I went to see Helen Schucman, the scribe for ACIM. Helen’s
advice was to let my girlfriend go. She always left the door
open, “You can still get together again if it is really
important.” I’m sure she knew that day would never come. The
best advice was to let the relationship go. It took a whole
summer of working that one lesson before I was able to see
peace.
Some people are bothered by the parts of scriptures they
cannot understand. What bothers me are the parts that I do
understand.
—
Mark Twain
One of the things I love about the Course is that it is
uncompromising, in it’s teaching which is one of
the reasons, it works so well. The Course is relentless.
It never gives in. It is in not ambiguous, indefinite,
or wishy washy in any way. For example, the Course is
persistent in trying to help us to see our
responsibility in our decision making. Indeed, the ability
to decide is, according to the Course – our last remaining
freedom. (ACIM 12: VII, 9:1).
An Awakening
I had a wonderful experience in 2001, after I got cancer. I
had an operation to remove a tumor about the size of a lemon
in my colon. The next day the oncologist told me that the
cancer had spread and the following day at 4 a.m., I had an
“awakening.” You could not say I was enlightened. We think
of enlightenment as a permanent state. While it would have
been wonderful to have “held” to this awakening, I did not.
I was able, however, to hold to it for some time. I describe
this experience in some detail in Missouri Mystic.
Cancer
gave me the opportunity of looking at death and I decided
that it did not matter if I died. I decided to just let go,
to not exist – to be nobody. Accepting this reality as
“nobody” opened the door to an awareness of simple beingness
and beyond that beingness, all-beingness. This was a
wonderfully freeing experience! Dying means letting go and I
decided to let go, to let everything go -- goals, ambitions,
things, the body – everything. The hardest part was the
thought of letting go of my wife, daughter, mother, sister –
my friends. Still, I let go and in this deep letting go, I
understood what I had previously understood only
intellectually, what Buddha meant when he said the loss
of desire is the key to enlightenment. This experience
didn’t leave me right away, so I was sad this past summer
when I let something take my peace from me.
Shempa or
Building a Case for Oneself
There is a concept in Tibetan Buddhism known as “Shempa” a
shempa is a place where we are “hooked.” It’s something that
gets under our skin, that works its way into our mind and we
find after a while we can’t stop thinking about it and
letting it go is difficult. Shempas are little irritants
that work away at the mind. They can, if nourished, become
very strong and powerful. A shempa is an addiction to a way
of thinking – a (seemingly) justified projection. The ego
speaks first and loudest and this past year as the readers
of Miracles know, a shempa came my way and I let it
take my peace away.
The last church I
served before retiring from the parish ministry was
Interfaith Fellowship in New York City. I would sometimes
get to church early and go to a corner coffee shop to look
over my notes. The coffee shop had a U-shaped counter. One
day, I noticed a homeless man sitting directly across from
me with a cup of coffee in front of him talking to himself.
There were few people around at the time. He was talking so
loudly that I thought that if I leaned forward and listened
carefully, I could hear what he was saying. Most people keep
their thoughts to themselves. For some street people,
however, the thought goes all the way to the tongue and
finds utterance through the mouth. I could not make out
everything he was saying but he was practicing a speech he
was going to give to a judge or a brother or someone. It was
clear that he was building a case and defending himself. Did
you ever drive around in your car thinking about some shempa,
building a case for yourself, practicing a speech?
So this
last year, a shempa came around and the more I looked at it,
the more evidence I found to support this shempa, the less I
could ignore it. I could have chosen peace, but the evidence
poured in and I let this shempa get past the mind and the
brain -- all the way to the tongue.
I
have often repented
of
having spoken.
I
have never repented
of
not having spoken.
Henri Suse (Medieval Mystic)
After my experience with
cancer and the awakening that came with it, I was clear that
I should seek not to change the world (i.e. other people).
I’ve been saying let other people be who they are for a long
time. While there are subtle loving ways we can influence
others and thus affect the world, seeking to change the
world and/or other people by pointing out what is wrong with
them, does not lead to peace. So, this shempa came up and
got in my face as a kind of test as to whether or not I was
there yet. Could I look this thing in the face and not let
it distract me? Could I remain silent in the face of what I
knew?
The ego
often plays the role of Sneaky Pete and just when we think
we’ve gained some freedom, it sneaks in the back door and
grabs us and we catch ourselves making a judgment. One day I
was driving, listening to a tape of one of my old sermons. I
heard myself say something and then thought “what a crock?”
I had said something that was blatantly judgmental. Didn’t I
know at that time that that was a judgmental statement?
