Copyright (C) 1997 by William Mistele. All rights reserved. Writing a Poem Using Focusing The poetry I write is more a direct description of my experience in meditating than it is anything else. Some have asked me to explain what it is I do. One method I use in writing my poems derives from Eugene Gendlin's method called "focusing." (See Eugene T. Gendlin's book "Focusing" published by Bantam Books, 1962). There are six steps in Gendlin's method. 1. Put everything off to the side so you can focus on one feeling or question. 2. Get a direct feeling from your body, an impression you can perceive in a concrete manner, which accompanies your feeling or question. 3. Express this feeling specifically in an image, a phrase, even as a geometric configuration of where the sensations or feelings are in your body. 4. Go back and forth between steps 2 and 3, that is, check and increase the accuracy of the image or phrase so that there is a close correlation or "fit" between your body and your conscious representation of where the sensations or feelings are in your body. 5. Allow now your entire body and soul to open to what it is you have identified as "stuck" energy or f eelings which are not flowing freely within yourself. For example, ask, "What is behind this or underneath it?" This allows what is stuck finally to be accepted and embraced by all that you are. 6. Give yourself a chance to process what you have experienced. Let it become in some way a part of your life. In so far as psychologists are occupied with the needs of the personality, Gendlin, typically, has an individual ask, "What is keeping me from being happy right now?" There are a vast array of definitions for what it is to be happy. Certainly, it is up to each of us to find for ourselves our own answers. There is, however, a strong connection between our body and our feelings. When we feel full of energy, clear, and open to what is happening within us, we are on the path of happiness. The body and feelings have an immense advantage over the mind when it comes to discovering happiness. Let us explore an example. An individual might focus and notice a constriction or pain within his or her heart. Focusing further to increase the accuracy, the shape and intensity of this feeling becomes more clear--it is then characterized as a throbbing, even a burning sensation which carries within it a feeling of loss. The sensation and the feeling of loss become, then, a "handle" one uses to open up the entire body and soul to experience this stuck energy. Total, undivided attention is present along with the empathy which is willing to enter into and feel all that is there. And the whole body stands ready to embrace and accept whatever is discovered. Asking, "What is this?" or "What is beneath this?" allows us to enter into an inner psychic space in which we are purely attentive and receptive. New and original perceptions rather than old thoughts and reactions can then be found. Empathy, love, and concentration are all present at once. The energy the psyche has put forth to hold, contain, and to bury these feelings is now no longer needed. The rigid barriers within the body are free to dissolve and the energy is free to move, to shape shift and be transformed--to be integrated into the rest of our psyche rather than being separate and alone. In this moment, however, we do not identify with our personality or familiar identity. No, no. If we want integration, to be more open and clear, we need to identify consciously with the totality of who we are. To do this, we must be willing to enter the unknown--to embrace that space at the center of our heart where love encompasses all. It is from this place that the stuck and trapped energies and tensions within ourselves dissolve and are then free to flow and move unobstructed. Opening to our sensations and feelings, the loss is then discovered, in this case, to be rejection: the withdrawal of love by others, the lack of acceptance, the way others have attacked rather than tried to understand who we are. The inner tension around the heart is then perceived as arising from an attempt to guard against others' hostility and lack of acceptance. In this "discovery" or insight, there is no longer a need to defend oneself. The acceptance felt toward oneself in this case is sufficient to extend toward the others as well. The body through opening and flowing with the movement of energy has found another way of relating to the world. The energy, then, shifts because the barriers holding it in place are no longer needed. The greater resources belonging to the entire psyche are drawn upon. With this shift and change comes new insight. And the tense, burning sensation with its feeling of loss is now gone. There is in its place a feeling of delight, a sensation like water flowing down a stream. Our task in the final step is to allow this insight to become a part of our life. Without receiving this insight, it is easy for our more familiar but less dynamic routines, thoughts, and reactions to reassert themselves. In this case, receiving this insight becomes a matter of holding the others in our hearts with the same love and acceptance we have discovered we can offer to our self. The most significant difference between what I do and what Gendlin does is that in step 5, in opening to the energy or feeling, I use and flow into the energies of nature as the images in my poems testify. I also, as a spheric magician, draw freely from the vast array of spirits Franz Bardon mentions in his book, "The Practice of Magical Evocation." This helps amplify my ability to explore