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Exploring our Intention in Service
Alternative Therapies in Health and
Medicine, May 1996, vol. 2, no. 3
by Frank Ostaseski
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This innovative
model of conscious care provides a spectrum of collaborative volunteer
programmes, residential care, and training which aim at cultivating
wisdom and compassion through service. Founded in 1987, the Zen
Hospice Project is the oldest and largest Buddhist hospice in America.
A long-time Buddhist practitioner,
Frank uses his knowledge of both Buddhism and Western psychotherapy
in his work of de-mystifying the care-giving process.
The following article is based
on a talk given by Frank Ostaseski at the Munich conference on Death,
Dying and Living in November 1996.
This
afternoon we are going to explore our intention in service, and
I think it's helpful to start with the basic, but true premise that
real service does not happen unless both people are being served.
At an installation ceremony at the Zen Centre, a student asked the
abbot, 'What can the Dharma teach me about serving others?"
The abbot answered, "What others? Serve yourself!" The
student persisted, "How do I serve myself?" To which the
abbot responded, "Take care of others."
Every day I work with people who are dying, and some
of these people are very tough. They may have been living on the
streets for some time, or be angry about their loss of control.
Often they have lost their trust in humanity; turning their heads
to the wall, they withdraw. Most of them don't care beans about
Buddhism. These people don't trust easily and if I am going to be
of any use to them at all, I have to be particularly clear and honest
about my intention; if I'm not, they will quickly sniff out my insincerity
and sentimentality.
Some of the individuals I work with blossom, and
the way in which they die will be a great gift; they make reconciliations
with their long-lost families, and they find the kindness and acceptance
they have been looking for their whole lives. It can be quite wonderful
to be around these people. But I don't do this work because it can
turn out so well. Chasing such rewards brings exhaustion and ultimately
leads to manipulation because we're so busy trying to create the
conditions that lead to a reward. In so doing we miss the current
situation. I do this work because I love it and because it serves
me. I try to see myself in each person that I serve, and I try to
see them in me. Those I work with know and trust that, in fact they
come to rely on it. They understand we are in it together.
You see, at the very heart of service we understand
that the act of caring is always mutually beneficial. We understand
that in nurturing others we are always caring for ourselves, and
this understanding fundamentally shifts the way we provide care.
I'm not the good guy coming to the rescue; I have no white horses.
Instead we become what I call 'compassionate companions'. 'Compassion',
when literally translated means ' suffering with others' and 'with'
is the most important word, because it implies belonging. 'Companion'
is 'one who travels with another'. So in this relationship there
is no guide, there is no healer and no one healed; we simply accompany
one another. And as my friend Reb Anderson says, "We are simply
walking through birth and death holding hands."
If we are paying attention as we walk into the room
of someone dying, we immediately understand, in a visceral way,
just how precarious this life is. As we understand that, we also
come to see how precious it is. When we keep death close at hand,
we become less compulsive about our desires, we take ourselves and
our ideas a little less seriously, and we let go more easily. We
become more open to generosity and to love. Paradoxically, working
with the dying will make us kinder to one another. In the face of
death everything we normally identify with ourselves will either
be stripped away by illness or given up gracefully-but it all goes.
'I'm a father', 'I'm a mother', 'I'm a hospice worker', 'I'm a sexual
deviant'-whatever our notion about our identity, it will go.
On the surface, the lives of the people I work with
seem to be very different from mine: they're black, I'm white; they
shoot heroin and have AIDS, I don't; they're homeless and alone,
I pay a ridiculous amount of rent and I have four teenagers. It
would be easy to convince myself that we are separate, after all
a few months ago we might have just walked past each other on the
streets. But the wonderful thing is that now, in the hospice, we
are thrown together in the most intimate of circumstances. And suddenly
in the midst of all the activity, in the details of service, we
find a meeting place. We find that we belong together.
Prior to any action of the body, thought, or speech,
there is a moment of intention that we need to be aware of because
clarity about our intention gives us choice about how we can proceed.
A moment of contact with our intention can break our habitual patterns
and keep us from operating on automatic pilot.
In the Zen tradition there is a practice called dokusan.
It is an interview with the teacher. The student is instructed to
wait outside the teacher's door, where they must gather themselves
completely into the moment. They have no idea what is waiting for
them on the other side of the door, they have no idea what their
teacher will ask them, so they have to be ready, flexible and open.
Going into a dying patient's room is like going for dokusan. Ideally,
our bodies and minds should enter the room at the same time. Sometimes
that's not the case, is it? We leave our minds way behind sometimes
we even leave our bodies behind! Or we enter the room days before
we ever got there.
