Chuck’s Place: Beyond Special

A warm heart indeed!
– Photo by Jan Ketchel

To be special warms the heart; to be special tears us apart. Why this contradiction?

Both Carlos Castaneda and his teacher, don Juan Matus, who’s lineage stemmed directly from the Shamans of Ancient Mexico, taught with both humour and piercing seriousness that the greatest scourge of humankind was the need to be special. They pointed to the internal dialogue we all experience that constantly judges everyone and everything, particularly the self, which is judged as either less than or better than everyone else.

From an adaptive perspective those shamans speculated that our ability to make these rapid judgements serves well our ability to survive as we navigate our predatory world. Less benevolently they point to the lion’s share of personal energy that all humans spend grooming and protecting their self importance. This energy is then lost to the evolving human potential, which to access requires a shutting down of the overarching investment we make in feeling and being judged as special.

And yet, feeling genuinely special is thought to be one of the most necessary prerequisites to feeling worthy enough to be in this world and to feeling secure enough to partake of its bountiful opportunities. Hence, the field of mental health places a premium on  attachment and the quality of care in foundational relationships in childhood.

Unarguably, the quality of attention children receive in childhood places a powerful imprint on the incessant internal dialogue they will repeat to themselves as they form an identity and strategy for living. A neglected child might become the adult whose internal dialogue incessantly reminds them that they are not worthy to live other than to serve the needs of others and that they should be grateful that they are even tolerated by others.

The overly valued child might constantly be reminded by their internal dialogue that they are superior, really of royalty, entitled to the adoration and respect of the mere mortals that surround them.

The Shamans of Ancient Mexico would argue that the true culprit here is the internal dialogue itself that channels our energy into defining and upholding our self importance, good or bad, for the better part of our lives. Rather than focus on challenging the message of the internal dialogue those shamans encourage eliminating the dialogue itself, which then frees our energy to explore our true innate potential, unbiased by the judgements that usually limit our sense of self.

From this perspective there is no advantage to having had a special versus neglected childhood. Either way we are saddled with the limiting judgements that steal away our vital energy for life. The real culprit is the internal dialogue, the true dungeon master of our lives. Rich and poor alike are saddled with the same enslavement. In fact, it could be argued that a neglected childhood may offer the advantage of seeking versus merely indulging in life.

The question of specialness is at the forefront of our current world fixation. Our world leaders express entitlement for their special interests and needs over and above the needs of others. Truthfully, persons of different cultures and religions share the same attachment to their own specialness over the needs of competing or just plain other groups.

Family, the foundation of a society, is perhaps the greatest perpetrator of specialness. “Blood is thicker than water” is the adage that summarizes this fixation of the internal dialogue. The Shamans of Ancient Mexico considered it crucial to break this fixation in order to free the trapped energy spent upholding it, to then have it available to be employed in the full realization of selfhood beyond the border of specialness.

Their methods to achieve this coup may sound severe, but they actually coalesce with the Buddhist practice of detachment. The shamans call their practice “erasing personal history.” The practice is to separate the special significance afforded family and loved ones, merely because of their family ranking and role, as well as to reduce emotional attachments. While not denying any of the truths of these relationships, the goal is to reduce them to the level of all human experiences, all entitlements removed.

Thus if someone has failed me, I fully face my feelings, but by removing the pressure of my entitlement, due to familial bonds, I am freed to see all my family and neighbors equally. A world where all is viewed equally is the template for the world we are evolving into, despite current appearances!

Freedom from the constraint of specialness is the practice that readies us for a world built on true universal love. Override the internal dialogue that creates hierarchy and special groupings with universal compassion for all beings.

Love liberates,

Chuck

Soulbyte for Wednesday January 3, 2018

Discipline, stamina, and hard work are the necessary components of change. A tiny seed lying in the ground must use tremendous force to burst through its casing and make its way through the solid earth, past all the obstacles in its path, if it is to make it to the light of the world. So is it with human beings too. They must muster all their intent to stay focused and disciplined if they are to succeed at changing themselves. There is no easy path, but once on the changing path stamina becomes second nature, discipline its fuel, and the hard work that it takes to achieve a goal becomes like an elixir, sought after for its satisfying effects. A deep sense of gratitude, self-satisfaction, and elation eventually arise. In this case all of it well-earned. Keep on changing! You won’t regret it!

-From the Soul Sisters, Jan & Jeanne

Soulbyte for Tuesday January 2, 2018

Let not your worries confine you, nor your implanted ideas define you, for you are so much more than the constant chatter you hear in your head. Worries are just worries and ideas are just ideas and neither have any substance. What gives them substance and power is the constant repetition of them and your attachment to them. Open your mind to fresh ideas, release your worries to the wind, and let yourself be formed anew by eradicating the old and implanting something new. It’s never too late to start over, to begin again, to wipe the slate clean and sculpt a new you, within and without. But keep in mind that making an inside change will actually be more important and, in the long run, more substantial and lasting than any outside change you may desire. Go within!

-From the Soul Sisters, Jan & Jeanne

Soulbyte for Monday January 1, 2018

On this one day, when all is new, let your heart be open to the possibilities that a new year holds. Let yourself step into the new era that is just beginning with your heart open to goodness, generousness, and the kindness that are at the core of the human species. Let yourself be the catalyst to change that you wish for, the world over, for who does not want to change the world? Do it with love, the most powerful change agent there is. The world is ready for it! Are you?

-From the Soul Sisters, Jan & Jeanne

Happy New Year to everyone! Thanks and gratitude for a wonderful year past and a new one to come. We look forward to continuing in 2018 to bring to you the wisdom, insight, and perspectives that come through us as we open to spirit, within and without, and for which we are eternally grateful.

– Jan & Chuck

Soulbyte for Friday December 29, 2017

Keep focused on what is right for the greater world even as you focus on what is right for yourself, for you are part of the greater whole and the greater whole will never be right if the individual parts do not get right within themselves. And what is right? Love, of course! Get that right and the whole world will be right. Focus on love, being loving, loving yourself, loving your neighbor the whole world over. Intend a loving world.

-From the Soul Sisters, Jan & Jeanne

Chuck Ketchel, LCSWR