and animate my impressions And it enables tensions within me which are much more collective, universal, or cosmic than personal to be released and transformed. As a psychologist, Gendlin's prime directive is to help others to adapt and to be successful in the social world as it already exists. His emphasis is on the happiness and integration of the personality. A bardic magician like myself has a different objective--it is to discover spiritual treasures and bear them back to our world, in other words, to capture in poems the beauty of the universe. My intent is not to adapt to but to comprehend and then to transform the world according to a vision. Though I use Gendlin's method, I have modified it so that it is now a wand in the hands of a magician. I chart, then, not just the integration of the personality, but the integration of the collective, global, and cosmic psyche in my meditations. The image or phrase I use as a "handle" on the energy I am experiencing within my body turns into part of the poem I write. In the poem, I pass into a void. I move beyond the boundaries of the world in quest of the harmony and beauty I seek. The entire poem, then, is a record of this journey I have followed on paths of soul and spirit. To avoid excessive explanations, I will begin writing a poem and talk about it as it unfolds. I am listening to a song by Karen Matheson from the soundtrack of the movie Rob Roy. The song is Ailein Duinn. This song is in another language and though I do not have a translation, I notice there is something in Karen's voice which I wish to explore-- Karen sings from her heart and in her heart there is a love which encompasses vast distances and places of isolation. She accomplishes something as she sings which I have not learned to do within myself--to unite sorrow and loss and loneliness with beauty. The heart has this power--to hold all of our experiences in life within a place where stillness and love are joined. I want to enter this place, to join with this source, that this light might shine within myself as well. This will not be easy for me. One of the qualities of love is that it seeks to flow through the very core of another's being. The oneness offered is immense. But this flow is not without a price. In its quest for intimacy and oneness, this love inevitably enters every sealed room where frightening secrets have been hidden away, every chamber where horrors and terrors have been bound and stowed--the flow of love breaks all barriers down. Love creates a magical circle. It weaves together all that is within the life and experience of both individuals. For this love (which I perceive as I listen to Karen's voice) to flow within myself, I must pass through the darkness that exists within me. Listening to Karen's singing: I open myself completely --as a bardic magician: I become the silence which carries the notes of her voice. I become the darkness willing to allow the light and all the images within her mind to shine forth. I bear the tension her heart embraces. I am the willingness that feels what she feelings. I am the stillness so complete her entire being--without diminishing, without a trace of my desires and needs--is allowed to appear here. I am the mirror willing to reflect without distortion her soul and her spirit within myself. And yet, though the mirror is empty, it also seeks to hear what her voice has to say to me personally. The tradition of the troubadour asserts that union with God or Goddess can not be attained, can not be experienced in full, until it is first seen and experienced through the heart of another. There is path of transformation her voice leads me upon. This path leads both through her and through myself. Upon this path we are not separate. This is a path of love and upon it there are moments when all that exists is union, oneness, and bliss. This is not a wish or a fabrication, for love in its essence contains this mystery--only in love can we undergo transformation without knowing where were are going or who it is we are becoming. Love offers us this union that we might find and enter the sacred gate leading to the enlightenment of the world. Listening to Karen's voice, my body is now gone. The surrounding world is no longer here. I would listen in this moment so completely that my mind is like the sky, my feelings the sea, and my body as quiet and patient as the mountain. My listening becomes the mirror so clear that her love, heart, and soul can appear within it not just as an image or representation seen at a distance. I allow the magic in her voice and song to create in me the very source of life inspiring her. The feelings and energy within her song now begin to appear within me. They are able to move freely drawing upon all that I am and all that I have ever experienced. In this listening space, her heart is now free to speak directly to my own. This is communication from one heart to another heart. This is a dialogue between two souls involving the entire being. In her voice I find a love so pure, I can feel it now flowing around my fingertips--a cool wind flows in the evening before the moon rises. The air is liquid. It brushes through my hair. Standing behind me, I feel her hands on my shoulders. I am protected by her love, sheltered by her heart. She offers me her own heart and soul that I might know my own better--again, this is not my wish or hope. This power to join and offer support is precisely the essence of her own soul which she is sharing in her song. The wounds within myself, the pain and anguish, they are strings upon a lute and she reaches to touch