âYou may think you are your name, your job, who your friends are, what you thinking, what you are thinking â but there is a deeper level to your Self and that is what you are here to find,' he told me.
And then there was nothing to do, no talking, no TV, no reading or writing â nothing to do except meditate.
Fourteen hours a day just sitting and breathing, slow-walking and meditating in front of Buddha statues. I was told to notice my thoughts, but to not attach to them â rather, I was to just watch them float away. While I believed I had already thought through my anger, all the thoughts I had were angry thoughts â anger with my parents, anger about triple j, anger about high school. There were no distractions, and it all felt so unpleasant. It made it nearly impossible for me to meditate.
I was looking forward to my meeting with Sunny; I hoped he would offer me some words of advice to help me with these awful feelings. When we sat down together the next day, he asked me how meditation was going, and I said, âI feel so angry, I just keep â ' and he cut right in: âYes, yes, yes,' he said. âEveryone finds it difficult, what you need to do is just breathe.' And then he sang, âRising, falling, rising, falling, rising, falling.'
And then: âI'll see you tonight for the evening chant.'
Apparently Buddhism is
not
psychotherapy. Words were cheap at the Doi Suthep. Western philosophy privileges thought; many strands of eastern philosophy do not.
I spent all the next day just breathing out slowly and not being able to concentrate, and getting hungrier and more fatigued, and exhausted. Then the evening chant â all of us sitting on the floor, chanting together for forty-five minutes.
And then prayer. I was still light-headed from the lack of food and sleep, but this somehow made me feel serene, almost trance-like, and I could start to focus on the stillness, a bit and then a bit more. An angry thought came up â this one about my parents â and I just kept breathing, and it seemed to fade away through lack of significance. And then after more chanting, and three solid minutes of meditation, I experienced for the first time moments of near-complete stillness and the thoughts stopped. When the angry thoughts came up again, I was flushed with visions of red and purple and pink as the images dissipated and broke down. These colours became spectacular tropical flowers that danced around in my head, and suddenly I had deep feelings of awe and calm.
That night, when the meditation stopped and I sat inside my room dressed in my meditation whites, amid the fire-flies and the geckos and above the Chiang Mai city lights below, I began to think about how I hadn't realised all these angry thoughts were so pervasive. Many of them, I concluded, were petty; others did not examine the entire context of the event in question; almost all lacked perspective and empathy. None of them examined the morality of my own behavior. More than that, I realised that so many of the things I was angry about were actually in my own imagination â a kind of paranoia, or low-level psychosis was giving me an unnecessarily grim and bitter view of the world.
Mindfulness in this way, done properly, divorced from corporate goals and corporate mumbo-jumbo, can tear open your skull, and when it does you might find something that resembles a chaotic TV screen â constantly changing channels featuring random memories, future projections, fuzz, hatred, and resentment. Crystal meth didn't stop the flow â its creation of a movie-like vortex only fostered the delusion that the mind was coherent and wondrous. It is quieting the mind, not speeding it up where, perhaps, ultimate fulfillment can be found.
More meditation the next day, and while my concentration levels and impulse control made it extremely difficult for me to meditate, I noticed nonetheless a feeling of calm that, over the next few days, increased. The angry thoughts eventually just faded away. Once they started to fade away, I felt extremely clear, and I began to wonder why I had spent so long dwelling on people's bad sides â many of which were in my own imagination â that I failed to see the good in people. So after meditation, I started thinking about all the good things people had done for me, especially my parents, and I realised these far, far outweighed the bad. And when I thought of the bad things, I put them in context, and tried to think about why they did that, and that, like me, they had this dreadful thing called the mind which was often petty, incoherent, vain, and deeply flawed.
And I wondered,
How can I have expectations for others, when our minds are just so inherently problematic?
I eventually chose a little temple just outside the main building and sat cross-legged in front of a 12-foot white Buddha â his body floating amid the vines and the flowers, and an elaborate crumbling cemetery behind him.
The austerity, abstinence, and ritual made my mind float, too. And the rhythm â the rhythm of the chants, rhythm of the breath, the rhythm of life and death. We are all impermanent; desire is the cause of all suffering; phenomena is unstable, transient, disenchanting.
