very helpul to me after a long exile.
Namaste!
Jagdish P Dave