A Search for My Treasure…

A tale in 3 Parts, this being:

Part 1 – The Pyramids
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I knelt down, prayed… asking for the courage to start again…

That was me almost three weeks ago, near the base of the Great Pyramids at Giza. It was a journey I began two years ago and was stopped at the gate of departure by a shock. My father took very ill and began the road that led to his death. The week before I was a button click from buying a ticket that would have brought me to the Pyramids and an Israeli journey; I decided it was time I discovered more about my Jewish cultural roots. But, as with the ways of life, the next two years would be filled with a type of learning and gut wrenching emotions that I would wish on no one. Even knowing my growth as a person in those two years, very much due to the trials faced, I would not have wished that experience on myself. It was too much.

Yet, that hard time is what I was offered and perhaps in some ways it was what I needed. I did what needed doing, I discovered the loving people I had around me, and thank all goodness I engaged the situation as best as I could, in the end finding myself only with the regret and question of how I could have been kinder toward myself during that time. If my words seem vague there is a good reason for it… I’m writing now not to discuss the hardships, but the treasure I’ve found along the way.

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Flying in to Cairo from Kenya was the worst travel day of my life. With a 4 hour delayed flight, digestive pain, flight broken bag, and internal strife I did not end up sleeping easily in my fan cooled pension at 3:30am in Egypt’s capitol. The next day though I got up with hope, had some fuul, Egypt’s national food of slow cooked fava with pita, and went to buy my train ticket for a few days later to Aswan on a journey to the upper Nile and the Valley of the Kings. Skipping the subtle foreshadowing, I did buy the costly, overnight ticket, but never made it to Aswan, and am now in Israel a bit earlier than expected. I will soon tell you why… but first, a little buildup…

It was a tiresome day in Cairo, a city that is quite powerful to walk through. It felt worlds better than Nairobi, the people were nice, the streets dirty, and the air filled with a Muslim soul unknown in the West. Oddly, the whole scene was refreshing even though my fatigue was excessive. I should have gone back to my room to rest, but after getting the ticket I went to the Egyptian Museum. As my friend Steve put it, “it’s like going to the Met (Metropolitan Museum in NYC), but where they took everything out of the cases and put it on the floor in front of you.” That’s just what it was. Sure, some things were in displays, but how crammed in everything was makes you feel privy to the worlds largest, coolest, and best organized pet rock collection. The highlight was of course the golden mask of King Tut (not on the floor in front of you but in a rather secure case). The whole experience is a marvel with the quantity and variety of artifacts from so long ago.

Marvels aside, my mind was clouded with other thoughts. I was very, very travel worn. The next day I explored Islamic Cairo and the spice markets. I walked through the poor section, avoiding the tourist section, and encountered quite of few kind and overly excited Egyptians who wanted to talk to me even considering my two word Arabic vocabulary and their equivalent level of English. The area was combination of China Town NYC, with the feel those streets made distinctly Egyptian with cups of tea everywhere and a Walmart / Home Depot fusion, casting the neat sections of the stores into large slots in the street-walls, brimming with Barbie Dolls, metal goods, lights, food, and every cheaply made foreign product imaginable. The old culture of trade is this city is still rich. The mango juice is fresh, the falafel is great, the heat is rough, and after a bit of soccer with some local kids it was time for me to crash again… though, my heart was hurting, I was feeling very uncertain about my journey.

It takes a great deal of resolve and angst to find oneself in some of the most amazing places in the world, as my good fortune has carried me, and still find a way to be trapped in your own head. Well, I’m very good at this self-transgression. If anything, I’ve practiced hard at avoiding what’s right in front of me. And that’s where the treasure hunt of this story takes a turn toward the climax of two years, more if you consider the practices, the devoted, powerful practices I’ve been engaged in for years; yet… that I’d turned into malice.

“What’s he talking about?” Well, time for a….

