Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Why We Blame

One of the most difficult things for many of us to do is break the habit of blaming others for our situation and our feelings.  In my role as a leadership development consultant working with organizations large and small, I’ve found this to be rife in spite of much talk about personal initiative and responsibility.  However, the one place where I see it most graphically on display is in my capacity as an Imago Educator working with distressed couples.  Almost any upset will send us reaching for our hip-mounted six-shooter to blast off a couple of blames, shames, sarcastic remarks, criticisms, put-downs, mocks or outright attacks.  Of course, not everyone voices these, but they are no less limiting when they happen within the confines of the mind, manifesting as “the cold-shoulder” or stonewalling or an eruption in the chat room between our ears.
Clearly, a cascade of this kind of negativity damages and limits intimacy.  So why do we do it?  It seems almost self-evident this is a behavior developed in childhood for the simple reason that in childhood, we have no or little power (depending on our age) and other people have all the power, especially our caregivers.  We need them to fulfill our needs.  We are other-directed from birth.  The source of food is mother’s breast.  Warmth and protection are in her or Dad’s arms as well as the ability to dry us when we are wet, cool us when we are hot, soothe us with holding, rocking, cooing and singing when we feel bad and stimulate us to learn and feel good. We are incapable of providing and creating safety for ourselves in all its many forms. 
In a well-nurtured childhood, this other-orientation would give way increasingly to the rise of our competencies and sense of selfhood.  In fact, childhood could be seen as a gradual journey from powerlessness to, ideally, full empowerment.  In a perfect world, we would ultimately be able to fully care for ourselves physically, emotionally and mentally and enjoy others as friends, companions, team-mates, partners, fellow citizens.  We would have a fluidly clear sense of what lives within us—those things for which we are responsible and those things we do, in fact, have power to influence or change. 
But the evidence is that most of us do not get to adulthood through well-nurtured childhoods.  We are highly vulnerable during the first many years of life.  But the period beginning with conception, including all of gestation, followed by the birth experience and the first three years out of the womb constitutes a time of exceptional vulnerability—a fact that most of us adults don’t seem to be able to hold in consciousness for very long.  This is likely so because our physical and emotional suffering from that time is utterly out of reach of the adult day-to-day mind.  In our culture, day-to-day tends to be dominated by left-brain functions.  Early painful imprints were laid down in the brain stem, the limbic system and the right brain.  As the saying goes, “You can’t get there from here” or, put another way, why would we believe we can think our way (left brain) out of what we were wounded into (brain stem, limbic, right brain)?  In The Emotional Brain, Joseph LeDoux highlights the fact that the neuro-pathways from the limbic brain up to the cortex are far more plentiful than those returning.  This makes sense because our brains evolved upward, not downward.  This is surely one of the main reasons Harvard neuro-anatomist and author of My Stroke of Insight, Jill Bolte Taylor, has stated “we are feeling creatures that think” not thinking creatures that feel.
The likelihood is that the deficits we experience in the womb, at birth and those first three years are so strongly taken into the early brain that they set up a neural architecture that is only added to when other insults to the system come in the following years.  As I have said often, this is not about blaming parents who, by and large, did the best they could with what they had.  But it is about discovering cause in order to understand better how to address the issue.
It has struck me recently that when we feel so angry with a partner that we whiz around a kind of high-speed merry-go-round over and over again about what they did versus what they should have done, we are re-enacting a moment in childhood that probably happened to most of us several times and which we have buried because it occurred so early and was so excruciating.  That was the first moment when the deficit of nurturing crossed a threshold into the unbearable.  Something in us cried out to our parents.  We didn’t have the words but the basic meaning was: “You must change!   I cannot bear this. You’ve got to start loving me the way I need to be loved!"  Again, we didn’t have the words or the ideas.  We had the experience, though, on an organic level.  The cries reverberated within our cells and tender souls. 
