Purpose, identity, meaning, valuation, understanding, justice, freedom, responsibility, potential, commitment and choice are very much at the heart of The Chaco Canyon Tapes
.This story of spiritual awakening, together with its concomitant thematic explorations, provide a context for reflecting on matters of fundamental concern to all of us.
The Call of the Owl - Part 3
Beth
cleared her throat and continued: "Leonard Peltier was one of the leaders of A.I.M..
The federal government wanted to stop the embarrassments and revelations associated with
A.I.M.'s activities. Moreover, the authorities wanted to send a message of intimidation to
other A.I.M., or would-be A.I.M., members. "Leonard had
the 'good' fortune of becoming a leading candidate in the government's search for someone
through whom to set an example. But, the authorities also tried to set up other members of
A.I.M., as well, on trumped up charges. "Russell
Means, Dennis Banks and a number of other members of A.I.M. all got the same treatment. My
brother was one of these other people." I had no
doubt Beth was sincere in her belief that her brother Brian was innocent. Nevertheless, I
was working in almost a complete vacuum of hard data about her brother's case. I decided to
change the subject. "What kind of a job do you have Beth?" She was
looking out the window again. She answered without turning away from the view. "I work
in the public library. I'm what's called a library technician. "I
operate some of the equipment in the library, like microfiche, microfilm and photocopy
machines. I work a little with some of the educational multi-media computer programs the
library uses as well." While
writing down her last response, I asked: "What about your educational
background?" She
continued to gaze out the window, as if only marginally interested in the questions being
asked. However, she answered the question. "I went
to a university out west for a couple of years and studied comparative religions, but I
didn't care for the atmosphere all that much. I spent a few more years at a community
college getting a library technician's certificate." I probed
further. "What bothered you about the atmosphere at the university?" Beth stopped
staring out the window and looked at me. "I didn't like the way people just seemed to
want to talk about religion without, as far as I could determine, actually acting on any
of the things about which they were talking." "Your
judgement seems rather harsh," I countered. "Perhaps,"
she said, "but I never saw evidence that any of the professors spent much time
helping the poor, or volunteering at the hospital, or helping out in some of the youth
centers, or fighting for housing for the homeless." I pursued
the issue some more. "Maybe, they like to keep their acts of charity and compassion
hidden from the view of others." "I'm
sure you are right in some cases," Beth said. "However, do you think we would
have as much hunger, homelessness, poverty, alienation and social problems as we do if
most people were busy doing their myriad acts of compassion and charity in secrecy?" After a
brief pause, Beth added a further thought. "Besides," she said, "for the
most part, education in many parts of the world doesn't appear to be geared toward helping
people learn how to put spiritual principles into action." Beth seemed
to be warming to the subject. "Don't you agree that much of education is only about
networking and career and status and jobs and life-style and the seeking of power? If
anything, many people seem to learn fairly early that one runs the risk of encountering
substantial penalties if one tries to implement spiritual principles rather than to submit
to the ways of the world." I didn't
know what to say to her. Her points and questions had a definite legitimacy and could not
be easily, if at all, dismissed. Nevertheless,
now was not the time for such a discussion. I felt it would take us too far afield from
the task at hand. I changed
directions once again. "Although you have not specified where you were born, some of
your responses lead me to believe you are from somewhere out west? What brought you to
Boston?" Beth was
quiet for a couple of minutes. From time to time, she would look at me and, then, look
away ... sometimes up at the wall above my head; sometimes down at her hands; and
sometimes out the window. Her delay in
responding to the question indicated that whatever was coming probably was not
straightforward. In other words, this part of her account likely was complicated or dealt
with sensitive material or involved issues that, for whatever reason, she did not want to
get into at the present time, or, perhaps, some combination of these possibilities. Beth began
by asking me a question. "Do you believe in visions David?" "What
kind of visions are we talking about here?" I inquired. "Spiritual
visions," she responded. I sought
some clarification. "Do the visions you're referring to ... do they come while asleep
or during the waking state?" "While
awake," she answered Under other
clinical circumstances I might have proceeded a little more cautiously in the light of the
mentioning of "visions". However, I had a strong, positive, intuitive feeling
about Beth. Upon initial
examination, she appeared to me to be a very intelligent, and relatively stable,
individual. Her responses tended to be insightful, if not thought-provoking. Beth seemed
to be in control of her emotions, although there might be some degree of repression going
on. On the other hand, at least on the basis of my on-going cursory examination, she
appeared to have adjusted well to a variety of traumatic and difficult life circumstances.
As far as I
could see, there was no evidence Beth was out of touch with reality. Moreover, I suspected
she probably did not suffer from any debilitating neurosis, although this was, perhaps, a
somewhat premature conclusion. Her
reference to visions notwithstanding, I felt relatively comfortable in raising a
potentially problematic issue with Beth. So, I said: "This might seem like a dumb
question, but how does one know when a vision is a spiritual one?" While she
was considering the question, I elaborated a little further."People can have
anomalous or odd visual experiences through all kinds of means." I went over
to my bookcase, and selected a few volumes. I came back to the chair, sat down and began
paging through them, talking as I searched the pages. "Alcoholics
sometimes have visions during delirium tremens. Acid-heads report them as well. "Sensory
deprivation tanks can induce visions. Intense fever also has been known to generate them. "These
sorts of visual experience sometimes accompany temporal lobe epileptic seizures. Moreover,
visions have been linked with various kinds of brain tumors." I paused,
having found what I was looking for in one of the books retrieved from the shelf. I
pointed out to Beth a table on the indicated page. The table listed a large number of
different conditions and circumstances known to have some sort of visionary dimension
associated with them. As she
looked at the table, I continued on as before. I said: "Holotropic breathing
exercises, continuous fasting and nitrous oxide all appear to have the capacity to induce,
among other things, odd visionary experiences." Beth looked
up from the book, and I stopped itemizing the list from the table. "I could go on,
but I'm sure you get the drift of the meaning of this exercise. Thus, my previous question
about how one goes about distinguishing spiritual visions from other kinds of induced
visual experiences may, from certain perspectives, be a dumb one, but, from my
perspective, the question is not entirely without merit." She had been
listening intently to everything being said but seemed undisturbed by the implications of
the evidence being presented to her. "I'm not sure you have answered my original
question." I thought
back for a moment and said: "Do you mean the question about whether I believe in
visions?" She nodded. I exhaled
forcibly through my mouth and ran my hand through my hair. I deliberated for a moment and
began rocking my chair slowly. "Beth,
I suppose the short answer to your question is: I really don't know. Something in me would
really love for the whole realm of spirituality, including visions, to be true. Yet, part
of me fears such possibilities, and another part of me is rigorously skeptical about, and
cynical toward, the whole idea." I picked up
the books on the desk and returned them to the shelf. As I walked back to the desk and sat
down, I said: "A certain amount of my resistance comes from the education and
training I've gone through. My way of thinking about these issues is very much influenced
by my belief in the need to be able to empirically test them. And, as I'm sure you will
agree, spirituality doesn't seem to lend itself too well to being examined in the
laboratory." Beth
retorted: "Have you ever considered field studies?" I laughed.
"No, not really."