And there we were

The next volume was undated, except one entry in late November.

The inside front cover was inscribed “Swami Jnana-Devananda into winter: ashram,” something added later.

Mostly quotes: Zen, Ginsberg, Hutterites, etc.

Includes Swami’s return from her first India trip.

~*~

Only Christ is arisen? Ignores the greater evidence of reincarnate lamas.

Swami, to disciple undergoing many tests (i.e., struggles): “Enjoy them!”

Traveling out, to support followers in “the world” and to distribute pamphlets about our programs:

WASHINGTON DC, a Tuesday in November

White House a surprise … zipping thru Georgetown and out, suddenly, turn corner, this ivory phantom! Expected much official buildings first, but just the monstrous ancient cake of Executive Office to prepare one for the icon itself

DC’s “42nd Street” just three blocks from the Executive Mansion

… what happens to the minds of the power elite who see all of these monuments at their command – the vast sweep of parks, White House tucked into one corner, Washington and Lincoln memorials in the middle, the Capitol on the other? A new Rome!

(encounter with York, Pa, and its oldness in rolling farmland)

Levi-Dev: When you try to find shortcuts to your meditation practice, you will miss some of the most delicious & precious steps in your spiritual growth.

In Japanese, prajana means wisdom!

~*~

Goddess Lakshmi , in an image from Hhite at Wikimedia Commons.

Swami Lakshmy: I tell you India is a civilized country. America is uncivilized India is civilized because you can walk the streets at night without fear. You cannot walk the streets of an American city at night without fear. America is an uncivilized country because we do not respect human life, because we are a fearful people.

The falcon rips the wayward rabbit but cannot stop the cloud.

How do you write down the sound of your laugh, the taste of your smile?

Appenzell Lutheran, Reeders Methodist. Our neighbors.

Deer Park
Where Buddha sat
dogs now bark

The Swami/Levi relationship / mother/son oedipal stuff, statistically more aberrant than the homosexuality she calls sick? I judge, too!

Fern: Sometimes I wish I had known you before you came to the camp. You must have been pretty fascinating.

Swami: You write like the Wall Street Journal: very well but not colorful.

Beatrice: “It’s amazing how everyone has changed in a year. I wouldn’t have believed such a change is truly possible if I hadn’t seen it in the people at the ashram. Everyone is so much more remote, distant.”

[Incinerated]

~*~

From Spiralbound Yoga, with commentary from now.

Dixie fiction friction

In the Southern literary tradition was a linkage with Scotland, a love of Walter Scott and, unsaid, its Presbyterian literal Bible, clans becoming klans, some of the same intonations and expressions, a shared rebellious nature, plus the repulsion of Quakers in general.

Yet many of its young writers in the ‘50s devoured Jewish influences (Mailer, Malamud, Bellow) and then the Calvinist Congregationalists of New England (Updike, in particular) and then their own Thomas Wolfe and Faulkner. So I’ve read.

Their own writers had been presenting the Dixie heritage as all happy and macho, which did not fit what they observed. The Jews and Congregationalists, on the other hand, were presenting something hard and ugly about themselves.

From that, I’ve wondered: where and how my Midwestern heritage was being addressed or examined. I saw escape but no reality being addressed. Things that ought to be said but weren’t, at least in the mainstream view.

The best I’ve come up with is Jeffrey Eugenides, Greek-American of Detroit. And, my, how he delivers.

Not every entry was worth saving

The next volume was one of three notebooks from the Cornell Campus Store. These had a kraft cover but also, to my delight, wide left-side margins, 3½ inches.

I must have stocked up before shoving off from Binghamton.

There was nothing notable in this one: bad poetry drafts, early ashram experiences, mostly.

For whatever reason, half of the book was never used. After discarding the written pages, I’ve saved the blank lined pages for scrap-notes in the future.

~*~

How is it I had a stash of these varied campus notebooks?

In retrospect, so much transpired when I thought nothing was – the travels as the most conspicuous example.

[Incinerated]

~*~

From Spiralbound Yoga, with commentary from now.