There was a volunteer I know who did this. He went
to a patient's bed and the patient got very excited saying, "Oh
I'm so glad you're here. I finally have someone to talk with about
my dying." The volunteer got very excited and said, "Yes,
yes, yes. I'm going to get books by Elisabeth Kübler-Ross and
Steven Levine and I will be back next week and we will talk all
about it." Of course the next week he came back with piles
of books and the patient said, "Yes. We're watching the football
game on TV, please come in. Watch the football game with us."
Too often in care-giving, we're not so much looking
to see what serves but to confirm some idea we have about ourselves.
We want to be somebody. We say, 'I work with the dying/ with the
emphasis on 'I', and invest in the role, not the function. I sometimes
call this 'helper's disease', and it is a much more rampant epidemic
than AIDS or cancer. We try to set ourselves apart from other people's
suffering. We set ourselves apart through our pity, our fear, our
professional warmth and even our charitable acts. This work has
nothing to do with charity.
A few years ago a woman at our hospice was just a
few days from her death, and she was quite sad and depressed. This
seemed natural to me; she was dying. But a nurse suggested that
we start her on Elavil, which is a medication used to enhance people's
moods and usually takes about three weeks to start working. I asked
the nurse, 'Why do you want to prescribe this medication?"
She replied, 'Well, she's suffering, and it's so hard to watch her
suffer." So I said, "Maybe you should take the Elavil."
This attachment to the role of helper is old in most
of us; helping others provides a needed sense of power or respectability
that we collect at the end of the week like a pay cheque. But if
we're not careful, this identity will imprison us as well as those
we serve. After all, if I'm going to be a helper, somebody has to
be helpless!
My friend Rachel Remen, who runs the Commonweal Cancer
Centre in California, speaks very beautifully about this. She says:
"service is not the same as helping. Helping
is based on inequality, it's not a relationship between equals.
When you help, you use your own strength to help someone with less
strength. It's a one up, one down relationship, and people feel
this inequality. When we help, we may inadvertently take away more
than we give, diminishing the person's sense of self-worth and self-esteem.
Now, when I help I am very aware of my own strength, but we don't
serve with our strength, we serve with ourselves. We draw from all
our experiences: our wounds serve, our limitations serve, even our
darkness serves. The wholeness in us serves the wholeness in the
other, and the wholeness in life. Helping incurs debt: when you
help someone, they owe you. But service is mutual. When I help I
have a feeling of satisfaction, but when I serve I have a feeling
of gratitude. Serving is also different to fixing. We fix broken
pipes, we don't fix people. When I set about fixing another person,
it's because I see them as broken. Fixing is a form of judgment
that separates us from one another; it creates a distance.
"So,
fundamentally, helping, fixing and serving are ways of seeing life.
When you help, you see life as weak; when you fix, you see life
as broken; and when you serve, you see life as whole. When we serve
in this way, we understand that this person's suffering is also
my suffering, that their joy is also my joy and then the impulse
to serve arises naturally - our natural wisdom and compassion presents
itself quite simply. A server knows that they're being used and
has the willingness to be used in the service of something greater.
We may help or fix many things in our lives, but when we serve,
we are always in the service of wholeness."
Caring for those who are suffering, whether or not
they are dying, wakes us up. It opens up our hearts and our minds.
It opens us up to the experience of this wholeness that I speak
of. More often than not, though, we are caught in the habitual roles
and ideas that keep us separate from each other. Lost in some reactive
mind state, busy trying to protect our selfimage, we cut ourselves
off and isolate ourselves from that which would really serve and
inform our work. To be people who heal we have to be willing to
bring our passion to the bedside; our own wounds, our fear, our
full selves. Yes, it is the exploration of our own suffering that
forms a bridge to the person, we're serving.
This is how it works. A few years ago a very, very
dear friend of mine, someone I loved very much, was quite sick with
AIDS. I had known him for many years. In just one afternoon he lost
his ability to speak, hold a fork, stand and to formulate a coherent
sentence, and it happened during the afternoon that I was taking
care of him. It scared the hell out of me. Me! 'Mr. Hospice'!
I did everything I could to take care of him. He
had enormous fistulas and anal tumours, and constant diarrhoea.
We moved incessantly from the toilet to the bathtub and back to
the toilet again. It went on all night. I was exhausted and all
I wanted to do was get him to bed so I could sleep. I tried every
trick I knew. I was cajoling, I was manipulative, I was paternalistic.
I changed wardrobe more often than Madonna.
In the middle of one of these moves from the bathtub
to the toilet, he spoke. From his garbled mind he said, "You're
trying too hard." And indeed I was. I stopped right there,
sat down beside the toilet and started to cry. It was the most exquisite
meeting of our whole relationship. We were completely helpless together.
No separation. No professional warmth.
If we're not willing to explore our own suffering,
then we will only be guessing as we try to understand our patients.
