Chuck’s Place: Love & Laughter—Tools Of Detachment

Incredible lightness of being... waiting to be freed... - Photo by Chuck Ketchel
Incredible lightness of being…
waiting to be freed…
– Photo by Chuck Ketchel

If we understand karma to be unfinished business, that which grounds our flight, then we can understand detachment as the necessary tool to free our incredible lightness of being to find fulfillment in this life and beyond. Detachment unhitches us from the energetic drains that keep us tied to people and situations that impede our freedom. Energetic drains take the form of intense emotional attachments, be they fear and hate or, quite the opposite, unrequited love. Either way, attachments keep us tethered, and, until released, we cannot journey deeper into life.

But what are the nuts and bolts of detachment? Often enough, Jan and I write about the formal process of recapitulation to free and reclaim all the entangled energy knotted in the lives we’ve lived. Love and laughter are tools at the heart of the recapitulation journey.

Prior to his assassination, Gandhi had expressed, “Even if I am killed, I will not give up repeating the names Ram and Rahim, which mean to me the same God. With these names on my lips, I will die cheerfully.” He also said, “If I am to die by the bullet of a madman, I must do so smiling. There must be no anger within me. God must be in my heart and on my lips.”

Rahim also means compassion. When Gandhi was actually assassinated, he raised his hands in front of him, in a common gesture of greeting to his assassin. And he did call out to God, according to some accounts, speaking the words “Ram, Ram.” In speaking these words, and with this final gesture, Gandhi forgave his assassin, leaving this world completely untethered to what his assassin had done to him, but also thanking the man for delivering him to the next stop on his journey.

Jesus similarly cried out to God while on the cross, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.” He also left this world completely untethered to his accusers, who delivered him to his future.

From wherever we come, we land; we move into life on this earth. It’s where we are now. If we turn around we turn to stone and can move no further, according to a common concept. Recapitulation, however, requires us to turn around, but with the intent of removing all the energetic strings that keep us bound in regret, anger, sadness, longing, and hate. In retrieving these energetic strings of self, we can turn to the unfolding awesomeness of continuing our journey untethered.

Buddhist wisdom guides all who leave this world to glance only briefly at the bardos of their discontent and stay focused on the light. To remain attached to the emotional ties of our life, loving or traumatic, forms the seeds of our karma and interrupts our journey to spiritual wholeness and enlightenment. Gandhi was well aware of this, as he faced his assassin in the common greeting of respect, namaste, meaning “I bow to you; I bow to the God within you.”

We all travel in and out of the light and the dark all the time... - Photo by Jan Ketchel
We all travel in and out of the light and the dark all the time…
– Photo by Jan Ketchel

To release emotional attachment to those who harm us frees our karmic load. We are then freed to proceed into new life unburdened by emotional heaviness. Karmic attachment requires us to stay put, until we can free our spirits to move into new life.

The love or compassion that Gandhi and Jesus portrayed transcends the attachments we have to our lives, interrupted as they are by our assassins. Instead, it accepts the reality of our unexpected launching into a different journey. Those that launch us must then grapple with their own karma—for the choice made to act from the dark side. We can extend the love of compassion to them, as they continue their journeys into that karma, and appreciate our own opportunity to free ourselves, at their hand, from attachment to the dark side that would have us stew in powerful emotions. If we look instead to the dark side and send it love—the last thing it wants—it releases its talons from our light being.

Laughter, like love, is equally freeing of energetic bindings. The Shamans of Ancient Mexico discovered that the greatest hook to our energetic selves from the dark side is self-importance. When we are offended by another, or by life circumstances, we are drawn to the seriousness of anger, pain, and resentment. These emotions, though transiently valid and necessary to encounter during recapitulation, are equally capable of keeping us attached to the dark side, for the dark side looks for ways to hook us, to entrap us indefinitely by feeding on the energy of our fixated, negative emotions. We can completely break the chains of these offenses by learning to laugh at ourselves.

We can laugh at our attachment to seriousness. We can laugh at our own human frailty. We can laugh at our tendency to judge the self and other. And we can laugh at the frailty and foolishness of others. If we can find our way to the divine comedy of self and other, we are freed of all karma associated with the injustices we have engaged in and those that have been foist upon us—however serious!

Can we learn to laugh at our predicaments? - Photo by Jan Ketchel
Can we learn to laugh at our predicaments?
– Photo by Jan Ketchel

Love and laugher are powerful tools that, when genuinely engaged in, free us from the binding attachments that tether our fulfillment to our karmic lives. As we exercise these powerful tools, we offer ourselves the opportunity for new and different outcomes. Love and laugh! Try it, and see what happens!

Loving and laughing,
Chuck

Soulbyte for Wednesday February 4, 2015

A warrior knows that all beings have a compassionate heart and that all beings are capable of kindness. But a warrior also knows that the human animal must be fully known and contended with if true compassion and kindness are to be experienced and utilized. A warrior knows how capable the human animal is of keeping secrets, especially about what is untenable to know and accept about the self. A warrior knows that the deeper secrets about the self, what lies in the shadow self, must be fully known and contended with if one is to truly own and have available the innate compassion and kindness that lies at the heart of every human being. A warrior knows that all that one is must be revealed for the true virtues of compassion and kindness to fully arise and be utilized for the good of the self and the good of all. A warrior knows that to become a compassionate and kind being is a noble goal, but that to truly be so virtuous, without ego or need, one must do the work of the self first. Only then will a life of true compassionate service be fully available and experienced. Only a true warrior, one who has done the deeper work of the self, knows what it truly means that to give is better than to receive.

Soulbyte for Tuesday February 3, 2015

A path of heart is just that, a path that asks the heart to lead while simultaneously asking the heart to continuously open to new opportunities and experiences. We can let our heart lead or we can ask our heart to take us on a new journey at anytime. The real key, however, is trusting that our heart really does know what is best for us and that it will take us on a journey of meaning, leading to fulfillment of who we are in this lifetime. Be sure that once you open to the heart as guide, your life experiences will change and your higher self will become known to you more deeply each step of the way. A path of heart is a path of higher consciousness, of which you are all comprised. Be open and expectant. Be prepared for new life each day and your path of heart will provide the rest.

Soulbyte for Monday February 2, 2015

Happy Groundhog Day! A good day to study our behaviors! As we are in the midst of a winter storm it looks like spring is a ways off, but the Soulbyte today suggests we plan for it anyway. The audio channeled message from Jeanne will be posted tomorrow, Tuesday, but here is today’s Soulbyte to start off a fresh week:

With tenderness, look upon the self and others as both fallible and infinite, as human and spirit, as terribly uncertain and keenly aware. This dichotomy of self, this wandering fool and this perfect magician that you all are, is where all that you seek and all that you will become merges to do the work of discovery. Within the self, do not blame or hate. Do not dismiss or overindulge. Do not demean or inflate, but instead take full responsibility for the raw truths of where you have been and who you are now, on this day. These raw truths offer you the material of your transformation, the secret formula by which you will grow and change.

Take charge of these raw facts of self, painful though they may be. Study, nurture, and provide them with all that they need so that from them you may grow your new self. You are all full of potential, contained within that which you were born with, the life you were born into, and that which you have evolved into so far. Just as you might wish for the new growth of spring and prepare seeds for spring planting, do the same for the self. Now is the time of planning, seeding, and tender nurturance of new potential. All that you are now, and all that you will be, is contained within the seeds of self. Take over these seeds and in your own creative way set about the seeding of new life for the self. Only you can do it!

Chuck Ketchel, LCSWR