Rachel
Naomi Remen
Kitchen Table Wisdom / May 2000
“There is a deep connection
between meaning and beauty. Neither is a function of the intellect,
both can enrich a life, and perhaps we develop an eye for meaning in
the same way that we develop an eye for beauty.”
Few of
us pursue meaning deliberately. Most of us focus our attention
elsewhere, accumulating knowledge in the belief that we will be able
to trade it for a good and fulfilling life. Knowledge enables us to
build a box to put our life in, but the box is itself empty. Only
meaning can fill it up.
Over the years it has seemed to me that there is a deep
connection between meaning and beauty. Neither is a function of the
intellect; both can enrich a life. Meaning feeds and strengthens the
soul in the same way that beauty does, and perhaps we develop an eye
for meaning in the same way that we develop an eye for beauty.
Recently, I found myself in someone’s kitchen listening to
a discussion between an art teacher and some friends about the nature
of “aesthetic perception.” As the only non-artist there I was
mystified by this idea, and when the others drifted away I asked the
woman who had first used this odd phrase what it meant. She laughed.
“It’s a way of seeing,” she said, and told me how a friend of hers
teaches it to a class of seven-year-olds.
He begins the class by giving each child some water in a
clear glass. Then he tells the children that something is going to
happen in their glass of water. They must watch what happens
carefully, but they cannot talk about it right away. First they will
spend a few minutes just looking, and afterwards everyone will have
the chance to tell the whole class what they saw. Then he walks
through the classroom with a bottle of red ink and puts a single drop
of red ink into each child’s glass.
The children are entranced, and the discussion that
follows is very lively. Some children have seen an angel in their
glass; others have seen the wind, or a flower, or the face of their
grandma. They are delighted with these differences and listen to each
other with rapt attention. The excitement builds and then the teacher
presents them with the real lesson for the day. “Well,” he says, “What
is all this about? Angels and grandmas and the wind? After all, it is
only a drop of red ink in a glass of water… isn’t it?” But of course,
in certain important ways it is not.
We all live far more meaningful lives than we know.
Uncovering this meaning does not require us to live life differently
but to see life differently. Finding meaning in the events of your
life is not very different than seeing the angels in a glass of water.
It requires a sort of double vision; an openness to living
simultaneously in the world of ink and water, and the world of mystery
and the soul.
Robert Assagioli, the founder of Psychosynthesis, tells a
parable about the power of meaning to transform our experience of
life. He invites us to imagine an interview with three master stone
cutters who are building a cathedral in the Middle Ages. Before
speaking with these workers, you take a moment to watch them cut
stones into blocks. As each man finishes cutting a stone, others take
it away and replace it with another stone, which too is cut into a
block.
After a while you approach the first man and ask him what
he is doing. He turns on you in anger and says, “Idiot, use your eyes.
I am cutting stones into blocks. When I finish one they bring me
another. I have been doing this since I was old enough to work and I
will do it until the day that I die.”
Stunned, you back away and approach the second man to ask the same
question. But his response is quite different. He smiles and says, “I
am earning a living for my beloved family. With my wages we have built
a warm little house, we have food on the table every day, the children
are growing strong. I am building a safe place for those I love.”
Going on to the third man you ask him your question. He
stops his work and the face he turns towards you is radiant. “I am
building a great cathedral,” he tells you, “that will offer comfort to
those in pain and sanctuary to those lost in the dark. And it will
stand for a thousand years!”
All of these men are doing identical work. Meaning does
not change our lives, but it does change our experience of our lives.
Finding a personal meaning, and especially one that is transcendent in
the midst of routine tasks, opens our daily work to the experience of
joy.
Seeing the familiar in new ways may come through intention
or practice, a cultivation of the capacity to reach beyond the cage of
the ego to feel and know the life around us. But meaning may also come
to us in moments of illumination, bearing with it a sense of grace. A
sudden shift in perception may cause the world to change unexpectedly
and offer us a glimpse of the deeper nature of things. Finding meaning
in this way may take us beyond an experience of satisfaction and offer
us a sense of gratitude. At such times we may feel blessed by
something beyond our control.
A seasoned and rather cynical physician discovered this
unexpectedly during a busy shift in a large city hospital emergency
room. About halfway through the evening a woman was brought in by
ambulance about to give birth. Jeff had delivered hundreds of babies
in his years of working emergency rooms and he knew the routine well.
Everything went perfectly, and he felt a familiar sense of competence
and satisfaction as he began to suction the infant’s nose and mouth.
Suddenly her eyes opened and she looked deeply into his eyes.
For Jeff, it was a defining moment, a sort of a doorway.
He stepped through it past all of his expertise and pride of
accomplishment and realized that he was the first human being this
child had ever seen. He could feel a thick armor of cynicism and
numbness that had built up over the years fall away, and he felt his
heart open to her in welcome from the whole human race.
Jeff is a fine physician. He had made many personal
sacrifices to become a doctor and often wished for a simpler, less
demanding life. But in this moment all that fell away and he felt a
simple gratitude for the opportunity to do this work. He says,
“Suddenly, I knew that it had all been worth it.”
The moment has changed him in a subtle but permanent way.
Reflecting on what happened he says that he has long known what to do
for his patients but he had somehow forgotten why he was doing it. “I
guess I remembered what I was serving with my expertise,” he says.
“Who would not feel grateful to be able to serve it?”
Ultimately, we are sustained not by our work but by its
meaning. The meaning we find in a common task is often highly
particular, but all genuine meaning has the same power: it enables us
to know who we are and what we stand for. In the end it will help us
to live a life worth remembering, no matter how difficult or
challenging our life has been.
Rachel Naomi
Remen, M.D. is a clinical professor at UCSF School of Medicine and
co-founder and medical director of the Commonweal Cancer Help Program.
Her new book is My Grandfather’s Blessings: Stories of Strength,
Refuge, and Belonging, from Riverhead.
From the
Shamballa Sun Online