I took a walk back to my villa, and pulled out the book I'd been reading:
Wisdom of the Buddha
.
âThe body is wasted, full of sickness, and frail: this heap of corruption breaks into pieces, life indeed ends is death'.
Yes, reading was against the rules, and actually I didn't even last the full week because I was so damn hungry. But what I can tell you is that on the way out, I stared up at a pagoda as its spire pierced the sky, and I watched as the clouds floated past; I might have been a no-hoper, a fuckwit, and a cliché, I might have just been lost in delusion and lost in the self, desperate for answers after the inevitable failure of my âchemical philosophy' â but what I felt then was a sense of the sublime.
When I returned to Chiang Mai city, in the three days after the camp I felt so very calm and grateful, and dare I say it â
happy
. Happy as Larry, happy as a pig in shit, and I sent a few people close to me some heartfelt messages about how happy I was and how glad I was that they were in my life. Possibly they thought I had re-discovered MDMA. My mum in particular was delighted to hear from me, and I told her all about my trip, and amid the cheery small talk, I felt a sense of acceptance.
We are both deeply flawed
, I thought. The fight earlier in the year became fluid, unfrozen, it became water under the bridge â a strong bridge which had ultimately not faltered under even more trying arguments. She had, after all, put up with an awful lot from me. She was always there to help when she could.
And I needed help. The body is wasted and full of sickness. I had been using the same anti-depressants for four years by the time I got to Chiang Mai, and shortly after I left the mindfulness camp, I discovered that those anti-depressants were extremely hard to find in Thailand's northern city. After about three days without taking them â tablets designed to reduce anxiety, depression, and back pain â I felt uneasy, and had a flurry of thoughts about how unfair people had been to me. I felt my career had been a disaster, I felt panic, then despair. On one level, I knew that I was feeling this way because I had stopped taking the tablets, but my thoughts and feelings seemed so sincere. I tried mindfulness meditation, and it gave me only temporary relief. I began to wonder what value spirituality, when it seemed my âself' was little more than a chemical reaction. I began sending out pitches to editors so full of typos and mixed up sentences that I never got a reply. The drafts of the final chapters to this book were sent back from Scribe with the message: âI have never seen anything like this in all my years of editing.' When I looked back over them, I had long, nonsensical sentences with no punctuation that didn't mean anything. In less than a week without tablets, I faded into a dread-ridden, dreadful ghost â and in that week, other people reacted to me strangely and even street dogs, for the first time, began getting aggressive as I walked past. This was again a loss of agency, an apparent limit of freedom, and again I was dependent on my mother.
Mum ending up sending me through $500 to buy anti-depressants. Not only did I not have any money for anti-depressants, but in the ten days in total I was off them, I had screwed up nearly every professional relationship I had â at least in the short-term â and she sent me another $500 a week later, with the message âI love you'.
There was no escaping the fact that, for better or worse, I had been taking those tablets so long they were like food or water, and without them, not even the more austere, dedicated life would make any difference.
Once that was settled, once that little piece of humility was learnt, I could concentrate on higher-order things, and the more my days wore on in Chiang Mai, the more inescapable the conclusion that âthe less I have the better I am' â self-evidently the opposite of the drug addiction ætiology of âthere is never enough'. Tablets might rescue me from despair; once that was established, there was still the pressing question of meaning, and indeed, freedom to deal with. I was finally aware what a wonderful luxury it is in life to not be bogged down by pain, misery, or poverty, and to be in a position to ask myself life's complicated spiritual questions.
I felt that the clues had been laid out for me during the mindfulness camp; mindfulness was about the joy and fulfillment of
subduing
one's mind, rather than accelerating it. It was slowing down and letting go, rather than clinging to things. I wondered about the links between a drug binge and a spiritual journey; I wondered if instead of a weekend of over-indulgence to de-clutter and start again, perhaps what I needed to do what start weekends of austerity. Generosity is a near constant theme in Buddhism, along with morality, patience, enthusiasm, concentration, and wisdom. I already knew was it wasn't possible to experience the other or the other's need when I was on the drug. There was, I began to think, an alternative to this cycle. Trips into the netherworld of our minds could be achieved through weekends of austerity and meditation, and not through drug binges.