them with hands of compassion and healing. Her song, and her heart from which it arises, is willing to walk with me right now by my side through the darkest places of my lie--places I can see, I can visit easily, but which I have not been able to share with anyone else. I feel her love as an actual energy moving through me. As I listen to her voice I sense the reason this healing power is within her is that she is willing to become the Earth. Within her eyes, within her heart, she too would bear, endure, and nourish all so they may come forth in their own time, in their own way, and be reborn, transforming, attaining all that they were ever meant to be. I feel that grace, that acceptance, that love within her heart as her voice speaks to me. With Karen's presence and heart clearly here with me, as liquid energy streaming through my body, I visit again those places in my life where I was indeed lost and lonely--so lonely I felt I had died, or that awakening within a dream, I turned and looked around myself and saw a million broken hearts silent and unable to speak. But Karen remains by my side as I enter this dark place. Still, this is not easy to do. I this moment, as I hold a cassette player in my hand, my thumb hesitates to push the play button and again listen to her song. The pain is overwhelming. It washes through my body like an undertow striving to tear apart my identity and carry it off. The pain is so total it feels that in entering it there is no way out. The pain weighs me down. There is a place of lostness within me so vast it is like a dream from which part of myself has never awakened. I hesitate to enter lest even more be taken away from me than before. But tracing the images I am actually seeing in this moment, I write these words to the poem, having spent many years walking alone through deserts, forests, and mountainsides: Does the mountain stream cry As its source--the clouds-- Drift off into other skies? Do its falls weep in sorrow and loss? Does it pause silently in its pools Its depths dreaming of endless loneliness before flowing on? If my answer is "No," Can I persuade my heart otherwise? Your voice walks beside me Through these mountains, deserts, and forests Where, though breathing, seeing, and dreaming, I feel I have died Because love has left my life behind. Clearly, I can enter, as in a walking dream, these moments of immense tension which I have experienced before. I am there now. I have invaded the past. I am who I once was. But to be here is to experience a numbness which can not feel, a sorrow which does not release. But Karen's voice is here with me also. She says to me, "You can feel. It does release. I am able to experience here and now all that you are going through. You are within my heart and my love flows through your soul." I feel the mountain pools and the streams again. I am one with them. And I feel the clouds moving on just as love having propelled me forward on my path of life then turned away from me and left me alone. But she is within the pools and the streams as well. Karen's voice, like a magician's, evokes within me the love which exists within this very moment within her heart. And so in my body where I feel the tension, the numbness, the pain, I feel her energy flowing also through me. Her energy has become my own. I could sit here for years by myself doing focusing and still this energy would never release. But the bard, in listening, has allowed the heart of another to infuse his own heart with new life even amid this wilderness. And so I write: But your voice reshapes my life In your song I hear you say, "This pool you see It dreams of clouds and seas But its still waters reflect more-- The stars dwelling in the vast expanse of space Their songs of Joy take eons of time Each others' hearts of find And yet they are all joined as one As your heart and mine Within this moment Within this poem Flow as one stream of love. The child understands not the words Understands not the reasons for its suffering But the mother is there to comfort She holds him within her arms In my waters cool and deep Rest and sleep Let go Be released And yet expand also--" There are places within us which are so vast, so empty of human companionship, that to enter them is to risk losing our understanding of who we are. But these places as well are part of an even richer and more wonderful world--they are a part of the Soul of the Earth. Here are found all the treasures of spirit the human race has ever known and will ever discover. Karen, with her heart of gold, leads me on paths through this wilderness of the soul. I am no longer within what is called the collective unconscious. I am not supported by the wisdom of any culture on earth. I have entered the domain of what is better called the global or cosmic unconscious. Here water itself testifies to that aspect of Divinity which it embodies--universal and comic love. Because the magnetic powers within Karen's heart reflect and carry the Soul of the Earth itself, I am safe traveling here. The desolation I once faced but could not bear, she has transformed through the willingness of her heart to flow through my own with her love. She has given voice to the Life which infuses us all. There are places of the spirit we may not enter without another by our side. There are transformations we can not undergo unless another is there to guide us. I assert that the feminine soul has the power within it to bear and give birth to any destiny human or divine. This is my experience as a bard. This is why I am so attentive to the treasures found within the heart of