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Why Does Heartache Happen?

February 19, 2017 by Ben Miller in Magical Thinking

Heartbreak may be triggered by a new outer event, but it activates old, preexisting internal patterns. Someone you like or love does not feel the same way. This is the outer event. In response to this, you feel unwanted, unloved, or even worthless. These are the preexisting internal patterns. The event did not create these feelings in you. These feelings and their corresponding beliefs were already there. The rejection from the one you love is just the force that reactivated them.

So why does heartbreak happen?

When I am in a relationship with a lover, I will feel love and joy like I never knew before! At least, that is the fantasy I sometimes entertain. Realistically, I don’t expect that I’d be swimming in joy and love all the time, but part of me imagines that being in a romantic relationship would help me to visit those states more often. However, if I have unconscious beliefs that I am not loveable, then those beliefs will eventually resurface, even if I’m in an amazing relationship with someone who truly loves me.

Why do those feelings come back? What can we do with them?

Those deep-seeded patterns of pain come up to ask for our attention. They are symptoms of something inside of ourselves that remains unresolved. They revisit our conscious mind so that we may acknowledge them and, if we so desire, begin to change our relation to them.

How?

We all have different obstacles that challenge our ability to feel love. One example with which I’ve had the pleasure of experimenting is being turned down by someone I have feelings for. I say, “I like you.” They kindly say, “I don’t feel that way.” As a consequence, I sink into a spiral of irrational but seemingly insurmountable self-loathing. The voices inside tell me I will never be loved as I’d like to be. I can rationally analyze it and explain to myself all the reasons that it’s not true, but the feeling sticks nonetheless.

These instances of rejection reactivate a sense that I am not worthy of love. It may be triggered by someone turning me down, but the internal effect is an old pattern that comes back again and again. It might initially seem like the feeling of rejection is exclusively caused by the outer event, but really, it is something already within me. I can search for someone or something (booze, eating, excessive busyness, etc.) to obscure or avoid that internal pattern when it comes up, but if I don’t change myself, then the pattern and its pain will always return.

I have no obligation to address it or not address it. There is no should or shouldn’t. But it’s a source of pain and perhaps I could benefit from taking a look at it if I feel it’s time for a change.

Change what?

The pain I experience comes from a belief that I am deprived of love, a belief that I cannot experience love because of something that has happened. If I want to change my experience, I can begin to change this belief. The voice of the pain says, Love is far away and not for you. This is the pattern that I can reverse--not by looking for love outside of myself, but by generating love within myself.

How do you generate love?

First, discern: What does love feel like to you?

For me, love is a feeling of compassion and affection for another person exactly as they are in that moment. If I feel love for someone, be it a stranger on the street or a lover in bed, it is easy, even automatic to see beauty in them. To look into their eyes, see their pain, their strength, their passion, their dreams, and to feel warmth and appreciation for them and all that they are. There are many different shapes and manifestations of love, but this is the essence of the love I wish to have more of in my life.

So, if I want to generate love in myself, I can shift my attention and do things that help me to find beauty and feel compassion for others and for myself. There are many ways to do this and we each find love in different ways. Here are a few of the methods that help me:

  • Intentionally imagining the feeling of love. Using my imagination to conjure the feeling into being.

  • Saying “I am love” 10 or more times with enthusiasm. It's not necessary to believe it. Just pretend it's true and say it with emotion. If it doesn’t seem true or even possible at first, that will change as I continue. If you pretend something for long enough, it can become real.

  • Saying “I love you” to strangers. I tried this yesterday after someone brushed past me on the subway and my initial internal response was anger, some words that were... less than friendly. Normally, if I do this I whisper it or say it in my head. But if I am giving myself the permission to appear absurd as I do when I do street performance, I may say it out loud directly to another person on the street.

  • Calling to mind or visualizing the people I love and for whom I am thankful. Even imagining that I am hugging them while feeling thanks for the beauty they bring to my life.

  • Looking into the mirror and saying with vigor, I LOVE YOU. This method was sparked by a night of drinking. I came home in a cloud of self-pity and was bawling alone in my room, feeling sorry for my perceived state of relentless loneliness. I saw what I was doing and realized this was not the feeling that I wanted to perpetuate in my life. I got up and stood in front of the bathroom mirror, stark naked at 3 a.m., looked myself in the eyes and said again and again, “I love you. I love you. I love you!” For the first few minutes, it felt stupid and unreal but I continued repeating the words, while trying to say them with the feeling I would have if I actually believed myself. Gradually, the words started to seem more plausible. I still felt totally ridiculous, but after five or ten minutes of this, that feeling of love which had seemed so far had become tangible. Being excessively drunk while performing this is not necessary or recommended. Being naked might be helpful.