I was living in a cheap hotel in Chiang Mai with a TV and a bathroom. But I decided to take my austerity to another level. I went to Kathmandu, Nepal, and moved into a small room in a hostel: no TV, no Wi-Fi, no computer, no phone, and a shared bathroom (but with multiple packs of my anti-depressants).
Kathmandu is a dusty, cluttered city in a valley â it was almost purely an agricultural district a hundred years ago. It is full of Buddha and Hindu statues, and yes, suffering: poverty, stray dogs, and street people â including children who live on the sidewalk.
The suffering was difficult to digest at times; it also seemed outside of my control, and unlike the social and political problems in Australia, which obviously paled in comparison, I did not feel the same sense of being able to place cultural explanations for my present own problems. Whenever I saw the cruelty often inflicted on stray dogs and street people, I did my best to stop it. Otherwise, the problems faced by them seemed totally insurmountable, which, in the end, confirmed my ideas that empathy and compassion are lofty ideals and higher-order human and social functions.
I have to admit I liked Kathmandu because it was cheap and weird; it didn't matter how you dressed or what you looked like, and it was full of strange bookshops. I found a book called
Transcending Madness
by a Tibetan Buddhist called Chögyam Trungpa, in which he writes:
Ego is that which is constant, it is always involved in some kind of paranoia, some of kind of panic, always some kind of hope and fear. Sanity is therefore experiencing things as they are.
Trungpa draws on the Buddhist idea of the six âBardos' â the six realms of human existence we are continually cycling in and out of. One of the realms is the âHungry Ghost' realm â a source of anger, greed, ignorance, lust, envy, and pride. The Hungry Ghost means you don't want to give anything; you just take. The more you get, the more you want to receive. Ultimately, this leads to aggression, Trungpa writes, because you want to destroy anything that reminds you of giving.
However, our âHungry Ghost' is also useful: we should not seek to exorcise it, instead, he says we should recognise how it operates and know when we are in its realm. The Hungry Ghost can lead to two types of pain: the first is not being to achieve what you want to achieve; the second occurs once you already have your desires filled, but you have a kind of nostalgia for desire. So this second pain occurs when you are already full, but you miss being hungry â it is at that point, perhaps, you should seek to enter the world of nothingness.
Not being dominated by sour thoughts all the time gave me an increased appetite for life, and I found myself bouncing around the streets of Kathmandu in happiness most days â I had no desire to escape from my responsibility to interpet reality.
Of course, a dose of healthy cynicism dictates that my sense of liberation and happiness may merely have been the result of enjoying travel, and that these âepiphanies' would turn to dust once I returned to my regular life in Australia, among old temptations and old friends.
I considered this, too, but it also occurred to me that I had come to pretty much what I wanted to in life. I could work full time on writing. There had been some very real economic impediments to my freedom in Australia â my career had, at the very least, stalled after having the Great Breakdown of 2008. Then I ran into conflict with my managers because of the lack of opportunity, and then I had back and neck problems that kept me out of the workforce for a long time. Combined with my reputation for being mentally unstable, the legal actions against the ABC only served to further tarnish my employment prospects, and even former peers who'd backed me stepped away. In 2009 and 2010, I had spent nearly eighteen months on unemployment benefits; I applied for jobs at a nursery and DVD store because I couldn't get a job, and even then I didn't get shortlisted. While most of my legal actions were eventually successful (I was homeless, in pain, and living on the dole in between them) I found it nearly impossible to get another job â in fact, most people at the ABC thought I was a âdisgruntled former employee' and many others believed I had been sacked. My main skill-set was in radio, and I was left high and dry and living on rice and sweet potatoes for a long time. Then my new career in law didn't turn out quite as I'd expected: first, I got low marks, which limited my career opportunities; besides which, I didn't have the temperament to be involved in litigation without a constant feeling of wanting to kill the most annoying person from the other party (or sometimes myself), and I just couldn't get excited at the prospect of a career working twelve hours a day in an oppressive office environment to have about half of my pay each week go on rent.