 

Advice from writers for writers goes way beyond the page

Just consider:

  1. “A blank piece of paper is God’s way of telling us how hard it is to be God.” ― Sidney Sheldon
  2. “One thing that helps is to give myself permission to write badly. I tell myself that I’m going to do my five or 10 pages no matter what, and that I can always tear them up the following morning if I want. I’ll have lost nothing – writing and tearing up five pages would leave me no further behind than if I took the day off.” ― Lawrence Block
  3. “Be willing to write really badly.” ― Jennifer Egan
  4. “You don’t start out writing good stuff. You start out writing crap and thinking it’s good stuff, and then gradually you get better at it. That’s why I say one of the most valuable traits is persistence.” ― Octavia E. Butler
  5. “Never use an adverb to modify the verb ‘said.’ … To use an adverb this way (or almost any way) is a mortal sin. The writer is now exposing himself in earnest, using a word that distracts and can interrupt the rhythm of the exchange.” ― Elmore Leonard
  6. “All you have to do is write one true sentence. Write the truest sentence that you know.” ― Ernest Hemingway
  7. “I do not over-intellectualize the production process. I try to keep it simple: Tell the damned story.” ― Tom Clancy
  8. “Just write every day of your life. Read intensely. Then see what happens. Most of my friends who are put on that diet have very pleasant careers.” ― Ray Bradbury
  9. “Talent is insignificant. I know a lot of talented ruins. Beyond talent lie all the usual words: discipline, love, luck, but most of all, endurance.” ― James Baldwin
  10. “When your story is ready for a rewrite, cut it to the bone. Get rid of every ounce of excess fat. This is going to hurt; revising a story down to the bare essentials is always a little like murdering children, but it must be done.” ― Stephen King

 

The move plunged me deep into mud

Vol. 18 began at the onset of my ashram residency.  23:XI:71.

On the inside cover, I inscribe, I, Elektrik Blue, Uranian, incarnation of Sacred Self, continue this journey.

Not a lot of poetry here but it does include early attempts at my astrological charts and some personally deep ashram mud.

First of all, I was deprived of many of my usual supports: reading of books and magazines, recorded music (though I did have my violin and attempted Bach two-part inventions on piano), movies or other outings, favorite foods. My newly blooming romantic outlook was totally nipped (celibacy and then the brahmacharya rags that served as a jock strap), although I was very much attracted to L.G., 17, daughter of Hunter’s friend Dick, and we had more charming interactions than I had recalled – until the incident in the attic. (I first record her as “Lynn,” which led to complications in reconnecting the thread.)

I was heavily criticized for what I said (too bookish or lecturing), inattentiveness to others, negativity. I was also put on my first Silence.

My struggle included attempts to reconcile my idealistic expectations with the sloppy realities I was inescapably facing. Except for Levi, the rigorous, systematic scholarly framework I sought was absent (even in a Zen absurdist degree). Cedar had her brilliance and insights, but nothing sustained. Levi pointed out that he and I were there for the discipline (practice), unlike the others who saw more of a back-to-the-earth party household. (Sports editor Russ Warman had thought my reason for relocating was to taste “rural life” – how curious considering how many of my residences have been that: Eggs Ackley, such a contrast in group living to the ashram, and then the places I settled in returning to Bloomington, and then on to the orchard in Washington State, the pig farm in Iowa, and perhaps Dover, with our city farm.

What began as an attempt to understand “my problem” (the depression) now had me once again sensing I didn’t fit in. My goal of becoming naturally high, wise, and holy enough to win back Nicki remained a motivating factor, along with self-liberation and enlightenment – transcendence.

I’ve joked about taking up yoga because I couldn’t afford psychiatric therapy, but I now see that both have wound up forcing me to examine the darker sides of my inner workings.

The resentments and anger, especially, built up as I ran up against the lackadaisical airs, and sometime irresponsible or inconsiderate actions of the others.

Especially heavy was my having to shut down all of the newly released sexual freedom and ecstasy. More on that anon.

My notes overflowed with locker-room coaching kinds of exhortations to push, strive, not let up, in the practice. In essence, to fly over my problems, rather than turn them into compost. My verse was largely bombastic, polemic, didactic generalizations and diatribes contrasting our superior ways to the rest of society.