  • Discerning the reactive tendencies I have which prevent me from feeling love. This can be anger, impatience, frustration with people in daily life, grief, self-pity, or self-loathing. All of those fun emotive companions. I try to notice them when they arise. If I can gently steer myself in a different direction, if I can try to feel some warmth toward someone that is aggravating me, I do that. If the feeling seems too intense to change in that moment, then I simply try to notice it and see if I can avoid acting on it. Simple, but not always easy. The other methods above this one are a bit like experimental exercises, but this method is the one that seems to have the biggest effect on my daily life. It is also probably the most difficult.

Some of these methods might seem absurd. I often feel ridiculous or foolish while doing them.

That is the point!

They seem absurd because they stand in such stark contrast to the pain they aim to diminish. Behaving with silliness helps to withdraw my attention from the reactive pattern that perpetuates my pain. Silliness can help free us from the perception of being stuck. It then becomes easier to redirect my focus as I would prefer. In this case, that focus would be love.

This practice of pattern-changing isn't necessarily meant to make huge, overnight changes. It's an ongoing practice that helps to make small gradual changes that grow easier and more natural over time.

I play with this practice not because I am always lovey-dovey, floating in the clouds and oozing compassion out of my eyeballs for everyone. I attempt to generate more love in my life precisely because I don’t feel it the majority of the time.

Sometimes it comes easily. Often times, it's hard. Sometimes it seems so impossible that I don't even bother. On the whole, I try to find little ways to generate more and more love in my life, simply because it feels good. With physical exercise, the muscles get stronger over time. Practicing the capacity to activate love is the same. It may feel awkward, stiff, or impossible at first, but through persistence, the motion becomes easier to perform.


If you enjoyed this post, please stay tuned for regular updates to my blog here. Writings about art, dreams, tarot, psychological constipation and liberation, and how all of these things can be relatable and practical.

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  • Art
    • Jul 2, 2018 About the Folks Who Think You Stink (Notes on Performance and Life)
    • Jun 22, 2018 The Freedom and Fear of Being Yourself (Notes on Performance and Life)
    • Apr 3, 2018 Public Alchemy: Notes on Street Performance
    • Dec 1, 2017 Why the Tutu?
    • Sep 14, 2017 Art is a Portal
    • Aug 17, 2017 Put the Potatoes on Your Face
    • Dec 28, 2016 How to Make Magical Oranges
    • Dec 19, 2016 Wakey Wakey, Inner Kiddo
  • Interviews
    • Jul 18, 2018 Artist Interview: Kayle Karbowski
    • Jun 4, 2018 Artist Interview: Sally Nicholson
    • Apr 23, 2018 Interview: Yogi Ron Katwijk
    • Mar 1, 2018 Artist Interview: Lawrence Blackman
    • Feb 21, 2018 Artist Interview: Samantha Blumenfeld
  • Magical Thinking
    • Jun 21, 2023 Magick for Reshaping Life and Transmuting Trauma
    • May 18, 2023 Magick is a Sentient Entity: Using the Imagination to Co-Create with Magick
    • Dec 4, 2020 The Healing Voice: Wounds, Addiction, and Purgation
    • Aug 5, 2019 Celebrating Your Misery
    • Jun 21, 2019 White Peacocks, Constipation, and Emotional Liberation
    • Aug 23, 2018 Melting a Snowball of Misery
    • Jul 2, 2018 About the Folks Who Think You Stink (Notes on Performance and Life)
    • Jun 22, 2018 The Freedom and Fear of Being Yourself (Notes on Performance and Life)
    • Apr 16, 2018 Questions for Limitations
    • Apr 3, 2018 Public Alchemy: Notes on Street Performance
    • Jan 5, 2018 Chaos' Playground: Finding Gold in the Shitstorm
    • Dec 1, 2017 Why the Tutu?
    • Sep 14, 2017 Art is a Portal
    • Aug 7, 2017 Three Reasons to Destroy Yourself (Or Not)
    • Jul 6, 2017 Nerves and Tutus
    • Feb 19, 2017 Why Does Heartache Happen?
    • Jan 15, 2017 Following Fear
    • Dec 28, 2016 How to Make Magical Oranges
  • Tarot
    • Oct 24, 2019 TAROT QUESTION #5: Why does my skin crawl with wonder and fascination as such important relationships in my life are connected by the eyes?
    • Oct 11, 2019 TAROT QUESTION #4: How long will it be until I have a new job?
    • Sep 25, 2019 TAROT QUESTION #3: Why can't I find more hours in a day?
    • Sep 3, 2019 TAROT QUESTION #2: Do abusers know they're being abusive, or is that just their sense of reality?
    • Aug 25, 2019 TAROT QUESTION #1: Why is the Present Moment So Much All the Time?
    • Aug 18, 2019 Today's Tarot: Shifting Pain by Surrendering to It
    • Aug 13, 2019 Today's Tarot: The Golden Devils Inside You
    • Aug 12, 2019 Today's Tarot: The Moon of Self-Loathing
    • Jun 27, 2019 Today's Tarot: Snot, Beauty, and Tea for Pain
    • Feb 28, 2018 Today's Tarot: The World is in the Seed
    • Aug 26, 2017 Tarot as a Tool for Reality Construction
February 19, 2017 /Ben Miller
benjonmiller, heartache, alchemy, loneliness, love, joy, affection, experiment, psychology
Magical Thinking
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Following Fear

