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Being: Observations related to embracing the present moment

#50: The gears of attention

August 6, 2021

Over the last month, my attention has been diverted towards a talkative and high-energy addition to my household. As I adjust my routines and environment for my new cat, she seems to be on a mission to dismantle my concentration, sleep, and schedule. As a first time pet-friend, I didn’t realize how these early stages can present a new problem on a daily basis and as I solve my way through, I’ve been thinking about the role of attention in our lives.

The quality and makeup of our attention is often what determines the state of our mind, emotions, and actions. Over time, these everyday things color and define a life. Attention also determines our time-spent. Time-consumed. Time-felt. Time-lived. In this sense attention is really the essense of time. So, here are some musings around attention:

  • Can one be addicted to focus? I’ve figured out the routine that works with my rhythms and work demands. I find that writing is best done in the mornings, when I have access to my internal silence, and the business-related work requires deep and sustained focus to absorb and thread together new ideas. After trial and error, I arranged my life in a relatively effective schedule. The cat has made it clear that this precision is sometimes untenable. Ofcourse our rhythms crave structure but when circumstances toss that structure out the window, we’re better off responding and not reacting. Here is a sequential summary of my reaction: frantic problem solving, followed by frustration, then detonation; and finally curiosity, which made it easier to experiment (7 different wet foods, ~12 toys, 2 pet gates, 2 rugs, 3 different furniture-scratching repellants…I could go on). The point is that my concentration and focus can’t be dependent on library-level orchestration and I have to mold new structures and rituals that are more permeable. A small example: In the past, I would shut the office door to signal the start of my work day but the cat becomes overly needy and disruptive if I don’t leave it ajar for her to come and go as she pleases. My new ritual is to take a few breaths when I arrive at my desk. I also expect her unexpected arrival knowing that her interruptions are typically no longer than five-minutes. Part of cultivating presence is cultivating presence towards whatever comes up but it’s easier said than done. We create an illusion of control precisely because we don’t know what will come up. I read somewhere that “confidence is more bending, confidence doesn’t clutch control.” It rings true.
  • How can we intentionally switch attention? Mindfulness practices recommend that we put our minds where our hands are. Working parents are forced to do this–they switch gears towards work deliverables and have to keep the kids out of focus and then at home, they have to be present to whatever comes up, even when they are depleted. But their boundaries often need to be permeable, as we’ve seen even more clearly during the Covid-era. While caring for a pet is not the same as caring for a child, the desire to keep this creature safe and thriving, and the moments of disruption feel oddly similar. I’m going to actively apply the “put your mind where your hands are” philosophy as she settles in.
  • And most importantly…what deserves our attention? While this is a very personal question, when we get down to the fundamentals, anything that moves us towards more equanimity, love and connection deserves attention. Loving someone can be quite a growth oriented practice. We don’t control the object of our affection and their outcomes, we can’t always control how they impact us, yet we love them. That unconditionality of presence, the come what may. That is what giving attention to love teaches us. When we exchange love, care, affection and accompaniment with someone, we build their foundation and ours. Yes, even if that someone is a cat.

“Your task is to love what you don’t understand.”― Rainer Maria Rilke

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#41: Sniffing for truffles

June 28, 2021

I went looking for a thick book to put underneath my computer monitor, to elevate it to a more ergonomic position. I found a ~4-year old yoga manual that I hadn’t used because it was unsuitable for my sporadic practice. As I flipped through the pages however, I sank into the couch savoring the creative ways to sequence postures. I now had a container in which to apply this practical wisdom. “I’ll use this one”, I thought as I put it aside. I then moved on to an academic text that had felt overwhelming because of the dense content and small print. I opened it for a quick glance and was astounded by how much of it made sense and was now within grasp. “Ok, so not this one either”. Then I saw a random coffee table book of maps but found myself enjoying it given my interest in different cultures and people. This happened repeatedly, book after thick book. I would pick up my thickest oddball books only to realize that books that seemed peripheral or aspirational a few years ago genuinely pulled me in now.