In The Continuum Concept, Jean Liedloff teaches us that we are born with naturally unfolding expectations.  These are, again, on the organic and implicit level.  We expect to be protected in the womb.  We expect to have a tolerable birth.  We expect to be soothed and calmed after birth.  We expect to be suckled at our mother’s breast.  We expect our parents to be fully responsive to our need for skin contact, soothing sounds, appropriate stimulation.  When these expectations are met, we have what Liedloff calls “a sense of inner rightness.”  Biologically, she is probably describing homeostasis.  Need arises, is met and subsides.  We are calm.  All is good.  This process unfolds throughout childhood with the needs changing as we develop.  What does not change is the innate expectation that our caregivers will largely be there for us, will “regulate” us until we can learn to regulate ourselves, which is to say, care for ourselves.  Considering this, it is a devastating shock to our fragile and open beings to experience parents/caregivers who, for whatever reason, are not giving and cannot give enough of what we naturally need to protect and nurture a sense of inner rightness.  In adult terms, inner rightness is to feel like ourselves, comfortable in our skin, psychologically solid, capable and confident enough to take on life.
This is a terrible loss to suffer—the loss of trust and safety amplified by our dependence.  It is cause for grieving.  The first station of grieving is shock and denial.  Here, perhaps, we see the first experience of shock—in utero or in infancy.  This is an overwhelming moment.  It makes sense that since our brains are so far from fully developed, we are not able to fully process it in consciousness, which is a delicate neural web itself at this point.  Denial follows (a neural-electro-chemical sequestering) as a survival mechanism to help us get through to physical adulthood and, hopefully, material independence. 
However, to be a physical adult does not necessarily mean we have arrived at emotional adulthood.  How could we, carrying such a legacy of unresolved hurt?  In adulthood, this hurt that stubbornly resists identifying its true origins naturally transfers to our partner more than all other people in our lives, though we may project it onto bosses, friends, politicians and oligarchs. But with our partners, we are more exposed emotionally than we have been since childhood.  In other words, adult love relationships have powerful resonance with childhood experience.  This is not only an experiential truth.  It is a neurological truth.  After the initial romantic phase of falling in love, we awaken to the reality that our partners are not us, are not here for the singular purpose of satisfying our every need, including those of which we were bereft long ago.  In short, as much as we like to describe them as “a dream come true” in the romantic phase, in reality, our partners are not our dream persons.  (Is that a burden any of us would want to carry for a lifetime anyway?  Wouldn’t we rather be our partners “real person”?)  No matter how much we love them and they us, there are ways in which we are different enough that it triggers that old hurt of feeling totally alone yet dependent on someone who “really doesn’t get me.”  We are indeed back in childhood shock/denial, wishing they were different (“if-only-ing”) and anger—the first three stations of grieving.  Why are we so deeply stuck here?  Because the very essence of the childhood predicament is that we are not safe and not yet capable of consciously experiencing and processing the full depth of the hurt of what it is to be at the mercy of those who cannot consistently enough care for us as we need, in spite of their best efforts. 
The thing we most need to do in adulthood is the thing that was most forbidden in childhood—to weep our way past our shock, wishing and anger down into the full sense of fear and abandonment…and even to go beyond weeping to deeply feel the physical pain that is often the core hurt in the pre-verbal years.  It makes sense, then, that barring a full immersion in such a process, in adulthood we would be caught in a kind of repetition compulsion, if you will—focused on our partners and desperately wanting them to change now, blaming and criticizing them when they won’t, can’t or don’t  
Even with the best therapist, breaking this cycle is likely to be difficult.  However, it is within reach for people who have the emotional bravery and the good fortune to have a therapeutic process that helps us feel safe enough to go there.  We are not dependent little children any longer.  Our brains have fully booted up.  We have psychological and social resources available to us that were not there in childhood.         
As scary or painful as it may be, this requires skills different from what the day-to-day strategic accomplishing mind offers. Cognition may help some, particularly in increasing our awareness of the impulse to blame/go negative.  It can educate us and nudge us toward taking responsibility for what resides within us.  In doing so, surely new neural pathways are being developed.  But when we talk about neural plasticity, there are a few critical questions we would be wise to continuously ask: 