It is the exploration of our own suffering that allows us to serve
others. This is what allows us to touch another person's pain with
compassion instead of fear and pity. And we have to be willing to
listen, not only to the patient but to ourselves.
We must pay careful attention to what's immediately
in front of us. A year or so ago a very tough, eighty-year-old Russian
Jewish lady was in the process of dying. As I walked into her room
I saw that she was gasping for air. The attendant sitting by her
bed said to her, "You don't have to be frightened, I'm right
here with you." The woman replied, "Believe me, if this
was happening to you, you would be frightened." I just watched.
Then the attendant said, "You look a little cold, would you
like a blanket?" The woman replied, "Of course I'm cold!
I'm almost dead." If I was going to be able to help her, I
knew that I would really have to listen. I really had to pay attention
to what she was telling us.
She was struggling with her breath, but she wanted
to be dealt with honestly-she didn't want any bullshit. I said,
"Adèle, would you like to suffer a little less? Would
you like to struggle a little less?"
"yes."
"Right there, right in between the in-breath
and the out-breath there's a little place in which I've seen you
resting. Can you Put your attention there for just a moment?"
Now remember, this was one rough, tough Russian Jew
with absolutely no interest in Buddhism or meditation. But she did
want to struggle less. So for a few moments she tried this and,
as she did so, I saw the fear in her face begin to wash away. She
took a few more breaths, and then died quite calmly.
If we are going to be of service we have to pay attention
to what's immediately in front of us, act with minimal intervention,
and bring to the experience the same attention and equanimity that
we cultivate on our meditation cushion. The degree we are willing
and able to live in this ever-fresh moment is the measure of our
ability to be of real service. When the heart is open and the mind
is still, when our attention is fully in this moment, then the world
becomes undivided for us and we know what to do. Each of us here
can do that, we .don't need twenty years of Buddhist practice. Each
of us has the capacity to embrace another person's suffering as
our own. We have been doing it for hundreds of years-we've just
forgotten how, and so we have to remind each other.
When our hospice first opened, one of our volunteers,
Tom, was helping a patient with AIDS to move from the bed to the
commode. As they began to move the patient fell, causing chaos:
his pants fell down around his ankles and the commode tipped over-it
was like a small Hiroshima. This is what care-giving is really like.
Anyway, Tom fumbled through it all and got the patient back into
bed. Then he called me. "Frank, I want you to review with me
the techniques we learned in the training about positioning people
in bed." I said, "OK, let's just do this: the next time
you go to move J.D., before you start just check your belly. See
if your belly is soft. If your belly is not soft, don't do anything."
'Don't give me that Buddhist stuff. I want to know
what do I do with his knees?" "Just check your belly and
call me back later."
It was a bit like saying, 'Take two aspirins and
call me in the morning', but he did call back a bit later.
"Frank, it was the most amazing thing.
I went to move J.D. and my belly was hard as a rock, so I stopped.
I took a few breaths, my belly softened and the next thing I knew,
J.D. was in my arms like a lover or a small child. It was no trouble
at all."
We all know how to do this.
Buddhist practice includes this notion that we have
all been born many times before and that we have all been each other's
mothers and fathers and children. Therefore, we should treat each
person we encounter as if they are our beloved. As we inquire into
the heart of service, we see a pattern: common to all habits that
hinder us in our work is a sense of separateness; and common to
all those moments and actions that truly seem to serve is the experience
of unity. Einstein wrote about this, and Sogyal Rinpoche quotes
it on page 98 of The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying:
"A human being is part of a whole, called
by us the 'Universe' a part limited in time and space. He experiences
himself, his thoughts and feelings, as something separated from
the rest - a kind of optical delusion of his consciousness. This
delusion is a kind of prison for us, restricting us to our personal
desires and to affection for a few persons nearest us. Our task
must be to free ourselves from this prison by widening our circle
of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature
in its beauty."
When the heart is undivided, everything we encounter
becomes our practice. Service becomes a sacred exchange, like breathing
in and breathing out. We receive a physical and spiritual sustenance
in the world, and this is like breathing in. Then, because each
of us has certain gifts to offer, part of -our happiness in this
world is to give something back, and this is like breathing out.
One friend calls this 'simple human kindness'. Our work, I think,
is to get out of the way of our own innate wisdom and compassion-that
simple human kindness-and allow our inborn ability to see what another
needs, to serve the dying and the living.
Quotation by Rachel Remen from Noetic
Science
About View
The VIEW magazine addresses a broad spectrum
of issues in the fields of spirituality, health, and psychology. Presenting
both Buddhist and non-Buddhist perspectives, it aims, in Sogyal Rinpoche's
words, to make a practical contribution towards changing "the
whole way we look at death and care of the dying, and the whole way
we look at life and care of the living."
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