I wondered how my past self had managed to surround me with material that my present self found compelling…almost felt like a gift from the past. How did she know?! It seems that something in her was drawn to a kernel of interest and she picked up these books with open-hearted curiosity and without an ounce of agenda. She didn’t push herself or try to impress others. She was attracted to certain ideas and created space for them even when she wasn’t completely ready to absorb their depth. These are the things that I surrounded myself with even before I completely knew why I was drawn to them and what to do with them.

You’ll likely have your own unique and varied collection of things that interest you. These interests may seem disparate, of little practical use, and you might even feel that you are extending into too many things. But we find ourselves like a hog searches for precious and fragrant truffles. We go sniffing on our internal trails of natural curiosity next to our trees of interests, we breathe in the fresh air of freedom and get stamina to keep going through non-attachment. This journey can take time, sometimes a process of years. Quieter patches of life interspersed with bouts of intense activity and at some point, ideas and inspiration start firing like they never did before. No matter where we are in the journey though, every time we spar with one of our genuine interests, we come back to the world renewed and refreshed. Also, no matter where we are in our journey, we have to practice patience. Anything worthwhile takes time to mature and bear fruit…and finding and living out our unique selfhood is one of the most worthwhile tasks of a human.

“Some days I am more wolf than woman and I am still learning how to stop apologizing for my wild” ― Nikita Gill

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#36: Anchoring in practice

May 28, 2021

My friend Anna lives in the Peruvian Amazon and was recently treated for both malaria and dengue. She was plucked away from the daily rhythms of her life to face severe symptoms, the limits of her body, and a sometimes lonesome and sometimes communal fight. She spent a week away from home battling intense breathlessness, fluid around her organs and fever dreams; it must have been extremely disorienting.

Since we exchanged voice messages, it felt like I had a front-row seat to her evolving situation. From the first breathy message where she thought she may have Covid, to the one where she craved a toothbrush, and the one where she mused how not being able to write for several days felt “completely bizarre” (Anna is my writing buddy and has written almost daily for years). In one message, she asked how I was doing with Covid’s rampage across India. Then one day she told me how it felt to look up from her wrapped up body in the infectious diseases ward to see twelve other patients wrapped up in their own, dealing with their own bugs. She noted everyone’s rituals with their families: someone brushing his wife’s hair, another reading bible verses, yet another putting lotion on their loved one’s feet, and some sleeping in weird arrangements on the floor. “If you look a couple of feet away from you, there is a person with their own infectious disease right there!”. She’ll write about this experience in her own poetic words but what bubbled up for me was Anna’s ability to stay fully and compassionately present to herself while also being fully and compassionately present to others’ experiences.

Throughout her journey, she seemed to have one barometer inside and another outside. She embraced her “mind-altering experience” with a blend of tenderness and pragmatism that gave her stamina to think of others’ battles. She didn’t fake strength, she had innate strength and I wondered how she fired up her emotional cylinders while battling fierce diseases herself. Then it clicked―it was her writing practice. She had learned to separate life’s threads to observe them with curiosity, letting them be without forcing change. I often tell Anna that her writing feels meditative but I now see that writing is also her meditation. I was fortunate to have been invited-in as an observer, to see first-hand the power of her anchoring practice. I honestly don’t think she realized that she exuded this capacity. She was just being…herself.

This is the beauty of having an anchoring practice; it roots us to our personal core. It can be anything at all―hiking, photography, sitting with the elderly, rowing, gardening, running, dancing―as long as the soul’s posture is of silent attention, so we can be completely present to whatever comes up without getting swept away by emotions. We may not even see a difference from one day to the next but over time, our way of being evolves in subtle yet powerful ways as we become this anchored version of ourselves. It’s quite likely that no one will be in the front-row seat to notice our evolution. It doesn’t matter. What will matter is how this repeated connection to self creates the capacity to relate to life and others in it.

“My powers are ordinary. Only my application brings me success.”― Isaac Newton

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#34: Building our energy

May 21, 2021

Years ago, I came across a Harvard Business Review article titled “Manage your energy, not your time“. Because I worked in startup roles on around-the-clock international teams, I could work endlessly and there would still be much left to do. The article resonated with me. Then I forgot about it. Until a couple of weekends ago where after a focused and uplifting work week, I crashed hard because of emotional stress from Covid-19’s India surge. The combination of first-hand news, urgent check-ins on family and friends, and a desire to support from afar created an energy-vortex. In two days I went from significant vitality and sharp focus to a bit off the rails. How did this happen?