women. To the treasures within the heart of this women I yield: I flow and let go and, entering into the mysteries of water itself and the heart of nature, I write: Dissolving Sinking down into your heart, your love I am now the underground stream Gently weaving through the caverns beneath the ground And I am curtains of rain sailing upon the wind I am the sea and the iceberg drifting The whale's song echoes through my body As other whales listen a thousand miles distant I am the mist embracing the forest with her arms I am the grape on the vine As it ripens As it ferments into wine Capturing the lightning with its song Joining earth and sky The taste of the grape Sings of the treasure I have found within your heart: In the coldest, darkest place of emptiness Though invisible and unknown A fiery light still shines A heart still celebrates the Love Binding the universe with its might-- From your heart to mine In this moment This flame is passed, And so I have come to see The stream, the falls, the pool and its dreams Fear not loss nor emptiness Nor the loneliness where the soul dissolves But flow as part of a Sea Whose Song is Infinite Love. It is not caprice nor exaggeration when I write the words, "Infinite Love." Karen's heart reflects the Beauty of the universe even as the Soul of the Earth reflects within itself the spirit of the sun, moon, and stars. I am now in the center of Karen's heart. I am one with the Source inspiring her. I move as spirit and the spirit indwelling her fills me with its love. This joining of spirits, this sharing from heart to heart, is not a method unknown to our world or in any way inappropriate. It is not just troubadours and bards who imagine such things. In any serious spiritual anthropology, shaktipat, guru yoga, and the transference of power from heart to heart, are the essence of the teachings made real. Part of Tibetan Buddhist, e.g., in its method of initiation, is to enter and experience the heart of the Dalai Lama. This is done in fact as part of the visualizations which are used with a guru in many tantras. Just for a moment, if you feel free, come with me. Visualize the Dalai Lama standing in front of you. See his smile. Look into his eyes. This is not so difficult. You can imagine a friend you are close to. If you visualize him or her right now in front of you and listen to words he or she might speak, you may be able to "feel" something of the other's presence entering you, flowing through your body. This is the same thing. For a moment, become a dot of white light and flow into the heart of the Dalai Lama. Let the entire universe for a moment be precisely what you feel and sense within his heart. Here is this moment is a sea of compassion which is infinite. His heart contains worlds upon worlds all enfolded by the light of the enlightened mind which he shares freely with others. This field of energy of his heart is also like wind and water when they are gentle and kind and nourishing. It is an open expanse which is inexhaustible. It is a sea of time where the mind discovers itself to be a mirror clear, open, and luminous, a mirror whose very nature is compassion. It is no wonder, then, that this same man repeats again and again, "As long as suffering remains to sentient beings, I will remain to serve," or, "My only religion is kindness." These words epitomize the essence of a sea of energy which his heart embraces. These words are spoken by one who would lay the ground work for establishing on earth a genuine cosmic religion. Karen's heart also touches on the universal and cosmic. Her magnetism is that of Venus: the willingness to combine and join what is separate so that healing and beauty may be found, so that love may be fulfilled. Listening to her voice singing Aileen Duinn, becoming the space where the light of her soul can shine, I have entered a sea whose essence is Infinite Love. So in summary, when I listen to another, I listen with my entire being. When I follow a feeling, like Orion in the sky, I am the eternal hunter. I move across all boundaries. I overcome all barriers. Like others before me, I am a servant who is guided by the One Light which holds the universe within its heart. But put more simply, I enter a waking dream. In this dream, I taste, feel, perceive, hear, and touch the energies which arise within the stillness of my heart. I allow them to appear, to use all of my life as the strings of a lute which they are free to take and play any song upon of their own choosing. Willing to be the earth and the sky, the seas, the volcano and the lightning, I become the source which inspires the other's being so that I too might become transformed, so that the paths of the spirit might be opened and shared with others. Again, this is what bardic magicians do: we find treasures of soul and spirit and share them with the world. Our meditation is the open space of the heart which we never cease exploring. Our poem or song is a record of our journey, of what we have been permitted to bring back and share with the world. But the poem is more than this. As is my experience when I listen to Karen singing, the poem/song is a magical gate. The poem is a sigil drawn not with lines but with metaphors which evoke a spiritual presence. The poem is the blood of Divinity called forth by the bard's voice and carried by the wings of spirit. It is the flame moving free and without obstruction from one heart to another heart. The poem is a joining of of one in love creating that moment in which God and Goddess reach for and touch each other within our hearts. Back to Transpersonal Psychology Page