PHILOSOPHY BREAK! —>

It is possible to find “god”, “union”, “grace”, “connection”, in many, many endeavors. Some people find it in loving their family, some in the garden, some in religion, others get lucky and see Mary in the mop water, and then there are those that pursue meditation and similar paths that have been specially crafted to explore the self and the majesty of the human condition. A point of note, these latter paths are not ‘better’ they are just very focused with clear intentions in mind.

For me, martial arts, yoga, meditation, Buddhism and other practices have been a significant part of my journey. They are powerful tools, very much so… but I have learned a lesson recently and this is the crux of it: The most powerful tools have the ability to do the most good, as well as the most harm, to oneself and to others.

Disciplines are dangerous. They are a commitment, a form of faith. The most devoted athletes, the most austere spiritual practitioners, and the most committed pioneers cast aside the obvious, the failures, the trials set before them in the face of the instinct that screams, “there’s MORE! I seek a greater, deeper Beauty and I’ll die before I fail to touch it!” Yet, at the same time, discipline and the fortitude of the human will can be twisted to serve destructive ends. Consider elite soldiers trained for war, or, perhaps in some ways worse, the many self-destructive behaviors people have created to punish themselves.

As I can see, it’s a matter of finding true and honest intentions. If you want love that’s what you’ll find, if you want pain, you’ll find that too. The scary part is, the more extraordinary the tool, the more carefully designed the formula of discipline, the more pure the intentions need to be. The harder you practice, the more solidified, for better or worse, the intention in your being will become.

<— END PHILOSOPHY BREAK

And so I find myself, the next day, kneeling on the stones outside the Great Pyramids, at the culmination of years of trying to get there… and I’d trained myself, twisted my heart and body, extinguished my flame so much (how and in what way is another tale), that I could barely see what was before my eyes. Literally, I was so worn from years of poorly directed discipline that my heart, mind, body, and soul were weakened into a spiritual and corporeal blindness. There, before the Pyramids, it felt as though I was looking at them through a pane of glass, a television monitor of ego and suffering, one that I did not know how to turn off or better yet smash with a giant hammer. Indeed my being felt truly broken.

Oh my though, the Pyramids are spectacular, truly epic and worth the journey; but after all the build up, and all the efforts I’d put myself through to ill ends, and though almost everything in me wanted to give up hopes and dreams on the spot, wrenched out of me by pain… there was a place in me, something small, that knew better…

I closed my eyes, pressed my hands together and prayed. What I prayed to, I don’t know, god, sure… but more so to a FEELING, to a feeling of love. I asked for Courage. I asked, even though I’m scared and weak and tired, for the Courage to start again.

And as I write it now, I realize that in that moment, there before the Pyramids, I’d found my treasure. Ever read The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho? If you haven’t you should, it’s short and powerful; if you have you’ll get the extraordinary irony I refer to. In another vain, as Kipling said, to “make one heap of all your winnings, and risk it on one turn of pitch and toss, to lose and start again at your beginnings, and never breathe a word about your loss.” Indeed I’m breathing many words, but I take that last line to mean not only humility, but letting go of the past. To start anew, to know in your heart that it’s possible, to be willing to ask for a chance, and to find that place of love inside when all else is pain, are greater treasures than can be measured.

Oh my again, as I said I just now realized that of all the craziness that was to come over the next week, that there at the base of the Pyramids was where a new page in my journey began. If life is a gift, then what more is another chance to live… to have a fresh heart?

But, as with many gifts and good fortune it takes time and contrast to make differences stand out. And that’s what comes next, a week of living with the Bedouin peoples in the Giza suburb, going to healers, sharing in their Ramadan, and exploring what it means to be myself.

Till next time and part 2…

-Lee

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Oh, the places you’ll go… looking within, listening without

The first bit of that title is the name of a story book. It’s about a kid growing up and going places. Well, I’ve been going to them, and I’m getting better at it as I go. There’s a catch though, and this is the second part of the title; I’m not getting “better” in the ways I might have expected, but that’s OK, it’s even good. As a teacher has told me (and a good song has sung), “you don’t always get what you want, but sometimes you get what you need”. Well, I’m getting what I need out here. It’s a bit of a taste of mortality, a side dish of humility, and ample portions of beautiful opportunities to learn, love, and let go.