While I had made a conscious decision to pour myself into loved ones, I wasn’t conscious of topping up my own energy. We can’t give what we don’t cultivate. Living in India right now feels like being in a warzone and I simply wasn’t prepared. I thought if I could pour a little more of myself into just one more person or one other situation, I could make a difference. I didn’t even notice that I myself had situational stress from this crisis and by the time I realized, I was too depleted and needed to disconnect and hibernate. Like an overheated machine with a faulty internal thermostat. How strange for this to happen to us repeatedly when we live inside our respective human animals! Why is it hard to check-in with ourselves? It may be a combination of productivity addiction, feeling selfish when we focus on our own needs, or a host of other things. I won’t dig into the reasons here because my focus is on understanding how we build energy. This life force. Chi. Prana. For a long time I thought prana was this esoteric concept and only serous yogis and meditators had the skill to generate pranic energy. It’s actually quite simple. How did I recover? I got out of bed and started cleaning while listening to an interesting audiobook. I took the easiest action I could take without needing to think. As I put my space in order, I started noticing a shift inside. Once I got some energy back, I walked in the sunshine and sniffed spring flowers like a bee. The next day, I got more of my rhythm back and worked out. Nothing magical or esoteric here. But certainly a real contrast in what little bit of self-care can do.

Energy is that feeling of buoyancy on days we are well-rested, well-moved, well-fed, and well-loved. By well-loved I mean that we are tuned into not only others but also ourselves such that we are able to give and receive care. This combination creates a sense of inherent vitality that we then bring to our actions and interactions. Prana is not a vague concept at all. It is the foundation for everything we do in life. What seems to be key in our recovery and strength building is the ability to tap into our energy building practices at a repeatable cadence so we don’t even have to think about them. It can be whatever feeds our unique souls and to whatever degree is practical.

We’ll run into a million different situations and we cant game theory our way out of each. If we keep topping up our prana through repeatable personal practices―aka routines or rituals― we will become more grounded, adaptable and resilient in the face of twitching circumstances, thoughts, and emotions.

“Almost everything will work again if you unplug it for a few minutes, including you.”― Anne Lamott

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#8: Gratitude for wonky blessings

March 17, 2021

I saw a friend’s life change in significant ways in the course of two years. She found a wonderful partner, and a dream home with a spectacular view that many might envy. Excited for her, I reflected gleefully on this abundance of delights and uncovered a “but”. She had given up a much cherished neighborhood, hard earned roots, and a community she loved enough to commute over long distances; so she could rest her head in the place she adored.  This “but” is embedded in our lives. We often get what we hope for, in big and small ways, but the wish doesn’t come to life in exact specs. I made a silent vow to notice and absorb my imperfect blessings as they come my way. I didn’t have to wait long at all.

Two days after seeing my friend, I sat down to take care of hospitalization bills that were weighing me down. When these bills started pouring in initially, they were jarring to say the least. Thousands of dollars that were crushing my already tender body. I had a new and untested health insurance and said aloud to my husband “wouldn’t it be great if insurance just made these bills vanish!”.  It took months of back and forth with the insurance company, the hospital and several administrators to figure out the details. So finally, the day came for me to pay my bills and reconcile everything. Buried under the burden of itemization across many different portals, I found my mind spinning and spirit sagging – “If I don’t get through this minutiae quickly, how can I move forward with the life and work I want to create?”. As the palpitations and stress arose, I called upon my newfound yogic breathing techniques and acknowledged the wave of emotion as it crashed against my chest. Then I fanned the tiny flame of resilience, restarted the review and in a few minutes chanced upon this – 

Claim 
Claim Number 
Type 
Medical 
Provider 
MEDICAL 
Status 
paid 
SUPARNA 
CHHIBBER 
Billed 
Amount 
$15,182.64 
You May 
so. oo

Sure, this was just one line item of the many but in one fell swoop, my wish had come true and rather than pausing in thankfulness, my heart was palpitating in the angst of lost productivity.

“May I have the wisdom to know when good things are happening, as they are happening” – says Suparna to Tim, often

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