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Searching For Nirvana

Nirvana.

 

The word conjures a state of perfect peace. It is the endpoint of the spiritual path and marks the attainment of enlightenment, where there is no more suffering or desire.

 

I’m reading about nirvana for the book I am writing. I am interested in parallels between spiritual paths and the “healing journey” from trauma, as it is sometimes called.

 

While reading Robert N. Bellah’s Religion in Human Evolution, I came across the following quote from Steven Collins’ Nirvana, where he wrote about the Buddhist journey to nirvana this way:

“The Path to salvation is … a journey through time from the city of the transient body to the city of timeless and deathless nirvana: the city without fear, as one of the earliest texts to use the image calls it.”

The “image” referred to here is of a fire going out —  fear being extinguished.

 

Could it be the desires we create and the pain we suffer are all responses to fear? When I read the above quote, I thought: Maybe nirvana is like being in the optimal physiological state of arousal, the Window of Tolerance, and the path to nirvana is avoiding the physiological states of hyperarousal and hypoarousal — our ingrained reactions to fear.

 

Could enlightenment really be that straightforward? It certainly would explain why mindfulness meditations are so useful for overcoming traumatic stress.

 

Perhaps like me, you have heard there are two basic emotions: love and fear. From sensorimotor psychotherapy, I learned to elaborate on this fundamental distinction with the action tendencies of defense and daily living. We all have to be able to defend ourselves against threat. And we all have to feed ourselves, exercise, work, play, take care of each other, fall in love, reproduce, sleep, and so on. We thus have to react to our fears and nurture what we love. And perhaps the less we fear, the more we are able to love. And the Window of Tolerance is that optimal level of arousal within ourselves where we can maximize our connection to the people and things we love.

 

Collins also writes the following about nirvana:

“Nirvana is the full stop (period) in the Buddhist story, the point at which narrative imagination must cease.”

When I read that, I thought, Yeah, if you can just drop the storyline and all the ‘what if’ scenarios, and just be with what is, then it’s easier to extinguish the fear.

 

We talk a lot about dropping the storyline in the treatment of trauma. To heal trauma, you have to learn to drop the underlying story told through defenses — that story the body unconsciously tells every time it gets triggered by old traumatic reminders.  So it’s not just the stories we tell about ourselves — those conscious narratives about what we want to avoid as much as who we aspire to become (that old divide between fear and love showing up here too). It’s also the body’s continual and unconscious scanning for the possibility of danger — what Stephen Porges calls neuroception — that keeps us reproducing fear and imagining danger.

 

It’s nearly impossible to live without fear, since fear plays such an integral role in keeping us alive. Which is why nirvana is so profound and rare (and requires so much meditation to reach) — it’s the point at which there is no more action tendency towards defense, no more natural, unconscious impetus towards protecting oneself from the inevitability of death and suffering. It’s a bit like no longer being human.

 

I don’t think I’m ready yet.

 

But I do like thinking of nirvana as like the Window of Tolerance, an optimal zone within us that lacks the physiological reactions of fear. In trauma recovery, it's the idea of reaching a point where the trauma narrative eventually sloughs off like an outgrown skin, because you no longer need to remind yourself there’s something dangerous in your past that the moment you’re off guard will return to haunt you in some new rendition. Because dropping that fear — and knowing you will never pick it up again — also sounds a lot like nirvana to me.

 

I once heard the story of an old enlightened Buddhist monk who was envied by the government officials in the country where he lived. The government officials worried the monk’s peacefulness might spread to the people, ruining the peoples’ attachment to fear. And without their fear, the government had no control over the people. So one night, the government officials sent some low level soldiers to kill the monk.

 

The soldiers broke into the monk’s small house. They began stabbing him. Although in pain, the monk saw the holes in the soldiers’ shoes, and their bony half-starved frames. Wincing from the wounds, he began to tell the soldiers where they could find a few coins to buy themselves a meal, maybe even repair their shoes. Overwhelmed by the monk’s compassion, the soldiers began to cry, and fled without murdering him.

 

I tell this tale not to give you ideas should you ever have paranoid government officials send soldiers to kill you. But rather to imagine the kind of compassion humans are capable of when they no longer feel fear.

 

That’s Nirvana.

 

 

 

References

Bellah, Robert N. 2011. Religion in Human Evolution. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press.

Collins, Steven. 2010. Nirvana: Concept, Imagery, Narrative. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.

 

© 2015 Laura K Kerr, PhD. All rights reserved.

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Comments (14)

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Thank you Cathy and Tina.  Compassionate to the core! 

As Jane Stevens said, "You can't convince a wall"!! Love that!  So on my (non credentialed) learning journey, I've learnt that it matters that you approach people who are already 'on line' with the possibility of seeing the usefulness of ACEs etc.  One would have to be tuned into TIC practises or in that area.  Bigger mainstream institutions don't understand the significance - yet! 

