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Waking Up to Reality: Byron
Katie and the Art of Freedom
by Carol L. Skolnick
Byron Katie had an extraordinary "spiritual awakening" in the midst of
an ordinary small-town American life. With the publication of Loving What Is: Four
Questions That Can Change Your Life, she shows us that enlightenment is within everyone's
reach, one question at a time.
Many people spend 10, 20, 30 years in sincere spiritual study and practice, only
to realize they still hate their jobs, their mothers, and the noise coming from the
neighbor's blasting stereo. Sound familiar? If so, according to Byron Katie, it's
because we're seeing everything upside down. What we believe to be true, isn't, and
what we've been told works, doesn't. We blame and fear and react because we've not
gone within to find out what's true for us...but only because we haven't known how.
For 15 years, Katie's been working to change that, using a remarkable self-inquiry
process she calls The Work. Neither spiritual path nor psychological modality, The
Work, which consists of four simple questions and a "turnaround," contains
elements of both, showing us how to heal our lives by understanding our thoughts.
Does it work? At Katie's free public programs, approximately 300,000 people thus
far have come to The Work with a broad spectrum of issues -- from minor annoyances
to seemingly insurmountable difficulties -- and experienced the power of those simple
questions in their own straightforward answers to them. Now, in the pages of her
new book, Loving What Is: Four Questions That Can Change Your Life, Katie's program
is spelled out step-by-step for all to use on their own or with a partner.
One of Katie's favorite sayings is, "I am the perpetrator of my suffering; but
only all of it." She learned this one morning in 1986, after a 10-year descent
into depression and hopelessness. Weighing more than 200 pounds, hooked on painkillers,
unable to bathe or leave her bed for weeks at a time, she landed in a halfway house
for women with eating disorders. It was on the floor of her attic room there that
she woke up one morning to discover nothing was as it had previously seemed: only
love remained. As Katie's awakening expanded, agonizing old concepts would return.
Self-inquiry then took birth inside, allowing her to meet each painful thought as
teacher and friend.
What hurts, according to Katie, is believing what isn't true for you -- arguing with
reality. Her own "undoing," wordless at first, was about examining thoughts
like "My husband doesn't love me," and "My children should understand
me." Katie realized she could only know her own mind. Eventually she was able
to convey her experience of unfoldment as a simple written process: the four questions
-- Is it true? Can you absolutely know that it's true? How do you react when you
think that thought? Who or what would you be without it? These questions are, Katie
says, "the ones the heart has been asking for eons."
Now, chances are, you haven't woken up on the floor in a permanent state of rapture;
perhaps you're someone whose boss has just yelled at you, and suddenly you're not
feeling so spiritual. Your mind creates stories and you're attaching to them: My
boss doesn't appreciate me. Nobody respects me. I shouldn't be upset about this.
How can The Work help you?
In The Work, everyday thoughts like these are the route to freedom. Co-written with
Katie's husband, the distinguished author-translator Stephen Mitchell, Loving What
Is provides the means to "undo" beliefs that cause suffering...along with
dozens of examples of The Work in action with people of all ages and temperaments:
an idealistic teenager, a cancer patient, victims of serious trauma and of a volatile
stockmarket.
Beginners in The Work are exhorted to "Judge your neighbor, write it down, ask
four questions, and turn it around." So we list on paper every petty thought
we've ever had about the boss, the family, men, women, terrorists...and do a full
inquiry on each statement. Take "My boss doesn't appreciate me": using
the first of the four questions, you'd ask, "Is it true?" Yes or no? Upon
deeper inquiry -- question two: "Can you really know that it's true?" You
may find you can only know your reaction to what the boss says and does. Question
three: "How do you react when you think that thought?" What do you say
to your boss, what do you do? How do you treat yourself and others when you think
she doesn't appreciate you? How does this single story color your entire life?
The final question is, "Who or what would you be without that thought?"
If it never occurred to you that the boss doesn't appreciate you, how would you feel?
Last comes the turnaround: "My boss doesn't appreciate me" gets turned
around to its exact opposite, "My boss does appreciate me." Could this
be just as true sometimes? Other turnarounds: "I don't appreciate me" (my
hurt feelings could stem from believing what my boss says about me) and "I don't
appreciate my boss" (especially when I think she doesn't appreciate me).
Katie's Work is a surgery that cuts to the core of reality, letting us know for ourselves
that we are always okay now...even in annoyance, anger, or fear. As Katie says, "Confusion
is the only suffering." Confusion stems from wanting circumstances -- or people,
or who you are -- to be different. To inquire deeply and deconstruct the story leaves
us more peaceful; we "love what is." Of course, some stories may be working
for you; you can keep those. "The Work is just four questions," Katie says.
"They don't even say 'answer me.' "
But if something hurts, you may just want to inquire. Loving What Is can help you
do that anytime, anywhere; all it takes is a pen and paper, and the willingness to
wake up.
Do The Work and Change Your Life with Byron Katie will be presented from 6:45
to 9:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 6, by the Learning Annex. Byron Katie presents what
she calls "The Work," which developed from a life-changing experience that
left Katie with the profound awareness of how her own desperate suffering had shifted
to a state of absolute joy. This class will show you step-by-step, clear and vivid
real life examples, of how to use this revolutionary process for yourself. Byron
Katie experienced what she calls "waking up to reality" in 1986. Since
then, she has introduced The Work to hundreds of thousands of people around the world.
She is the co-author with Stephen Mitchell of Loving What Is, demonstrating how four
simple questions can really change lives. Registration is $44.99, $39.99 for VIP
members. Call 1 (800) 872-6639 and mention Course 2135MN. The location has not been
announced.
Carol L. Skolnick has been published in magazines (Glamour, The Sun, DM News, The
English Journal), in anthologies (Kay Allenbaugh's Chocolate for Women series, published
by Simon & Schuster), and on the web (paraview.com, Writer Online, mxaprimo.com
MillenniumSHIFT and elsewhere). She is an essayist, humorist, sometime poet and would-be
performance artist.
Copyright © Carol L. Skolnick |
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Oct 2004
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