Reset the old data with a clear direction…

I’m a total nerd, and I’ve accumulated a whole lot of data points about myself throughout my life. As I’m making new choices, that data is influencing me in unconscious and energetical ways. Typically it will follow the well trodden pathway that the continuous pattern of choices has created. And those patterns play out on both a small scale and larger life scale.

Through the work I’ve been doing at Harmony Meditation – the method of changing the conditioned nature of those choices requires setting a right direction & focus. There needs to be a core goal/target around which everything else in life can start to naturally self-organize. This sets a standard to gauge the actual value of those choices in a more intentful way.

And this is followed by the doing!! After setting the target, I remember not to overestimate what the process of reaching towards it will be like once I’m fully immersed in the journey. Some days it will be immense effort to go against that old data. But no matter what that is the way forward. The theory and cognitive concept can be crystal clear but the reality of how these ideas are applied has never actually matched up with the expectation itself. I’m testing my cognitive understanding with every effort I make and am realigning my choices and information with the new growth oriented goal I’ve set for myself.

So I use the time I have to make the most of the opportunities I have to grow while I have them. Resetting those old data points through practice and meditation, because I don’t want to lose the moments by being stuck in an old mindset, and emotional comfort zone. And through that I’m creating a new space in my life for even more chances at growth. To be ready to ride a new wave of possibility toward my goal. I’m building it up with consistency – aiming to get just one more step ahead of where I want to be.

Responsibility to Heal

During a recent meditation, I distinctly felt a layer of tensed tightness related to the efforts I’ve been making that seemed to envelop my core. In that moment, it dissipated and made way for an immense peace and clarity. I had caught a glimpse of the subtle baseline that I’ve been living in and acting from. But was this baseline one that I was improving through diligent sincere effort?

Zen Tai Chi has been an instrumental framework for building sincerity. Sincerity with the body cultivates sincerity with mind and thoughts. The body does not lie. It manifests what it has. At an earlier time in my life, I’ve learned this lesson through long distance running. That you can push your body but you have to be gentle and sincere with where you are. If I pushed too hard, too forcefully I would end up hurt and injured but if I did too little in a lazy way then I would remain stuck at the level I was at. So the sweet spot is just beyond the edge of the current comfort zone. A place that the mind finds uncomfortable, but the body can really enjoy without incurring injury. Learning to find that balance is the essence of what Zen Tai Chi has been for me. Learning to listen and hear the natural condition that is being communicated while in motion. Without any of the bias or filters or laziness that might impair the objective presence with the real experience.

But how does this tie to responsibility? I can start with intention – What do I want and what? And what do I realllly want? My biggest weakness in life has been my disconnectedness. I sought to resolve my inner world to better connect with the outer one. An external world that often filled me with anxiety. A world darkened by my perception of it. Who is responsible for that perception? I spent a lifetime believing that it was a product of misfortunate circumstances. Something beyond my control.

But healing is an active practice. At Harmony Meditation I’ve learned how it is possible to lead myself into a brighter state of being. Toward a Bigger Self that encompasses the objective reality of those lived experiences without becoming tethered to them. So a new choice appears. A real choice. A choice about sincerity. A sincerity about healing. A sincerity of acceptance for things as they are.

So I can make peace with the mistakes I’ve made and realign myself with the goals I’ve set. To heal and grow up as a human and live as a Bigger Self, not confined by a limited ego but expanded through genuine connection and love. For everything that actually matters in the life – this is my responsibility.

Thank you me

Thank you me
The Bigger me
For seeing me
And loving me

For finding me
When I was lost
And accepting me
So patiently

For knowing there’s much more to me
The boundless, brighter, Bigger me

Thank you for being here with me
And in time, becoming me

Drummer

Growing up doing drum lessons I had good teachers. They taught me rhythms and rudiments. The foundation of a drummer is his order of sticking. You learn the basics by playing on one drum – the snare drum. This is the military sounding drum with the white head. It makes the distinct sound because of metal rattles on the under side of the drum. So, one example is a ‘paradiddle’ where you play right-left-right-right-left-right-left-left.

Of course, a drummer feels and keeps the rhythm for the rest of the band. It seems simple but it is in fact the hardest part of playing the drums. You think you’re keeping a steady beat, meanwhile that sometimes is just your own perspective. Listen to a recording and it often slows down or speeds up many times through the song. It’s almost like how we experience time at a different pace, a drummer will assume a steady beat even though the audience hears up and down. This is where practice with a metronome comes in.

Believe it or not, apart from simply speeding up or slowing down you can also be on the WRONG side of the beat. A millisecond ahead of the band or a millisecond behind the band and it makes a completely different feel. If you’re a split second ahead it feels like you’re ‘pulling’ the band forward. “Relax Will” they would sometimes say. “It feels like you’re pulling the band forward. Try to relax and be on the back end of the beat”.

It seemed so strange for me as a drummer to be on the ‘back’ end of the beat. Aren’t I supposed to be LEADING the band? To be on the back end seems like I’m following, when I should be the leader in charge of the beat.

Sit back.

Breath.

Don’t try to create the beat – enjoy it. 

Receive it as it comes – for it is a much more relaxing ride.

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