Through Confusion With The Help Of Mindfulness

By Jake Kessler

Your Eyes Seek Conclusion in All This Confusion of Mine

“I know, things are getting tougher when I can’t get the top off the bottom of the barrel.” ~ Jesse Michaels

No one thought I was going to live to see 20. Including me. In fact, I vividly remember telling my father that it would be miraculous if I saw 25. It wasn’t emotional. It was simply a statement of fact. And yet here I am, mid-thirties, wife, daughter, one on the way, house, job, sense of purpose. What happened?

I was one of those kids with questions. Big questions. “What does it all mean” questions. I used to wonder what the point of all of this was. As young as seven and eight I remember lying in bed at night trying to understand the nature of the world. I would examine my family, my friends, my fears, my aspirations, looking for the thread that would unravel the existential knot.

I loved to learn and I was frequently drawn to the sciences in a way that I now see as my continuing to look for answers to the big questions. When my friends were asked what they wanted to be when they grew up there came the usual answers: policeman, fireman, professional athlete etc. I think someone said “Batman”. It might have been me. But I would usually say, “paleontologist or astronomer” (I later amended this to astrophysicist but I hadn’t heard of it yet and, further, didn’t have the math skills). It was clear to me that this world had a rhyme and a reason and I wanted desperately to understand it. And then, at 12, I discovered the answer.

I became a drug addict and an alcoholic. It was beautiful. It did not give me any answers, it simply took away the questions. It shrunk my life to the “one-pointed mind” that I would rediscover later in another context.

Addiction is an all-consuming activity. I compounded this problem by developing a number of co-occurring mental health problems: rage, depression, anxiety. A continuous cocktail of hopelessness and loss. This spiral was only arrested at the nick of time by the intervention of a loving family and a supportive community dedicated to service towards those struggling with addiction.

rough struggle

In the decade and a half since, I watched many friends die, go to jail, disappear, and I have often wondered what the difference between them and me is. I have heard the “some have to die so others can live” theory and the “they just weren’t ready” platitude. I have heard the “at least they’re not struggling anymore” and the “god must have needed them” conclusions and I reject these utterly.

While these statements offer some degree of emotional and psychological comfort, I can’t buy into the implications, the idea that some of us are “chosen” and some of us are not.

I think about a friend of ours who died Xmas eve morning from an overdose. I couldn’t conceive of going to his grief-stricken family and saying: “bummer about your son, guess he wasn’t chosen.”

I have been to seventeen funerals in the past few years, all for people under 30 and most under 25. Each time I have asked myself the same question: why them and not me?

I don’t pretend to have an answer. Furthermore, I don’t think there is an ANSWER. When I discovered my spiritual/meditative practice, the thing I was drawn to so strongly was that these practices openly admitted they had no answers, only a means to investigate the questions.

Meditation does not give me any answers. It does not allow me to sidestep grief or pain or rage. It does not make good times better or bad times suck less. It does not offer me a way to disassociate from my very real human experience. Although, for the record, I have tried to use meditation to do all of these things.

So what difference does it make to me? The meditation practices that I employ bring me face to face with the pain and hurt and fear and rage. The pain of losing my friends; the hurtful realisation that no one could help them, not even me; the fear that I could very well fall victim to the same delusions, to succumb to the rage at the utter injustice of why beautiful, talented men and women at the beginning of their lives are lost to us.

In not trying to avoid the pain, I get to experience it and learn from it. In the past, I have repeated the negative and destructive patterns of my life not because of lack of will or lack of desire to change, but merely because I HAVEN’T SEEN THEM. I have looked away from my pain and my trauma and so it has had no choice but to re-emerge over and over again. Sitting “on the cushion” has given me a stable and safe place from which to step into the sea of suffering and find the part of me that needs comfort and compassion and try to bring it into the light.

My practice has shown me that the answers that we look for are whatever we want them to be. Meaning is not an inherent quality. Things happen, and we, as human beings, assign them meaning. Sometimes the meaning is that we “live for them”. Sometimes we “make it matter.”

I once asked out a girl in one of my graduate school classes because I had just helped bury a 17-year- old kid who I realised would never get to ask a girl out again. So what the hell? I asked her, thinking maybe Danny would give me an assist from wherever he was…She still said no. I swear I could hear him laughing at me.

Unique Construction

Sometimes we use things to reinforce the negative story that we tell ourselves about ourselves and the world we live in. We create our own victimization and tell ourselves it’s not our fault. “The world is terrible”. I did this for so long. Reinforcing the story of my own victimhood until it almost killed me.

Meditation allows me to examine all of these storylines. It lets me embrace the things that make my life better and to discard (almost always with assistance) the things that are detrimental to myself, that cause pain to those around me. It offers me the opportunity to “turn the volume down” on the rage and anxiety and depression. It brings me back within the bounds of experiencing all this without them becoming the monsters they used to be.

Mostly it invites me to see some of my truth, to adjust my thoughts to the reality of my life so that, hopefully, my internal and external experience are mirrors of each other. Nothing is supposed to be happening in any particular way. It’s just what IS happening. Embrace it or fight it, it makes no difference. It will, has, and does happen exactly as it’s happening. To be truly content, I only need to adjust to conditions as they are, not how I would wish them to be. Meditation lets me see things in a way that is closer to how they really are.

I write this having attended a funeral last week for a 23-year-old man who was my student and my friend.I am selfishly grateful in a strange way that his death was accidental and not related to any substance abuse. I not sure if that matters but it feels different.

I loved and will continue to love Josh. He was amazingly talented. I met him when he was 15 and couldn’t play a note. By the end of our time together (I was a music teacher at the time) he could play four instruments well and a few poorly (harmonica is tough). He had interned at a local music festival during high school and eventually parlayed that into a full time gig at one of our local venues. I am so proud of him.

His service was packed. Friends, family…he touched so many lives. The greatest gift that my practice afforded me is that I was there. REALLY there. I cried. I laughed. I hugged people. I snuck one of my medallions into his casket when no one was looking. I thought he’d like that, both the medallion and the sneaking (we shared something of an anti-authority streak).

I didn’t run, either from his death, from my feelings, or from the people around me. I hugged his dad and told him how much I adored his son and how grateful I was to have helped him along his journey. I stood with my friends and offered a shoulder when they needed it and received one when I did.

I am so deeply moved to have been able to be there, without a buffer, to help send off my friend. I can be uncomfortable and be ok with being uncomfortable. Pain and sorrow are my teachers. So is joy and love. Meditation brings me to the place where I can experience all of it. Meditation in all its forms: introspection, quiet sitting, self-searching, continued self-discovery and service.

I wouldn’t trade this life for anything.


Jake Kessler is a teacher, mentor and consultant based in Salem, Massachusetts. He can be contacted at: Jakeknexuslearning@gmail.com

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