The Ox and the Rose
When a former lover went to the AA,
a thought danced like a lightning
in the storm of my mind: If only I could
do it for him – I’d be much better at it.
do it for him – I’d be much better at it.
Then, in excited whisper, another man
confessed: You know what attracted
me to you? Your arrogance.
This confirmed he was The One.
I was right. Soon my new love
said about a friend who was dying,
If it were me, I would be even more
heroic. Neither of us had any doubt.
It’s not arrogance, but passion:
a goal summons, and the inner ox
begins to plow that endless
field of stones and stars.
Some call it the Protestant work ethic,
but I see nothing Protestant about
life’s deepest joy. It’s my tender, Catholic
faith in the infinite rose.
It’s for the rose that the ox
never ceases his labor –
the unfolding rosa centifolia
that is even greater than art.
~ Oriana (c) 2010
**
This is a minor old poem. I'm posting it only because it
continues the thread of "extreme effort" (or call it simply
"hard work") as prevention of depression and suicide.
The alcoholic mentioned here once made a remark that stayed with
me: "Alcohol is always there for me. When I need it, it is
there." At the time I couldn’t counter that with a positive example.
I couldn’t tell him what else could always be there for him when he needed it.
Back then, I was a love junkie more than a poet (excusable at a young age), so
I didn't have anything that would be there for me whenever I needed it.
Or, to return to the metaphor that I use in the poem, the inner
ox is always there for me.
And the rose? It's not a goal the way I used to think of a goal.
At one time my goal was to publish in one hundred magazines. I'll never forget
the empty feeling I experienced when I reached that goal. The rose is closer to
beauty -- I love to create beauty. The rose is also a symbol of the soul (a
poem that I read for the pure pleasure of it is "one for the rose").
But I don't want to define the rose. Let rosa
centifolia have a different
meaning for each person.
I can imagine someone saying, "So work is now your drug,
your addiction?" Not only work; I listen to my favorite music the way
other people do drugs. These labels do not bother me. I am never going to seek
a "balanced life." I want to do what I love doing, without forcing
myself to seek "balance" in some boring activities. I found something
that works for me, and I feel enormously lucky.
**
Lilith:
Is there bliss after the inner ox plows for a good
long while? Is there pleasure in the plowing, and ecstasy in
the aftermath of it, when you're all plowed out, so to speak?
I remember reading somewhere long ago that the
masochist doesn't really enjoy pain (as Freud surmised), but needs pain to
break through the blockages to pleasure. That there is so much repression
of pleasure in some people that it takes a being struck or pained (physically
or emotionally) before they can feel a flow of pleasure in their bodies.
Intense effort can be a kind of pain you place on
yourself, until you, in effect, break under it.
Life should be easier, and pleasure should be a
daily experience. When I studied tantra, I recall the teacher saying that
all depression is due to lost pleasure.
Luckily for us, we get pleasure from good poems.
More than catharsis, there is beauty.
You've got me thinking about all this.
Oriana:
And you have certainly made me think as well. What I said needs
a caveat about not going so far that work becomes destructive. And given how
compulsive creative people can be, work is an upper and, like speed, it can
kill.
When I got tired of my depression – a boring state of mind, with
thoughts so repetitive that make me think of an endless pantoum – I
asked myself about the last significant stretch of time when I was not depressed. I had the answer
instantly: when I was both writing articles and teaching at a junior college. I
was simply too busy to be depressed. So the answer stared at me with such
clarity that I practically felt my neural networks remodeling. And I was right.
It became impossible for me to indulge in depression again (my depression was
largely volitional; I could get depressed at will; I know I'm not the only such
case).
For me creative work provides enough pleasure so that it's rare
that I feel de-energized by it; yes, there is pleasure in the steady plowing.
But now and then it gets to be too much, with too many demands from all
directions. Then the best thing for me is to drop everything, lie down and
decide which activity should have priority. And even after I've decided, not to
rush to it immediately, but close my eyes and do my parasympathetic breathing
(the long exhale). And then to remember to work slowly and
take breaks. To do anything not in a manic fashion, but with
slowness and serenity (at least as an ideal). To plod, rather than frantically
thrash and hurry. Done serenely, the plodding/ploughing becomes pleasurable,
and it's a reliable, sustaining pleasure that's "always there for
you." As Hopkins says in
"The Windhover," "sheer plod make plough down sillion / Shine."
Let me say it again, because I feel I haven't emphasized it
enough, since I'm only learning -- that work should be plodding, serene, and not manic
and dangerous to health.
The terrific success of books such as Scott Peck's The Road Less Traveled, with their
emphasis on self-discipline and delayed gratification, can blind us to the
obvious danger: the potential development of anhedonia, the unwillingness
and/or inability to feel pleasure. As long as music and the beauty of
nature give me instant pleasure, I feel I am all right. But I remember the
times when I had to force myself to listen to music or take a walk; those were
also the times when I worked with an anxious feeling, a feeling of failure,
rather than in a more pleasurable "plodding" way.
But I realize I am blessed; all
who have creative work are blessed.
Lilith:
Why some of us take on so much responsibility and drive
ourselves so hard continues to puzzle me. There are people who don't
have that ox going in them.
