Conscious Aging Book Club Discussion “Still Here”

 

Last month we launched the Conscious Aging Book Club with the selection of The Spirituality of Age.  Over the next few days is the time to heat up the dialogue online as I’ll be bringing your thoughts with me to the in-person meeting of the book club at Parnassus Books, Nashville this Thursday, April 5 at 10:30 a.m. You can join the online discussion  HERE.

Our next selection will be Ram Dass’  Still Here: Embracing Aging, Changing, and Dying.  Our conversation begins today with my blog below and the posting of new questions and prompts following.  This conversation will culminate with the Parnassus meeting May 3.

And now, onto this week’s blog.

–Carol Orsborn

_____________________________________________________

STILL HERE

Ah, the privilege of living larger than life—something I’ve longed to experience through my achievements, by doing.  With a longing this big, I can feel as if I could conquer the world—it feels endless, infinite.  And yet, how ironic, I sometimes write just one paragraph and feel worn out.

Right after the winter holidays, I got just the right kind of cold, just bad enough that I had to cancel my appointments and hang around the house in my jammies, reading, listening to music, staring out the window at the river. I was pleasantly surprised how little I needed to fill my days, how whole I could feel simply existing in my own skin.  I stretched this thing out a full three weeks before realizing that if I didn’t get back to the gym, I’d lose my ability to walk up stairs. Before long, I was back in the fray, saying yes to too many things while having unsettled dreams about cars overheating.

Thank God that during my illbattical, I re-read one of my favorite books, Ram Dass: Still Here: Embracing Aging, Changing, and Dying.  Somewhere in my subsconscious, his wise words and life experience were percolating, waiting for just the right moment to save me from my own exuberance.  Early in the book (p. 43), he relates a tale—quintessentially human—of being invited to speak before an audience of thousands in Denver.  Rather than walk up the steps to the stage, as appropriate for a 63-year-old, he decided to show off by leaping straight to the podium. Only thing is, he miscalculated his strength and trajectory, and took an embarrassing and painful fall.  Even then he didn’t want to lose face, so gave his speech with blood dripping down his leg.  In retrospect, he wishes he had had the humility to “act his age” and then to excuse himself for the brief time it would have taken to tend to his wound properly.

Ram Dass learned valuable life lessons from this embarrassing episode—adding to the bank of his spiritual resources he would have to draw upon when in 1997, just three years later, he suffered a near-fatal stroke. The stroke left him paralyzed on the right side of his body and with expressive aphasia limiting his ability to speak, along with other challenging ailments. According to his bio: “The after effects of the stroke have once again changed his life and vastly altered his day, but he has been able to resume teaching and continues to share and teach.”

Throughout the course of Still Here, Ram Dass points the way to making peace with the losses associated with aging, our unexpected challenges—and especially with our arrogance.  He writes that before the stroke, he had been “prone to overestimating (my) powers. Or perhaps, I was simply more arrogant. In any case, it is fascinating now to discover that the embarrassment I felt over getting older has nearly disappeared with my physical disability.  Back then, I was worried about not looking fit. Since the stroke I have been wheelchair-bound…This was much harder to take at the beginning.  It gets easier as the Ego lets go of its concerns.” (p. 44.)

Ram Dass’ stroke forced him to face his worst fears.  But while there were painful losses, there were also unexpected gifts.  The greatest blessing was the wearing away of the effects of his Ego—the attachment to how others perceived him, to expectations about what kind of life he deserved, even to what we had thought was the meaning of life, itself.  As Ram Dass describes it:  “Behind the machinations of our brilliant, undependable minds is an essence that is not conditional, a being that aging does not alter, to which nothing can be added, from which nothing is taken away…This is not an abstract concept; it is as real as the breath moving in and out of your body, and real as the spirit that animates you.  The greater your mindfulness, the more you will come to know this truth, and to rest in it when painful thoughts threaten to hide it from view.” (p. 49.)

This book is full of practical advice and spiritual wisdom to help us face our worst fears about aging, and holds our hands should we have to transit through the darkest passages, as did Ram Dass, ourselves.  But even if it’s just a cold that’s got you in its grips, or in my case, recovery from that same cold and subsequent miscalculation of my energies, we are reminded by Ram Dass’ story about what matters most.

After refreshing myself with Ram Dass’s words, I took out my calendar and crossed off half the entries.  I am determined to use the deficiencies of my energy as a vehicle that will take me back to where the love is not conditional nor exhaustible—back to where I can simply be.  This is a newfound ability, a gift of age: detaching from the fray of life, and my own ambition, to descend—or is it elevate?—into a life that interacts with the world at a life-giving and age-appropriate pace, while rooted in the soul’s natural habitat–love of solitude. In this place of being, I grow deep and I grow whole.  After years of having to channel the essence of my vitality to make a living, play a part in the world, my spirit has, at last, found sanctuary. Like Ram Dass, I am grateful to have shed so many layers to discover that I may not be who I used to be, but I, too, am Still Here.

_________________________

Please feel free to jump-start the conversation about what I’ve written and your own interaction with Still Here below.  You don’t have to have read or completed the book to comment, but it will be interesting as you revisit this dialogue over the course of this month and dive into Ram Dass’ work yourself to see what other significant takeaways, questions or critiques arise.  You will find some initial prompts below. 

Starting this week, April 6, Netflix will be airing a new documentary titled Ram Dass: Going Home .  The trailer, alone, is worth the price of admission.  You can also access wonderful content centering on Ram Dass, including talks, daily inspirational readings and more at https://www.ramdass.org/.  This page in particular will lead you to his online archives about conscious aging. Click HERE.

_______________________________

To purchase Still Here, please support our independent book store partner, Parnassus Books by clicking HERE.

To subscribe to our sister site Fierce with Age: The Free Digest of Boomer Wisdom, Inspiration and Spirituality, click HERE

TO COMMENT: Please share your thoughts with me about this blog in the comment section below as it is posted at CarolOrsborn.com. 

You can also email me directly at Carol@fiercewithage.com.

_______________________________

Carol Orsborn, Ph.D., is Founder of Fierce with Age, the free monthly Digest of Boomer Wisdom, Inspiration and Spirituality. Carol, who earned her doctorate in the history and critical theory of religion specializing in adult and spiritual development from Vanderbilt University, is the best-selling author of 30 books, including The Spirituality of Age: A Seeker’s Guide to Growing Older (co-author Dr. Robert L. Weber), winner of gold in the category of Consciously Aging, Nautilus Book Awards 2015. Carol’s blog Older, Wiser, Fiercer is available at CarolOrsborn.com.