Jesus in the Gospels calls upon us to “watch” to be
“vigilant.” What we’re to be vigilant of is this thing we
call an ego, and all of its silly tricks. There is a section
in the Ur text of ACIM which talks about “the unwatched
mind.” It asks us to watch our minds and to be aware of how
often we allow for some distraction, some shempa to come
take our peace away. According to the four obstacles to
peace in the Course, the first obstacle is our desire to
be rid of it. Notice the ease with which we throw our peace
away. Some one cuts us off on the highway, a little
perturbation comes along, someone says something with the
wrong intonation and zoom, peace of mind is gone out the
window.
Responsibility
The Course is about responsibility. It’s about being
absolutely responsible for absolutely everything that comes
our way. This way we can’t complain and moan and say, “Look
how the world has treated me.”
This is the only thing that you need do for vision,
happiness, release from pain
and the complete escape from sin,
all to be given you.
Say only this,
but mean it with no reservations, for here the power of
salvation lies:
I
am responsible for what I see.
I
choose the feelings I experience,
and I decide upon the goal
I
would achieve.
And everything that seems to happen to me
I
ask for, and receive
as
I have asked.
Deceive yourself no longer that you are helpless in the face
of
what is done to you.
Acknowledge but that you have been mistaken,
and all effects of your mistakes
will disappear.
ACIM T 21. II. 2-1-7
Anger
One of the most uncompromising lines in the Course is:
Anger is never justified. It does not make any
difference if we are right or wrong about what we are angry
about, what’s wrong is that we are angry. Thus anger is
“always” a mistake. When we are angry and cannot see the
face of Christ in our brothers, the best advice is “I need
do nothing.” This past year, despite what I knew, it would
have been best to have done nothing, to just let the
situation play itself out on its own without saying
anything. Truth has a way of making itself known without our
help.
We teach what we need to learn and sometimes our teaching is
done “out loud” and in public, though it would be better if
it were done more quietly. It is possible to just read ACIM
and “get it” without having to experience why it is true.
That is not the usual way we learn things in this world.
Getting it is one thing, living it is another, and you can
easily say that we don’t really “get it” unless we actually
put it into practice.
The Inner Voice of Reason
The Course is trying to help us hear one voice only -- “the
inner voice of reason.” In this case, the inner voice of
reason was drowned out by the ego’s voice of outrage.
Outrage comes from the Anglo-French ut-rage, or
outer or uter – like other. It’s the
other that’s the problem. To be outraged, we must feel
that either we or others have been injured or insulted. Yet
the Course teaches.
Teach no one he has hurt you,
for if you do, you teach yourself
that what is not of God has power over you.
ACIM 14, III, 8:2
The movie The Secret, points out that it’s how we
think that brings into our lives the various things that we
see. Does what I see make me outraged? Is there ever a time
when we could be justifiable outraged? No, Nunca, Never. A
mystic cannot be insulted. You cannot be insulted. Only an
ego can be insulted and we’re not egos. Anyone can say all
manner of evil against us falsely and it will have no affect
on us if we know who we are in truth.
The Devil Disguised as an Angel
or
Righteous Indignation
Watch your mind for
the temptations of the ego,
and do not be deceived by it.
It
offers you nothing.
When you have given up this voluntary dis-spiriting,
you will see how your mind can focus
and rise above fatigue and heal.
Yet you are not sufficiently vigilant against the demands of
the ego
to
disengage yourself.
This need not be.
ACIM, T. 4. 6:1-5
The Course is about raising our awareness to the point where
we can both see and learn how to say “no thank you” to the
demands of the ego. We need vigilance. According to the
Course, we are far too vigilant for the ego and hardly
vigilant at all for the right mind.
Temptation, Righteousness
and the Correction of Error
One of the ancient “apocryphal” books which never got
included in the Bible is The Life of Adam and Eve. In
this recounting of the story, the devil, disguised as an
angel, appears to Eve to tempt her. So this devil, shempa
thing that does not exist came along dressed up as an angel
named righteousness. One of the translations for “Satan” is
the separator or the divider. According to the
Course, there is no hell and there is no devil. That is,
there is no external force which is trying to get control
over our souls. Within this world of illusion, however,
there “appears” to be something we call “temptation.” The
Course makes 72 references to temptation or temptations. The
ego is analogous to the devil, though -- just as there is no
devil, there is also no ego. Within the illusion, however,
it certainly “seems” that way. Our task is to be free of
this devil thing, this shempa, this ego.
