Thursday, December 12, 2013

Acceptance of the Overwhelming True-Self

It’s been a while since I've done of these posts. Probably because all of the stuff I could have blogged about I've journaled about instead, primarily because well that stuff is really just too personal for the interwebs…that and I’m pretty sure no one really wants to hear about those things, they’re honestly pretty much whining.

However, there was something…or somethings which are somehow in a complex yet not complex way related. In short I’m just gunna spew some stuff out and it may or may not be coherent.

So our spiritual envoy, a Jesuit Priest (Fathah J), gave us a set of reflections that he compiled for a spiritual dinner conversation. Basically we had to read and reflect on them before the dinner. That’s a minor detail; the more important detail is they’re by Richard Rohr, a Franciscan. Now, I know that people have mixed feelings about Rohr and that’s fine, but I ask that no conclusions are made yet. Aight, setting the stage. The first part of these reflections (which are both theologically deep and personally applicable) focuses on what Rohr calls, “The Immortal Diamond of the True Self.” Sounds pretty mystical to me, totes dig it. In a nutshell, Rohr talks about discovering one’s “True Self” which is, “…our souls, our inner destiny, our true identity. Your True Self is that part of you that knows who you are and whose you are, although largely unconsciously.” Rohr makes the valid point that we are very much afraid of our True Self as we cling to a false self that is primarily comprised of our thoughts of who we think we are. However, just as Rohr says, “…but thinking doesn't make it so.”

So we have to mine for that Immortal Diamond of our True Self. It’s kinda like the resurrection where we ask who will roll this rock away? This rock being our egos, specific life experience, culture, etc. It’s a rock that prevents us from seeing our True Self who we are called to become…who we are called to change ourselves into. This True Self is beyond temporal categories such as country, race, sex, etc. But is founded, grounded if you will, in the divine. Rohr sums this up nicely saying, “I believe that Christ is the archetypal True Self offered to history, where matter and spirit finally operate as one, where divine and human are held in one container.” Aquinas and Jon Duns Scotus both argue that God is not merely a Being but Being itself. This has a pretty significant implication for our True Selves. If God is Being itself, that means we by the mere fact exist, are a part of that Being and that Being is a part of us. That, consequently, means that our True Selves isn’t just a discovery of who we are a part from who we are told to be but also the recognition of the presence of God within us. “The True Self is both at the same time, and both are a total gift.” Thus we shouldn’t let anything compromise it, “What will it profit you if you gain the whole world and lose your own soul?” (Matt. 16:26). What is really cool about the True Self is something early Christian writers understood from the beginning, “…this discovery of our True Self is also at the same time a discovery of God…The two encounters with a True God and a True Self are largely experienced simultaneously and grow in parallel fashion.

Bangin’.

So being out in SoDak, where nothing is familiar, where nothing and no one has expectations of who Mike O’Neill is, has allowed me to really go deep and engage with the search for that True Self. Part of that has been the overcoming of a great personal challenge: the desire for perfection and control of things to draw them closer to that perfection. When it comes to accepting one’s True Self there is only acceptance of what is and forgiveness of shortcomings. This is where God is found. Rohr notes,

“We don’t come to God (or truth or love) by insisting on some ideal worldly order or so-called perfection, but in fact we come “to knowledge of salvation by the experience of forgiveness” (Luke 1:77)—of reality, of others, of ourselves. One reason why I am so attracted to Jesus and then to Francis is that they found God in disorder, in imperfection, in the ordinary, and in the world – not in any idealized concepts. They were more into losing than winning.”

Once again…Bangin’.

This art of acceptance (and of letting go) leads to a much greater sense of gratitude and seeing the good and God in the world. Basically it makes it easier to see Being itself in Being. Granted this isn't like a pair of glasses you throw on and then forever see the world that way, of course it’s a struggle but when you've got that perception…damn life is good. Yeah, may not be ideal, but that’s fine cause otherwise it’s still pretty damn good.

Which leads me (yes, it ain't over yet) to kind of a real life rock removal (remember the whole ego, life experience stuff?). My good JV buddy Mike wrote a pretty bangin’ blog post which I will share: http://michaelprate.blogspot.com/2013/12/holy-longings.html. Basically it’s awesome and we were talking about it in the car on the way home from the radio. He had mentioned that he was talking with his mom who had called him, “overwhelming but in a good way.” He told me that he had thought, “That’s Mike O’Neill in a nutshell.” I was a little perplexed at what he was saying but in the end it made sense. He went off to explain that (and I say this not as an ego self-confidence booster thing, I honestly can’t stand that kinda stuff) he believed that I was overwhelming in the sense that I’m so vulnerable, genuine, and loving that sometimes people just can’t handle it. Like it’s almost too much all at once that maybe they don’t know what to do with it or perhaps even be intimidated by it. And that, in a vocational sense, it would take a special kind of person to be able to handle all of that love. My only thought…shit…never thought about it that way before. Positively Overwhelming. Is that even a thing? Guess so.

Now I say this again not to say how great I am or anything remotely close to that. I’m much more instinctively going to be critical of myself than proclaim how great I am. All that I am is who I am and that’s it. I’ll admit that I have a huge desire to love and in particular those close to me. I just want to pour myself out to them. I just want to do anything I can to make them happy and express my love for them. Now thinking about that, I can see how that can make people uncomfortable and I can think of many particular examples. Just part of being overwhelming in a good way. I also want to love people I don’t know as well, but my introvert-tendencies make that very difficult and I’m stuck with a desire to love rather than loving itself. Like that drunk person in the orchard behind our house, or that elder who has an hour long story to tell. I want to show them love, but, it’s just so draining that I just find myself saying, “I can’t do this right now.” In fact I rarely find myself saying, “I can do this right now.” But hey I’m human and its part of who I am. That’s not to say it’s not something to work on but it is an acceptance of who I am, of my True Self. God gives everyone gifts that are unique and talking and showing love to those whom I don’t know is just not the greatest gift God gave me as a human being. That doesn't mean I shouldn't try, but it isn't where I’ll do the most good and it isn't where I’ll connect with God the most (again not to say that I can’t find God in those interactions). Rather, I’d have to say that God has gifted me with the ability to love those who I am close to. It is truly a grace that my person is all about close, deep, inter-personal relationships. They pretty much sustain me and tend to be the least draining of interactions, if not life-giving. It’s where I recognize, in a subconscious way, that I am a part of Being itself and Being itself is a part of me.

So to kind of wrap up and connect (admittedly in a half-assed sort of way) these themes of the True Self and being an overwhelming person in a good way…I’d have to say that accepting and acknowledging that I am an overwhelming person is just a part of who I am and a part of my True Self, it is God working through me I guess. Perhaps? Not entirely sure. But that’s a thought. Either way I feel a final quote will sum up all this nicely,

“We are love, and we are made for love, and our natural abiding place is love.” –Richard Rohr

Also if you've made it this far in this post, thank you. I know this is long and normally I’d apologize for that, however, I’m a long winded talker, a circular thinker and I take forever to express myself, and that’s okay, it’s just me. So as always thanks for reading! Prayers for Jessica, Mike and myself are always appreciated! Also for those from home, I’ll be home from December 21st to the 28th and I couldn’t be more excited!

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