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disowning self

We have a commonsense notion of self.  Self is thought of as a given, unique, agentic, independent, integrated, cohesive source that is permanent, underlying the flow of our conscious experience.  We experience self as the independent cause of voluntary action.

Al Kaszniak, Neuropsychologist

from Notes on Zen Brain: Contributions to an understanding of self-awareness from the study of neurological illness

Al’s research examines how the constructions of self are dismantled through a disease process that we call Dementia which means “deprived of mind.”  Alzheimer’s disease is the most common one we identify as a Dementia and is the major cause of Dementia.  Memory loss, changes in behaviour, transposed timelines and relationships, and reduced intellectual function create a flowing parody of the Three Doors of Liberation: selflessness, signlessness and aimlessness.  Age is not protective, nor are accomplishments, intellectual prowess, wealth, fame, or any of the legacies of our actions.  And in its initial stages, it’s hard to discern the development of the disease from the assertion of personality.

The most read post on this blog is losing and letting go, an exploration of my relationship with my mother who was diagnosed with vascular dementia three years ago.  I can only think that the popularity of the entry is because so many of us are trying to cope with the transformations this disease brings not just to the self of the person afflicted but to our own identification with the Other.  In our commonsense understanding of Self, we hold to the belief that under the expression of wild words and bizarre behaviours there is a solidity that will re-assert itself – given time, rational discourse, and a good night’s sleep.

It was easy for friends and family to lionize my mother.  She was certainly larger than most lives, passionate, fierce, and dominantly generous.  Her independence was legendary and there were few who returned for forgiveness after encountering her cold rage.  She and my father walked from Rangoon to Mandalay, a distance of some 400 miles, to escape the occupation of Japanese forces.  There are stories told from that period that cast her as an avenging protector, a trait that did not serve her well when transplanted to the West twenty years later.  In an environment that conceptualized relationships differently, she entrenched, refusing to reconstruct herself.  Or perhaps, there were no pathways, never had been any, that allowed a perception of experience as relational.

As she lost the world she understood, she had little choice but to disavow the world she had.  Having watched this from childhood to adulthood, I wonder why I pushed back against her unravelling self when the dementia began to flourish.  In the first few visits with medical personnel, I took great pains to explain that “this” was who she was: the rage, the lack of tolerance for not getting what she wanted immediately, the blaming, and the shaming.  They tried to explain that “this” was involuntary, a dismembering of neural networks that left her blameless and a candidate for equanimity and compassion.  I watched her put together the fragments of her identity, like a kaleidoscope, creating new combinations yet only ever arriving at the same place of desiring, rejecting, and confusion.  All observers agreed on the impact of her behaviours.  Yet I went home each night from the hospital where she lived for three months feeling like I had been transported into a strange universe where I knew everyone was finally seeing what I saw but were not bearing witness to it.

As she became disconnected from the concepts and ideas about her I had built for decades, she said as much about me in that way she had of highlighting my deficiency in making the world easier for her to cope with.  We were responding involuntarily to who we were to each other but remained unaware of it.  It reminded me of a phenomenon called Alien Limb in which the person afflicted claims their limb (an arm usually) is not their own.  The arm acts in various ways that are often embarrassing or oppositional to the person’s wishes or intentions yet the person will insist it was not their actions.  Combine this with a phenomenon called anosgnosia (an unawareness of having a deficit) and we had a pithy metaphoric recapitulation of what our mother-daughter relationship had become.

There is Dharma in this if we can get past the drama.  It raises for me the question of how to drop under the surface of losing identities and see, feel, realize the selflessness, the interbeing, the interconnectedness that is the mystery of relationship.  There is nothing lost.  There is only an observation of what is letting go.

Thank you for practicing,

Genju

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losing & letting go

Scattered-Leavesscarlet and ochre flurries —
into her autumn
my mother’s mind disperses

genju

My mother is 91 years old.  She lives out her days now in a tiny village nursing home about 5 kms from our farm.  We brought her there three years ago after as many years living day-to-day with the choking fear of what might happen as her mind slowly unravelled.  I noticed the unravelling at my father’s funeral as she chuckled at and commented loudly about irrelevant things from the church pew.  I noticed the spinning out over months as she became fearful at dusk and the time came for our fortnightly visits to end.  “Why can’t you stay the night?” she would plead.  We had excuses always at the ready, blocking the fear in her voice from penetrating our hearts and opening our eyes.  It wouldn’t have mattered even if we had seen clearly and deeply into the cause of her mind’s descent to that dark world of dementia.  She was just lucid enough, just articulate enough, just charming enough when the neighbours came by or the church ladies visited with communion.  Even her cardiologist dismissed my fears as those of an over-zealous psychologist who certainly didn’t understand the real workings of the human mind.

Eventually circumstances colluded and we brought her to this home.  She arrived thinking my brother and I had bought her a mansion: a three-storey building with a circular driveway.  She was thrilled.  I will never forget the look of terror and betrayal when we left her in her semi-private room.  The nursing staff said it was for the best that we leave quickly and not return for a week or so.  “She needs to learn to adjust.”  We lost her that day, my brother and I, standing in that parking lot each one convincing the other this was the best thing we could do for her.

cedar

The time between her last hospital admission three years ago and the laughter-filled family lunches these days has been a cobbled path of long brutal exchanges no child should ever experience and no parent should ever require.  The practice of equanimity failed me over and over as I watched the steadiness I gained on the cushion fracture and words snarl out fueled by long-buried childhood wounds.  Every encounter left me raw and bleeding, angered by the weakness of my practice and determined that there was some space to be inserted between the pain her words re-ignited and the protective rage that flashed.  I told a friend one day, “I can last about 3 hours, then I lose it!  And I hate myself for days after.”  Three hours.  She was flabbergasted.  “Three hours?  You need to lose sooner than three hours.”

I needed to let go of the fear of losing.  Not outlasting her felt like losing – the game, the contest, the race to the finish of the Good Child Marathon.  I wanted to be the noble daughter who had emerged from the chaotic, mind-bending mother-daughter relationship as Avalokitashvara, the goddess of compassion.  I wanted to hear her pain and be able to say, “Whatever may have been, I can be here with your suffering.”  I had this fantasy that I truly understood her actions had been the result of her own suffering.  These, I had to let go.  I had to be willing to lose these battles between my practice and this shrieking being who lived in a hell I could not imagine.

I also had to see that even when I descended into that hell with her, we were not demons nor did I have to be Jizo, the god who entered the hell realms to bring out the suffering beings in his sleeves.  It was enough to be oakleafthe one who visited, brought her flowers, took her for her hair appointments, and who waited for the disease to take enough of her mind that she would let go of me as her daughter and her Jizo.

Last year, I came across Ruth Ozeki’s article in Shambhala Sun:  The Art of Losing: On writing, dying, and momElizabeth Bishop‘s poem The Art, reproduced in full in the article, brought me home.

The art of losing isn’t hard to master;
so many things seem filled with the intent
to be lost that their loss is no disaster.

Filled with intent to be lost… parent-child, mother-daughter, father-son…  the protective hierarchy is always lost, the intention of relationship is to lose what we hold onto.  And to lose effectively, we must, eventually and with intention, let go.

Thank you for practising,

Genju

Haiku published in South by Southeast: Haiku & Haiku Arts, vol 14 no 1, eds. Stephen Addiss et al., Richmond Haiku Workshop