The Correction of Error
The alertness of the ego to the errors of other egos is not
the kind of vigilance the Holy Spirit would have you
maintain.
To
the ego it is kind
and right and good
to
point out errors
and "correct" them.
When you correct a brother, you are telling him that he is
wrong.
He
may be making no sense at the time, and it is certain that,
if
he is speaking from the ego,
he
will not be making sense.
But your task is still to tell him
he
is right.
You do not tell him this verbally, if he is speaking
foolishly.
He
needs correction at another level, because his error is at
another level.
He
is still right,
because he is a Son of God.
His ego is always wrong, no matter what it says or does.
If
you point out the errors of your brother's ego, you must be
seeing through yours because the Holy Spirit does not
perceive his errors.
This <must> be true, since there is no communication
between the ego and the Holy Spirit.
The ego makes no sense, and the Holy Spirit does not attempt
to understand
anything
that arises from it.
Since He does not understand it,
He
does not judge it, knowing that nothing the ego makes means
anything.
ACIM, 9 III
Fixing Ego
It is always a mistake to try and fix another persons
ego. Egos can’t be fixed. Egos don’t need to be fixed. They
don’t exist. The task is to discover who one is in truth not
who one is as an ego which has no reality in it.
This is heavy teaching.
1. First of all, if we see the problem in our brother’s ego,
we must be seeing through our
own and this is blinding.
2. Furthermore, when we attack, what we are attacking is
another ego. How is that ego
going to respond? It is going to get angry and defensive and
attack back.
Only someone who is very mature will be able to listen to
criticism, find the value in it, and then think about what
they might do to correct the situation by changing something
within themselves. This is a rare experience. 99.99% of the
time, when we offer up our critiques to others, we’re not
going to get through to their right mind – we’re going to be
hitting on their ego and the ego is going to respond the
same way egos always have responded -- with defense and
attack. Thus it is that attack never works and safety lies
in defenselessness. Correction, the Course tells us, is at
another level. The only way we can help a brother is to be
able to get through to the Holy Spirit within. We must speak
to their right mind. This is the only part of him which is
sane.
When a brother behaves insanely,
you can heal him only by perceiving the sanity in him.
ACIM, T-9.III.5.
All Projection is Projection
How many times do I have to get slapped in the face with
reality in order to see it? So, “this seeming thing”
which does not exist, this “shempa” led my mind down a
mine shaft of righteousness. Anger is an interesting, often
not so subtle, thing. As this shempa began to rise, I did
not think at first that I was angry. There was, however,
annoyance and where there is smoke there is fire.
The degree of the emotion you experience does not matter.
You will become increasingly aware that a slight twinge of
annoyance
is
nothing but a veil drawn over intense fury.
ACIM Workbook Lesson 21 2:4-6
As long as I am in the attack mode, or the complaint mode,
even the slightly “annoyed” mode, I’m blinding myself and
I’ve still not learned my lesson. We use a great deal of
vigilance to protect our egos; we use very little vigilance
in the protection of our right mind. We can, however, be as
vigilant against the ego's dictates as for them.
(ACIM, T-4. IV. 4)
Attack is never discrete and must
be
relinquished entirely.
ACIM, T-7, VI, 1:3
I
slipped. Two contradictory thought systems cannot share the
truth. Something is true or it is not. Anger is never
justified. Truth is everything.
Correct and learn, and be open to learning. You have not
made truth,
but truth can still set you free.
ACIM T, III. 11:4-5
Dealing with Shempa
I
thoroughly disapprove of duels.
If
a man should challenge me,
I
would take him kindly and forgivingly by the hand
and lead him to a quiet place and kill him.
Mark Twain
What I should have done with this shempa was to take it
kindly and forgivingly by the hand to a quiet place and
there given it over to the Holy Spirit for disposal.
Instead, the evidence grew to the point where I could not
help but think about it and like the homeless man in the
coffee shop it got to my tongue and spilled out. I’m
literally too old for this sort of distraction. I’ve been
around too long. I’ve been working with this material for a
long time and have been through enough hard knocks that I
should have known better.
Experience is a wonderful thing.
It enables you to recognize a mistake when you make it
again.
--
Anonymous
They say
that the more times you quit smoking, the more likely it is
that someday you will actually stop. So it is with falling
into judgment. I thought I was beyond such nonsense, this
was a big test and I failed. I pray that if any shempa like
this comes my way again, I will have enough sense not to
step in it – to turn around and walk away and return again
another day. If I say anything more on this topic it will be
in the continued acceptance of my responsibility in this –
it will not be about one of my brothers.
Peace,