My window of tolerance of many desiring to maintain ignorance is at least widening!

Perhaps Nirvana is where there is are very few/no ACEs in the world!!!

Thank you, Jamie, from sharing from your experiences as a healer. What you write reminds me of the blessing of helping others in deep need. And thank you too for sharing Teihard de Chardin's wonderful reorientation towards the reason why we are here. 

Thanks, all, for such a rich and thoughtful discussion.  I appreciate that the healing journey, particularly as wounded healers, is a profoundly spiritual journey. My experience is that when I am in a particular healing role (e.g., facilitating a Traumatic Incident Reduction session), I am serving as a container for another to process and transform their traumatic experiences. As such, I often experience a sense of fearlessness, which I think is necessary in that role/ setting.  Do I have fears in other settings? Sure. Those aren't big and they happen.  

 

I do think that compassion comes from a place beyond fear, and that is our connection to our spark to the divine or timeless experience or nirvana. I love the Teilhard de Chardin quote, 'We are not human beings having a spiritual experience; we are spiritual beings having a human experience.'  What a good problem to be trying to figure out how to integrate the two.

 

Thank you all for your presence and work.

 

Peace,


Jaime

What an interesting article, Laura! I like the idea of looking as living in the window of tolerance as nirvana! Though I am not sure if I agree that this would mean we're living without fear. We don't know if the monk wasn't afraid. He might have been and still acted out of compassion toward the soldiers rather than blindly defending himself. And maybe he was able to do that because his fear stayed within the window of tolerance. It did not overwhelm him thus making it impossible to chose how to act. To me, healing is more about that: Choice. I have created a space between trigger and my reaction to it during which I can chose how to react.

 

Also, I hope healing is more common than you claim nirvana is! In fact, I am looking for women who are willing to share their stories about transforming their relationship trauma into a thriving life, so hopefully they are more numerous than enlightened beings

 

Last edited by Rachel Buddeberg

This is such a great discussion! Thank you, Jane, for creating ACEs Connection and making possible all this wonderful flourishing of ideas, activism, passion, and knowledge. I think we are showing that credentials aren't as significant as commitment, critical engagement, and the reflective wisdom gained from experience — and for many of us, the "school of very hard knocks."

And Mem, 

 

A trauma-informed, trauma-actively addressing, and inclusive community that works includes everyone.  Everyone is important so for example at the University of Michigan 34th Annual Child Abuse and Neglect Conference there will be a session led by I believe she is a florist from Tawas City, MI.  She will be discussing the role of parent mentors.   Tawas has some of the highest rural infant mortality and child abuse reports in the state of Michigan.  I was born there and grew up just south of the county border.  

 

Everyone is important and their voice needs to be heard, in fact, I believe where we have not done nearly as well as we could be doing is by not including those who "don't have credentials".  Once I was a kid dressed in rags living in a broken down trailer without indoor plumbing with parents on welfare.  I was one without credentials or a voice who knew what I knew and my lived-experience has much to offer.  

 

Dr. Bruce Perry said something like, paraphrasing here "Those with lived experiences who overcome this trauma have a type of wisdom that can be gained no other way."  I completely agree.  Every voice is important.

 

We are all God's Children.

 

Thank you my friend across the Ocean!

Tina 

Last edited by Former Member

Mem,

My visioned utopia is a world where everyone understands how ACE scores impacts their everyday life, despite maybe their own zero to low ACE. And a world where we all work together to impact resiliency. Imagine if we could end homelessness, addictions, domestic violence.... 

 

For this to be a reality it will take everyone, especially those without "credentials", because there are more people in our communities without credentials than with. I'm encouraged by your words and hope you will continue to inform others and work toward a community of healing. You are needed. Your work is essential. Thank you for all you have done and are doing.

 

~ Cathy

As usual Laura, you have put your thoughts into such a reflective, powerful and sophisticated way.

When we’re too hard on ourselves to get it right we must keep in mind that Kurt Cobain didn’t reach Nirvana either! 

 

“With regards to your question about compassion and ACEs: Compassion naturally begin with the self, and what we know harms us. Because Western society has constructed the notion of the hero as an unwounded, perfect being, I think we have also developed a notion of compassion that is a bit god-like too. But in actuality, most of us care about things that have impacted us personally, or someone we know”.

 

It is trying to get that balance right.  Enough fear for protection against attack and yet be in a more loving (safe) place.  What if you peel off the “outgrown skin” and someone sees your vulnerability and misuses their ‘insight’? Often my fear.  - Not necessarily a conscious thing they’re doing.  There are some situations and people in our modern world that one does need to guard against.  Yet hypo or hyper arousal is not going to be helpful at all.  Just how much we have control over this is still a bit of a mystery to me…  Stretching that Window of Tolerance without the surprising triggering that occurs without one’s consent. 