1.      In what part of the brain are these new neural pathways being developed? 
2.      Does development of new pathways in, say, either Pre-frontal Cortex correlate to changes in the deeper, older systems where early childhood pain is likely held?   
3.      Finally, what do these changes mean in terms of sustainable body-mind health?                                      
It seems a “no-brainer” (pun intended!) that whenever we learn something, we develop new pathways.  The questions above go to what kind of learning is taking place and whether or not it actually contributes to more long-term openness, consciousness and health or is actually a new stealth form of self-suppression.  After all, we have ample examples in the history of humanity, not just the history of psychotherapy, of individuals learning what is best for them yet going ahead and doing the exact opposite.  This is likely because it is literally a top-down approach, meaning that we are trying to think our way beyond something that does not yield to the most brilliant left brain because the locus of the generating dynamic resides in the emotional and sensory systems, literally embedded in a different part of the brain.  The skills necessary for resolving them have to do with emotional and sensory learning, learning to let go and surrender to what lives within our bodies and hearts in its original childhood context, not figuring it out or controlling it.  This would be a bottom up process fully in alignment with the way the brain evolved. 

If we are to help people break the behavioral grip of reactive blaming, isn’t it clear we will have to make ample space amidst the words and ideas for emotional, non-verbal and even somatic experience?  Wouldn’t this be true of both individuals and couples?  And doesn’t it make sense to be looking for how old neural pathways are changed and new ones generated in the brain stem, limbic system and right brain, too…in other words, in the entire brain?

C 2014 Bob Kamm

Thursday, May 8, 2014

Moment

This moment.

Walking down the mountain
this rock is here
               not there.
It is shaped just so
               not any other way.
This plant is there
               not here.
It is shaped just so
                     not any other way.
A living plant, thriving
               while this other plant is dying
                    and that one over there
                              is clearly dead.
This lizard
               is on a rock over here
                              in the sun
not anywhere else
until my moving shadow sends him scurrying
       for a still shadow.

This moment.

Rock
     plant
           lizard.

There is fog over the ocean
               all the way to the horizon,
almost no wind
               in a season when it’s usually windy.
And though it seems that wild onions, indian paintbrushes,
buttercups, bush lupine, monkey flowers and morning glories are blooming
               everywhere,
   they are not.
Everywhere is a collection of precise somewhere’s.
Each plant is in its place and nowhere else
and there is considerable space between all of them
filled with many others less obvious to the eye right now
—wild cucumber vines,
Yerba Buena, coyote brush, ferns,
incipient goldenrod and stinging nettle
shiny bushes of the three-leaved oak
               men curse and deer devour
                                          --the blooming
                                   and not-yet-blooming—
not to mention the grasses—veldt, fountain, giant reed,
               wild oats, smooth brome
—the seeding
   and not-yet seeding--     
       each an exact life in an exact place                                                               
   in its own moment
               in my moment
                              in this moment…
the one that is not mine
the one that cannot be owned,
                                              only entered.

My body has lived sixty-seven years
               beyond my mother’s,
not forty-seven, not eighty-seven
but this body right now
               thankfully strong enough                                                                    
that I am here on this mountain,
though my skin has given up some radiance
as a homage to time,
       
This moment.

My eyes with bifocals
               not the falcon’s vision of my youth
but not the blindness I may one day
be privileged
               to know as a very old man
whose moments will be more laden with memories
               than the making of them.
Body strong.
Breath strong.
Spirit strong.

This moment.

Bereft of mother
father
      brothers
               alone here on this mountain
           the deep sorrow of walking so far beyond them
               fully mine
the deep joy of finding a companion
               to walk with me
to the end,
of seeing my son become a man beyond
               the one I raised him to be,
of having good work helping others in ways
               I never imagined
--all gathered together,
fully mine.

This moment.

            My moment
               --loved and loving
still striving
still striding toward that very specific
final step
beyond anger and judgment
                   where the embrace
of all that has come and might come
                              is complete.