Well, this is kinda how I saw myself at the time. This image of Bharadwaja, seated on an antelope skin and surrounded by implements needed during his meditations, is from Wikimedia Commons.

All of this was intensified when Swami took off with Levi and Theo on extended travel to the Midwest (including Dayton). I was left as the sole resident male with three hippie chicks, at least that’s how we were seen on our trips out in public to the supermarket or diner. I noted that having a woman was my desire a year earlier but now? I perceived how inadequate these three were for my needs, even in celibacy.

Would it have helped to point out that I had to own up to my own demons? A year earlier, I never have considered that mumbo-jumbo.

Swami did point out that unlike us guys, the girls played games of their own invention, something that drove me further nuts.

This became extremely pronounced in trying to write an article for Mother Earth journal. Everybody had a different take, taking us further and further from what the editors wanted. In the end, the proposed story went off the rails.

Ria was the most complex case, I’m thinking. She had been involved in some of the more satanic streams – she “used to go with the guy who wrote Rosemary’s Baby, the infant with solid gold eyes, a tail, and long claws. [The author who wrote the bestselling 1967 novel was born in 1929 and divorced in 1968. The plot thickens.] We observed that what she really wanted was a home on a small pond with a rowboat.

After leading hatha and meditation one night, she turned to me, “Where were you? Your vibes were absent during the second half of our sitting.”

Theo (our seven-headed horse) usually appeared as the happy-go-lucky physical laborer counterbalance to Levi and me, though my early notes show him instead as intensely egotistical and “two-faced.” Ouch! He did teach me ways to ease off and loosen up, on the sly.

Our first, chaotic, week-long intensive session came over Christmas break, much earlier in my residency that I recalled.. Some of our actions I now must admit were offensive, even harmful, not that I could object at the time. Still, it was a huge opening in reshaping the direction of the ashram’s mission. One guest did mention hearing scandalous stories about our ordaining swamis under “questionable circumstances.”

Curiously, some of our guests – usually female – took me aside to say I was the only one in the community who understood and embodied our beliefs. That was tempting.

As for my response to the Zen koan, “What was your original face before your mother’s birth,” I noted: Close your eyes! (The koan really goes, “Show me your Original Face, the one you had before your parents were born.”)

Other bits:

“Last night in meditation, I saw Jesus – the dark, straight-nose, pointed jaw Jesus of the most popular portrait. He came into our circle and sat beside Cedar. [She’s Jewish.] Such a strange looking man.”

My other meditation entries were all about lights, warmth, feelings. Example: “Felt the flame burning up around my body but I, in the center, was cool. I see a little light, or merely cold light. I break my meditation to answer the phone and return without losing the high.”

“I am the center of my universe.” Well, in relationships, it could as easily have been, “She is the center of my universe.” Never, really, though, would I have said God or the like.

When L.G. asked about my parents, she laughed at my description: middle class, don’t smoke, don’t drink, don’t curse.

A country-western song idea: “Heaven is just a liquor store up in the sky.”

“Sometimes I think I’m more alive on paper than in person. A man of letters? A paper tiger.”

Also, mention of riding our horse Timely, English-style, “very high … like bareback, flying.” Also, 12:XII:71, Hunter’s asking if I’d like to hear some jazz, which led to Deer Head Inn at the Water Gap. Some very fine piano riffs. Nice, clean place: table cloths, nothing fancy but simple, art on the walls, some nice reproductions. With one of his friends, a freelance commercial artist.

Other musicians showing up that night were two bassists. One joined us at the table and told of quitting playing with a group at one famed resort. “They were in their 50s and so bad you couldn’t follow them; it sounded like church music.”

An ashram guest who had worked for a VD doctor said it was enough to put anyone off sex.

[Incinerated]

~*~

From Spiralbound Yoga, with commentary from now.

