Monday, February 18, 2008

Setting Pace in Taoism

I personally feel the hardest thing about the Taoist path is the balance of the overall long term practice.

For many people after a period of time a Taoist lifestyle can seem to be boring, monotonous or even at times pointless. (Anyone who feels this way, in reflection, feels that way about their own life. They are actually looking for practices to spice their life up.) This is not an issue about Taoism, it's an issue of deciding what practices you choose to fulfill your empty space.

I can compare Taoism to Jogging. On the surface I find the activity of jogging to be very boring. I don't enjoy pounding the crap out of my knees and I don't enjoy running. I am rarely in a rush to get anywhere.

But jogging isn't boring and it's not about a rush to get somewhere.

Boring is merely a matter of perspective.
It's a matter of pacing yourself for the distance.

Taoism is a practice geared for your entire life. You don't run full speed expecting to find all the mysteries of life in the first few days. Taoism teaches a person to pace their exploration, discovery and wandering to cover the path of an entire life time.

So many get excited when first learning Taoism, only to then lose focus over time. They put all their energy into focus of achieving the results they desire in the now: seemingly in the fewest possible actions.

This is why I am careful about which students I take when teaching Taoism. Not everyone is at a point in their life where their perspective is ready to pace out the practices. As a result as a Taoist teacher I have learned to teach different aspects of the practice to fit the person relative to where they are in life.

My goal is always trying to help a person find a sustainable set of practices. So the key to a long term Taoist practice is not about focus, it's about living. Very similar to jogging when one lets go of actually running to instead give in to the movement, to run the distance. Then in time a person also discovers to relax and just take it all in, to watch life , to watch the run through the trail.

It's similar for Taoism.. People place initially all that energy into exploring ... and then lose their intensity after finding answers just don't pop up as they would like. Yet the answers are all there. You just have to run the distance.

People want short cuts.

Taoism does teach many short cuts... but the short cuts aren't one of time, they are of perception. Taoism provides the tools of acceptance so it's possible to settle down and enjoy the run.

Taoism shows a person to take care of mind , body and spirit so it's possible to run the distance. Taoism teaches to drop expectations so a practitioner can have patience to complete life: to discover it's about yourself rather than answers. Taoism also teaches that you will embrace many practices over time, to match shifting needs.

Taoism is never boring, it's your life.

It's just a question on how we choose to jog through that life.

peace

2 comments:

donna said...

For me Tao became the opposite of boring, since it lets me experience in full every moment if I choose to do so.

If I am "bored" it is most often because something is going on in my head that I need to attend to and work on. "Bored" means I don't feel like working on that thing right now.

Casey Kochmer said...

:) very very True

It's also why people might feel boring when we are around others. They are afraid of not doing enough...

All that pesky Do-ing gets in the way of just being in the now