Rock
plant
lizard

body
breath
sorrow

joy
memory
yearning.

I am here
                                   nowhere else
                              shaped just so
                                   not any other way,
                         fully in my moment
                which opens its chrysalis
                              into
               the moment that cannot be owned,
               the one that can only be entered,
               the one that I enter
                              now.


C 2014 Bob Kamm

Thursday, February 20, 2014

The Gaze

for my granddaughter Kiera

She is nearly one year old
and has probably learned more
               in this year,
making all the new and strange
               familiar,
than I have in the last twenty.
However
clearly she has not heard
that stars reside light years away
because
her eyes are twin blue stars
right here
              before us.
Clearly she has not heard
that blue stars in particular
are so hot
they are gone
in the blink
of a cosmological eye.
Her twin blue stars warm
                with no danger of burning us
or burning out.
Yet there is another kind of light
that arises from her
but does not originate in her.
It is gathered by her presence,
called home by her cheeks.
I have seen this light
                on the cheeks
      of white orchids
in the rainforest of Peru
--a light that filters down through
layered leaves and
     nestles silently on petals,
a soothing glow
          that quiets you
and draws you closer.

Twin suns gazing.
Cheeks gathering.
A small smile summoning.
All saying silently together,    
“I am here.
 I see you.
          I see you
                            seeing me.        
I am awake.
                I am alive!”


C 2014 Bob Kamm

Hold the Sky


for my granddaughter, Ember

My granddaughter
               Ember
just short of
her second birthday
reaches up, out, down
because holding
is new and
             how she understands things best.
She literally grasps
                   in order to grasp
but not just with hands
           as she did some months ago
--a tiny plastic dinosaur, a piece of apple, a stick
her grandpa’s glasses—
now with her arms, her whole body.
“Hold!” she sings reaching her arms out,
                                             her tiny torso arching to the effort.
(All her words are small songs, even
single syllables have at least two notes).
She sees a tree outside
and sings, “Tree.  Hold!”
She points to the clouds
and sings, “Clouds.  Hold!”
and the sky, “Sky.  Hold! Hold!”
this one with more intensity
reaching her arms almost straight up.
 “Can you hold the sky, Ember?” I ask
“Yeah,” she answers with two notes.
“And can the sky hold you?”
“Yeah,” two notes and a nod
                       of utter certainty.
She throws her head back,
    stretches her whole body,
               rises on her toes
as if to will herself
higher and higher
    until she can
         hold the sky
and by holding
                  know it.

Later in the day
    walking alone
I look up and think,                             
“I’m almost seventy
              and maybe I’ve forgotten
                             how to understand the sky.
I’m not talking about collisions of molecules
      or the scattering of light waves.
I’m talking about
                      knowing the sky
as only a mystery can be known
    by getting your arms around it
                       pressing yourself against it
                            letting your heart beat into it
and its heart beat
            into you.
Maybe I need to reach higher.
Maybe I need to reach harder.
Maybe I need to stretch my body more.
Maybe I need to throw my toes all the way into it
                    as I once did
                              long ago
                          when I first held the sky
and the sky
         held
                me.”


C 2014 Bob Kamm

Monday, January 20, 2014

Apologies to the Goddess


Kwan Yen--our little goddess of compassion.  We found her in a local nursery.  She is slim
and stands only four feet tall but weighs close to two hundred pounds from molded concrete.
A concrete goddess…how’s that for an oxymoron?  She is coiffed and clothed as a Chinese girl should be and would even warrant the adjective demure but for her small right foot—all five perfect little toes--boldly presenting themselves from beneath her floor-length skirt. Is it because she is going somewhere?

Did the artist capture her in the midst of a small but sure step or is this a subtle offering, a promise of a different kind of divine delight?  I guess we will never know.  Her lips are sealed.
When we stood her against the small arched wooden bridge in our front yard we thought it the perfect place for her energy to emanate and envelop our entire acre.  And for a number of months it was so. This goddess of compassion made compassion reign.  Flowers bloomed, fruit appeared, birds and butterflies filled the air.

