I seemed to come to a new understanding of an old question today.
Listening to Pema Chödrön, the Buddhist nun, on an audiobook this morning and she was suggesting (I paraphrase) you pay attention to the question: ‘Are you opening or closing?’
Those of you who’ve hung out near me will know over the years I’ve talked a lot about clenching and unclenching.
Today, I notice that I close a lot. Especially in response to overwhelm at others’ sadness.
I close to my best friend having a terrible time.
I close to people in a FB group I’m in who are putting out requests for money and support.
I closed the other day when reading about the Great Barrier Reef bleaching white and basically dying. I often close to the facts of global warming and imminent/growing climate crisis.
I close to reports of the reality in Syria, Yemen, Burma…
I close to Trump, to Brexit, to possible nuclear war.
I close to Z when he is having a less than positive moment.
I close when wandering through the Christmas shopping mayhem thinking about people in the future asking why we didn’t stop buying stuff.
I close when I think that children have mined the ingredients of my Mac, my phone.
I close when I read about my friends having a hard time, struggling in the world the way it’s currently set up.
What I’ve realised today is that when I notice the closing and don’t turn away (either from the trigger or from the act of closing) I can take more action.
I can contact my best friend rather than letting another day go by without properly saying anything to her.
I can donate *some* money to *some* people in the group, rather than turning away in guilt and not supporting anyone.
I can continue to read books that offer clear-eyed ways forward to the climate crisis (like Doughnut Economics that looks at both social justice and the earth).
When I stay open to the closing (and maybe sometimes open more), I can take more action.
So, that’s my focus right now. Asking ‘Am I closing or am I opening?’ and noticing what happens when I, well, notice.