Out here by the way is in a tented lodge on the cusp of Serengeti National Park in Tanzania. There are lions, buffalo, hippo, rhino, elephants, giraffes, acacia trees that look like giant Japanese bonsai with 2 inch thorns, yellow savanna, snow capped mountains, crystal lakes, golden birds, and right now with the help of satellite Internet I write with the aural backdrop of crickets humming on a cool African night.

Yes, I laid the setting out in one sentence, and there’s a good reason for that. You’ve all, mostly, likely, seen National Geographic, been to a zoo, well, this is a thousand times better just as you’d expect; go on safari (means journey in Swahili btw) once in your lifetime if you can, it’s worth it, but there’s a better reason to come to East Africa. A lesson that can only, truly be taught by seeing the cities and villages, feeling the energy, breathing the air, and talking with the people.

First an anecdote: In a good book I’ve been reading, ‘Eat, Pray, Love’ the idea came up that every place, people, person, has a word, a single word that describes it / them. In the book, Rome was supposedly Sex, New York was, if I remember right, Achieve. Well, it didn’t take me long to figure out the quintessential word for the regions of Africa that I’m exploring: Hungry. There’s a look in people’s eyes in the street, a look of need that even the impoverished areas of Central America did not have.

In a single second anecdote this can be summed up: In an open market in a little village I was walking with people on my tour (here with my Mom on a guided safari) when we passed some working women and their cute little children, no more than 2 or 3 years old. Well, one of the little ones came up to a nice lady on my tour, took her hand and started walking with her. Oh so precious it was. The lady’s heart was so touched. Shortly after a little one did the same to my Mom. As he let go and my Mom started to walk away she noticed the kid gesturing with his hand in the universal language of “give me”. The mothers of the children didn’t seem to mind this at all and there were repeat attempts. This is a microcosmic example of the hawkers and touts you’ll run into everywhere, from city to village…

But, the word ‘hungry’ takes manifest and more benevolent forms here as well. There are also very kind and hard working people. There are the score of Masai for example, a native tribe, trying their best to live their traditional lives. Yet, many of them have had to turn those lives into a tourist zoo just to make end’s meat (or end’s spinach and corn mash which is what many of them subsist on). None the less; they work hard and many are genuinely good people. These villagers are only a cry from being in the shoes of the Native Americans of a few hundred years ago: being boxed into areas and having strict limits placed on the way they run their lives. What would you do?

I’ll say this: if I were hungry like that, physically, all the time, I would be the same way. And that’s where some of my lessons of compassion have come in on this journey. I went from Western Europe to this in a heartbeat. Wake up call! I’ve been meditating regularly too. I’ve been offering myself space and even a bit of love. My dreams have been teaching me lessons. And per my style, I’ve met some lovely locals and travelers and had some amazing conversations.

It seems that when the layer of ‘hungry’ is peeled away there is a genuine caring in these people. I’ve found this more and more the further I get from the cities. It’s not all that different from going from a city to rural land in the US, the change is stark and appreciated.

Today, I skipped the group game drive (aka, driving in the jeep on bumpy roads and looking at animals) and decided to do my own thing. I went on a guided walk around the lodge. I was the only one being led by two guides (really). One was a native that wore traditional garb and carried a spear the other was a translator. To note, the spear was not for show, there was a pride of lions nearby as the fresh tracks would tell and buffalo that might charge without notice. I then checked some e-mail, decided where to go after this tour, did some yoga, ate with my group who’d gotten back, did some martial practices, and then, creme de la creme, I was taught to throw a spear, hunt the lion style by the Masai that quite enjoyed glimpsing my exercises. I got past some of the layers with a few of these people. Thank goodness.

Safari means ‘journey’, well, I’m journeying inwardly and outwardly. Inside and outside I’ve been looking and listening and each day I feel that I’m getting better at forgiving. I could get into what I mean by that, but then it’s another two pages of philosophy and I think this e-mail has had just about enough of that.