But then, the plague arrived, the plague of oak moth caterpillars gnawing their way through our luxuriant oak canopy, rappelling down from the heights like an endless gang of warriors.  They covered   our walls and walkways with their skinny black and green bodies and copper helmets and their poop—which scientists have given the dubious name frass.  Frass descended from the leaves above blanketing everything, its smell spoiling every inhale.  A biologist friend told us this is a once every six or seven year phenomenon.  If you don't do commercial spraying (expensive!) right at the first sign, it's a waste.  The oak trees, though utterly stripped, will rebound. The caterpillars will become pupae and the pupae moths but once hatched they will move on and even if they don’t their children, the next generation of caterpillars, will die at the hands of a tiny parasite that takes but a single generation to catch up to its prey. Isn’t nature wonderful?  The balance!  Ah!!  It only takes one year for the parasites to overtake the marauding worms and set things right. So our friend, counseled, since we woke up to the invasion too late for commercial spraying, we should “become one with the caterpillars.” In other words, let Kwan Yen’s spell of mercy abide.

Alas, we could not. The smell of the frass was too “in your nose”, the sight of the caterpillars too icky.  Yes, so icky that a couple in their sixties had to reach back to the childhood word icky to describe them. And the final straw floated down when they covered Kwan Yen’s tiny toes, nose, eyes and ears.

Now you might say they were showing her affection.  One of the stories about her tells us that animals had an affinity for her, even helped her do burdensome chores in a monastery hundreds of years before St Francis spoke to birds in Europe.

You might say they were showing her respect.

You might say the caterpillars were worshipping at her feet, on her feet, limbs, hands, face and hair.

And you might say they were a dastardly pestilence
that needed to be mercilessly wiped
from the earth.

Believe me, we tried to be good students of our goddess, to be one with one with the worm, one with the frass, one with the pupae.  Unfortunately, like all humans except those who attain godly status we were weakened by our anger.  We attacked those worms and their little sleeping pods with environmentally friendly death sprays, wire brushes, power washers, blowers and outdoor vacuums strong enough to uproot an oak.  We sucked, squashed, smashed, blew and blasted them off our walls and deck.  As each day passed we embraced our murderous mission with greater zeal, driven to the precipice of madness by the pungency of frass.  

But finally, it was over.  

Every last worm was either dead or had spun its tiny sanctuary of transformation in the branches beyond our reach.  Then and only then did we approach our freshly washed goddess to ask for compassion when we had given none, mercy when we had been merciless.  For the legend tells us she refused to go into heaven because she heard the cries of the world and wanted to return to assuage them.  Weren’t those cries now coming from us?   Yes, but our cries, were not at first for forgiveness, because we did not seek it.  We did not feel guilty, initially.  After all, if we had not done the killing, wouldn’t the parasites?  How would that have been preferable?

We felt ambivalent and confused. We were both sorry and not sorry.  That's what we cried to have lifted from us--ambivalence and confusion.  We cried over our low tolerance for frass falling from the sky, sharp smells, gangs of insects that, unlike the migrations of monarch butterflies, had for us no redeeming qualities whatsoever; a low tolerance in general for beings—human and otherwise—that were different, and neither beautiful nor useful in their differentness.  We cried out not only for mercy and understanding.  We cried out for the the spell of being human to be re-cast so that compassion would live in our hearts, not just flop on the couch for a week from time to time.  We cried out for the strength to  trust more, allow more, witness more.  We cried out for our capacity for anger to be reshaped into a greater capacity for love that we might be one with nature and one with mankind and our wars against both might finally come to an end. 

Only weeks after the moths left, the canopy was full and lush again, in fact, more luxuriant than it had been before the caterpillars arrived.  The irony weighed heavily upon us.  Heavily.  We stood in the shade surveying our little piece of reborn heaven, trying not to notice that the ground was littered with tiny graves.


C 2014 Bob Kamm