A cure for depression--be 100% in the present moment. Over-working is one way to be 100% in
the present. In that regard, over-work is self-medication, why you weren't
depressed when you were working so hard, I believe.
Oriana:
Already Ecclesiastes, arguably the wisest book in the Bible,
after demonstrating that all is vanity, nevertheless recommends “whatever thy
hand finds to do, do it with all thy might” (Eccl 9:10)
We don't really understand why some people "don't have the ox
in them." I don't think it's laziness; more likely it's not having a goal,
a direction -- but that's a guess. Persistence is a genetic trait that can be
enhanced through the right experiences. The interaction of genes with
environment may be too complex for us to ever completely understand all human
behavior.
I have definitely been saved by the ox in me -- and by having
grown up around people who'd survived huge traumas and catastrophes, people
who'd been there with Job on the dung hill. The view from the dung hill is
different; for one thing, you see a lot of heroism, which makes the impulse to
kill yourself over a man seem not only idiotic, but shameful, and a disgrace to
my family. Maybe that was a delusion, but it served. I survived my youth.
Anonymous:
I've learned much about depression (reflecting now on one of your
comments), that depth I now call a friend (on some days), a relationship he
apparently isn't comfortable with since he doesn't now visit in the same way.
He's more devious, stays too long, shape-shifts easily. Still, I call his name,
he's in my house, and I demand he lives by my rules. I say, Beware the ox!
Unless you can leave room for other, better oxen. The psyche is on the move in
the sorry voice of depression and will not be denied, even by an ox. What does
it call for?
Oriana:
I trust my ox, a wonderful animal that has been my salvation.
I used to think that my depressive cogitations were profound,
but eventually I saw the repetitive, self-absorbed, and rather pathetic nature
of these various thoughts of self-loathing, trying to discover which tragic
mistake was the original tragic mistake that gave rise to all the other tragic
mistakes, and so on. I was like the hyper-rational mole in Kafka’s “The
Burrow.” I say, Beware the depressed mole! He steals your life away from you.
Not of the healthy, hard-working mole, however. Below is an
elegy (or call it a eulogy) for a Carpathian mole.
I saw him by the roadside, dead –
Brother, how did I know you
He had no face, only blackness,
Teacher, how did you see
Speaking about the (shockingly recent) turning point in my life
when I decided not to be depressed, at that moment I experienced
exuberant self-confidence in the strength of my will. I suspect that confidence
was due in part to my long experience in keeping promises to myself, and in
part to my knowledge that I was descended from and brought up by two very strong
women, my mother and my grandmother, and I had their genes and their heroic
example. I did not doubt that the power of my will was greater than the power
of my wounds.
But in the first few days, I also experienced some doubts. Could
depression really be ended without drugs and therapy? I did not backslide, but
I felt a bit shaky. Yet ultimately I knew it could be done -- not only because
intuitively I felt a great light within me, but also because that moment took a
lot of preparation. Revelation feels instant, but it often takes a long period
of ripening, of accumulating influences.
For one thing, I knew that intense activity in the left
prefrontal cortex could override signals from dysfunctional, over-reactive and
overactive amygdala (what I call "the screaming limbic system" -- the
old wounds). This meant that intense, focused left-brain activity, such as
learning how to speak a new language, play an instrument, use a new software,
or even just preparing a lecture could shut up the dysfunctional deeper
structures. Yes, the wounds of the past were real, but dwelling on them was
dysfunctional. Forgiveness exercises brought mixed effects: in one case the
effect was spectacular, the trauma erased; in another, the memories kept
returning, causing crying fits. Amazingly, what finally worked was the
commonplace if belated insight that there was only so much time left, and that
if I spent that time suffering and crying, I would lose it all
-- give victory to both the trauma-causer and my Anti-Self, and end up
with a feeling that I have wasted my life.
I also knew that cognitive therapy had proved successful in the
treatment of depression. Even earlier, in The Road Less Traveled, Scott
Peck put forth his view, heretical at the time, that psychological
disorders were disorders of thinking. A "mental disorder" was basically a thought disorder -- paying attention to the wrong things, along with an even broader cognitive dysfunction. For instance, Peck said
those who were obsessive-compulsive had trouble seeing the larger picture.
In depression, I felt, the thinking disorder was more complicated due to memory distortion. The larger picture was absent, but so were positive memories; there was tremendous self-absorption (or call it masochistic narcissism); the slightest negative thought produced a cascade of automatic negative thoughts that kept going on and on. But experience showed me that tight focus on a project and dedicated work could end this whole syndrome like a miracle.
In depression, I felt, the thinking disorder was more complicated due to memory distortion. The larger picture was absent, but so were positive memories; there was tremendous self-absorption (or call it masochistic narcissism); the slightest negative thought produced a cascade of automatic negative thoughts that kept going on and on. But experience showed me that tight focus on a project and dedicated work could end this whole syndrome like a miracle.
Theories such as Peck's are important steps even if they are
oversimplified. I discovered that something else was very helpful, and possibly
essential in the long run: the "live!" signal
from others. Luckily, those around me appreciated what I could contribute as a
dedicated teacher, for example. A small but significant group of people kept
saying how much they loved my poems. This too was very healing. I know I
owe my healing not only to myself, but to supportive friends. And to
invisible friends -- the writers and poets who've shaped my mentality and
created in me the trust that life could be worth living.
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