Smiling from Africa,
Namaste,
Lee

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A Little Walk Down Bennett at Night

How can I begin,
Without starting from where I am?
Can a travelers heart be free with love so close at hand?
In twilight hours, sitting long, composing simple hymns,
Painting salt-water taffy dreams from teary wells within.

The air is crisp, I walk
Night flower blooms, street lamp to display
Sweet plum flowers inner glow
Despite the chilly, bitter Spring

Kiss’d by bless’ed fairy fire
The thought lends warmth to a cool heart.
A little church, vine covered,
Glows too with old love, held deep within worn stone.

Buds and bricks with inner light,
A wanderer still seeking his,
Luminescent moon hidden, but bright…

A reflection or a lesson?
The street welcomes my lonely feet.

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Waiting for a Girl in the Rain by Starbucks

Lay me bare!
Just breath, breath…
Peal off this cover!  Erupt from inside!
Come back to the breath…
Come back to the breath…

No more!
Because you know what breathing is?
It’s no control
Life, stripped bare,
No meter or rhyme, except when you want to,
But this time…

Guess what?
I’ma do it in style:

Green cap, feathered brim
Bow and arrow with the finest trim,
You’ve ever seen…
Riding off into the sunset
And guess what?
I’m gunna have a yo-yo too,

Cuz you haven’t seen a badass till you’ve
seen someone ride a horse and pull off
the flying trapeze at the same time…

And just as I’m doing that,
I’ll be stopped dead in my tracks

Because I’ll see her
Maid Marian…
Walking
Down
The path
Rockin, gown, tiara, and a fine set of hoola-hoops
And you haven’t seen a Maid Marian till you’ve seen a gown wearing,
tiara toting princess rockin’ a double hoola-hoop
struttin’, down, the block.

And I’ll step off my steed, yo-yo in hand and ask,
“Ms. Marian?  Would you be so obliged as to walk the dog with me?”

We’ll link arms, hoola-hoops and yo-yo’s in hand,
And I’ll take a deep…
full breath.
This time, without even trying…
Just breathing, and living, and passing the time,
With you.

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Maitri on the Bus

I’m on a bus to Riverdale.  The chapter I just read on Maitri, Loving Kindness, is still resonating through my being.  I’m paying attention.  There was an automated announcement over the loud speaker: “Customers, if you see something say something.”  Orwellian thought police is a step away, only a step.

There are advertisement slots that run from the back to the front of the bus; they’re above the seats behind the hand-hold bar.  Typically there is room for eight separate ads.  Today, all are filled with the face of a Latin-American teen girl and to her right in blaring yellow, the exclamation, “FREE Abortion Alternatives.”  The last add slot toward the back is empty with signs of rippage, clearly one of the same ads was there as well.

In another seat in front of me sat a Hispanic fellow who was reading a book.  He stepped off a number of stops ago.  The book was called El Effecto Mariposa, translated: The Butterfly Effect.  I don’t even know what it’s about, but I’ve heard of it.  It certainly doesn’t pertain to the typical, vogue topics of the day.  Here was a man asking questions.

I too am asking questions.  I’d just read a chapter of Pomo Chondron’s, When Things Fall Apart.  That’s what woke me up a bit from the stupor I’d been in all morning.  It’s not going to last though, I can feel the awareness fading already.

At least it was enough time to write down these words.  What are we doing?  Where is our “free” society turning?  Religious politics on advertisements in NYC?!  Then compounded with McCarthy type audio encouragement from a neutral female, digital voice.  What movie am I in?

Than, thank goodness, there are still those reading about the Butterfly Effect and Loving Kindness.  People know something is off; this blatant contrast between what is in our hearts and what our society is manifesting is scary.

One almost has to inundate themselves in their own world just to feel that it’s all OK.  I do it.  It’s what I wake up that things get frightening.  No camera could have caught that experience on the bus.  Maitri brought me to tears and then I woke up to see.  Then I wrote in down, if merely, to keep my sanity.

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