So I wasn’t losing my eyesight or my mind, after all

Back when I had an hour commute home after working an evening shift at the paper, there were a few nights when I was mesmerized by what I saw in my headlights while driving the country highways in heavy rain. As the drops splashed from the shiny black pavement, they seemed to turn into frogs that were hopping wildly. That part was freaky enough, but all of the ones I saw were leaping in the same direction, say from right to left. Hundreds of them. Thousands of them. There was no way to avoid them, either. Naturally, it was difficult to see at 60 miles an hour, and I was always anxious to get home, have a martini, and hit the sack promptly.

Why one direction? Something to do with the wind? Maybe just the angle of my headlights, so I didn’t pick up on just as many hopping in the other direction?

A few miles later, I would encounter another flock (officially, a group of frogs is called a knot, a colony, or an army, go figure) all flying in the other direction, left to right.

The phenomenon didn’t appear every time I had a heavy-rain midnight, but it did happen enough times over the decade to repeat the show, something I didn’t connect to springtime.

Turns out, as a recent Sunday Afternoon presentation at the Eastport Arts Center prompted, I wasn’t hallucinating. Didn’t need my eyes checked or a pair of glasses for driving. And wasn’t losing my mind. Frogs, toads, and salamanders have a Big Night (or two) in early spring when heavy rain, an inch or more, combines with thawing ice and snow to signal the amphibians to leave their winter shelter and return to emerging ephemeral vernal pools for breading. The high, shrill chirping chorus of peepers soon fills the night air for a few weeks after.

The temporary shallow ponds are fishless, and thus free of predators in the amphibian-breeding forest wetlands. With their job done around the time summer rolls in, the pools dry up for another year.

It seemed pretty risky at the time, maybe more so now

As you can see in my Binghamton “hippie” journals, there was nothing brash in my decision to quit my job, go without an income or health coverage, and relocate to study and practice a yoga life fulltime.

Yoga was definitely improving my emotional, mental, and physical life.

Economically, I was marginal, living in squalor (winter in that farmhouse must have been miserable, and getting to work through the snow often an impossibility).

My job wasn’t going anywhere, anyway, and for much of the preceding year before taking up yoga, I had been deeply depressed. As a professional journalist, my income was borderline near poverty despite working weird hours and Saturdays, which did nothing to alleviate my condition.

None of the stockholders, of course, appreciated any of this.

I’m still left wondering why I set a late autumn deadline for the move.

I suspect I felt that the summer would be one to remember, and it was, bringing a period of intense self-discovery and growth. The delay also allowed me time to have a better understanding of my teacher and the community. Was I overlooking something treacherous? In the years since, we’ve seen all too many incidents of financial and sexual scandals in the Eastern spiritual communities in America. As I’ve learned in subsequent years, that was true to some degree in my ashram, especially after my residency.

Crucially, I was single and unattached, even though my love life had certainly picked up.

And so, eight months after my introduction to yoga and then the repeated trips to my guru’s ashram on a former farm in the Pocono mountains of Pennsylvania more than an hour south of where I was living, I packed up and resettled.

As I would discover, the most important lessons in yoga were not about the physical exercises, hatha, but in the practice of meditation, ethics, and spiritual community.

The real lessons arose as back-to-the-earth skills, along with new people skills, too. I’ve come to think of this as my Master’s degree.

The experience has been abstracted and distilled into my novel Yoga Bootcamp and its earlier version, Ashram.

For me, it was ultimately positive. I wish there was something similar for lost youth today, though I’ve never seen myself in a position to offer that, either.

Bouncing around in my head

As I noted, way back.

  1. Stare at candle, unblinking, 15 minutes. (Learning to concentrate attention in preparation for meditation.)
  2. My ankle hurts, my eyes do blink, my body twitches
  3. My tongue runs away.
  4. We had 108 inches of snow by April 1. (The 36-incher hit a few days later.)
  5. It’s funny, I should go with the daughter of a cattle rancher and come out loving seafood and chicken livers.
  6. Title for a poem or collection? One Thousand American Fungi.
  7. I walk around in a shroud of music.
  8. Walking with my long hair past a barber shop, I feel guilty: the barber, reading magazines, no business.
  9. Why do girls use paper tissues, but guys prefer handkerchiefs?
  10. So what happened to the entry that was here? Poof!