 

Tina, I think it is both altruistic and the desire to self heal that impels us to move forward and try to spread the word about ACEs etc.  It is the motivating factor.  Speaking subjectively I think both are good/make sense to begin and sustain such a drive.   You are doing such a fine job of this!  I wish I could do more than I am without having to have the right ‘credentials’ etc.

 

I’m not sure about the increase in compassion without the fear component in terms of the general population.  I believe many people feel like it’s a rat race and one must do the best they can to survive – ie we’ve all got it hard.  Or as Laura said it affects someone in their family etc.  Like all movements it needs those affected to commence it, foster it, etc to gain any traction. 

 

I didn’t realize just how passionate/obsessed I am about spreading the understanding of ACEs until I was talking to someone (who was in a position it seemed to me to make significant changes) who said, ah yes, ACEs are yet another program among hundreds, that I either wanted to grab him by the shoulders and shake him or stamp my foot like an impetuous child because he wasn’t getting how important it was.  Take my word for it, I wanted to say, I’ve lived experience and some intelligence and I’m telling you this is a game changer. I was quite shocked I felt that strongly…

 

Such a game changer that in fact when I think about friends, people who’ve had a hard time I automatically count up their possible ACEs and Resilience scores!!

 - In my head of course!

I’m not trying to be a Debbie Downer but these are red herring type questions I think need considering as we find the best way to move forward.

Very much admire your writing Laura and so looking forward to your book.

I love this:  ...it's the idea of reaching a point where the trauma narrative eventually sloughs off like an outgrown skin, because you no longer need to remind yourself there’s something dangerous in your past that the moment you’re off guard will return to haunt you in some new rendition.

 

Thanks for posting this.

Tina,
 
Thanks you for sharing from such a deep place. That feeling of being an outsider is painful, and I think medicine in particular has a bad habit of expecting physicians to appear as perfect, even heroic, and to hide their own wounding and difficult emotions. I'm glad there is more attention being paid to burnout. I hope over time more physicians will, like you, find the courage to look at their own woundings and take the time to heal themselves. The world needs more HEALED (or healing) wounded healers!
 
With regards to your question about compassion and ACEs: Compassion naturally begin with the self, and what we know harms us. Because Western society has constructed the notion of the hero as an unwounded, perfect being, I think we have also developed a notion of compassion that is a bit god-like too. But in actuality, most of us care about things that have impacted us personally, or someone we know. 
 
I just think it's wonderful that you are challenging the silence and speaking out. I personally find other people's courage inspirational. So thank you!

Thanks Laura.  I don't want to take a lot of your time.  But I am not coming at this from the point of being a doctor.  In fact, it has been incredibly difficult to see myself as a doctor.  I have always felt like a stranger looking through a foggy window when it comes to being a doctor.  

 

I have never fit in because I have 10 plus aces starting as an infant and the adult spiderweb of traumatic continuation that I have not been able to extricate myself from that goes with a severe trauma hx.  I was coming from the place I live --- with the Demons that Jesus drove out of the crazy man in the herd of pigs who flung themselves to their death --- I live that fear inside daily though with less intensity than once I did.  

 

I have always felt like I was living --- injustice to others when I would read about it or hear it and it was as if I was that other individual and there was no boundary between myself and other (but I came out of all that trauma without a self).  

 

So when I work so hard to spread the word of ACEs --- is that compassion or some diseased attempt to self-heal?   I think it is maybe some attempt to right an injustice and I know I would never had this type of motivation or drive if these things had not occurred.  

 

I sometimes become annoyed at others who I judge (and I said judge) as callous and unconcerned for the suffering of others, but I think I would have been callous and unconcerned (or at least ignorant) had I not had these overwhelming experiences.  

 

That is kind of what I was wondering?   I hope I make sense.  

 

Thanks.   

Have you read Danielle Ofri's What Doctor's Feel? A lot of her book responds to your question/observations. She begins the book by telling a story of being an intern and helping a woman she found totally repulsive. She didn't do a very good job. As her career develops, and she became more experienced, her compassion grew, but there was also the issue of burnout  nipping at her heals. The book is  a great discussion of doctors and feelings like fear, and thus she also shares from other doctors' lives and research. She also writes about how in the culture of medicine fear isn't dealt with, and how this erodes compassion, and also contributes to burnout. 
 
Fear can motivate compassion -- like a mother fearful her child will be hurt will risk her own safety. But I think fear, especially when habitual, erodes at our capacity for compassion.

Is one capable of compassion while experiencing fear? Just curious.  

 

Certainly without, I can only imagine being freer to be compassionate.  If one does things that "seem" good when burdened with fear ---- are the actions really good?  If not good what is it one is doing (my thought maybe still trying to find a way to heal self?)

 

I simply do not know.  

 

Thanks Laura

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