January 15, 2017 by Ben Miller in Magical Thinking

"When you have a goal, obstacles are actually teaching you how to get where you want to go— carving you a path. 'The Things which hurt,' Benjamin Franklin wrote, 'instruct.'"
Ryan Holiday, The Obstacle is the Way


WHY IS FEAR A FRIEND?

I wrote this note to myself to help me reflect on the uncertainty that comes with taking a new direction in life and not being able to know what will come from it. For the most part, I look forward to having a big shift--relocation and finding new work, in my present case. Under the surface of my conscious mind there is a voice of fear that resists the unknown. This voice wants to know everything that will happen in advance so that it can feel safe. It’s this voice that gives me dreams about naked, shell-deprived turtles and hanging men that wake me up and make it difficult to fall asleep again.

The entry below was written as a letter to myself to help me focus, to find some perspective beyond the nagging voice of fear and self-doubt.


Hello dear self,

If there is something you wish to do but you doubt your ability to accomplish it, then it can actually be an opportunity to show yourself that you can do something you thought you couldn't. If you shrink away from it, you feel diminished. If you embrace it, despite your fear, you can grow from it. When you attempt this, three results may occur:

1    YOU MAKE A MISTAKE

If you make a mistake, you learn something you didn't know before. It might not be easy to endure, but you can use the mistake's knowledge to refine you approach. The mistake becomes a guide.

2    YOU REALIZE IT ISN'T FOR YOU

Before you attempted this task, maybe you weren't sure if it was really the right move for you. Maybe you wanted a change and you thought this direction might be the change you want, or it might not. You’re curious but unsure. In your mind, you ping-pong back and forth between doing or not doing. Then you do it. You make that change. And you realize, "Oh shit. This isn't right for me at all. This is not what I want."

That's fine!

Actually, that's great.

Before you made the attempt, you had so much doubt and fear. You asked yourself, “What if it's right? What if it's not?” If you hadn't tried, there might always be a whisper in your mind wondering what would have happened if you did try. The doubt or regret may linger. If, on the other hand, you make the attempt, and you realize it's not for you, then you know with certainty that it's not for you and you will have a clearer sense of what is right for you. Learning what doesn’t work will bring you closer to what does work.

3    YOU DO IT - AND IT WORKS OUT

You do the thing you thought you couldn't. Not only do you realize your greater capabilities, but you also develop a different attitude toward the other wishes you may think are impossible or too scary. 

You realize that the tasks you imagine to be impossible can be challenged and tested. With each seemingly impossible challenge you take on, you strengthen your ability to do so.


If you enjoyed this post, please stay tuned for regular updates to my blog here. Writings about art, dreams, tarot, psychological constipation and liberation, and how all of these things can be relatable and practical.

subscribe via rss
  • Art
    • Jul 2, 2018 About the Folks Who Think You Stink (Notes on Performance and Life)
    • Jun 22, 2018 The Freedom and Fear of Being Yourself (Notes on Performance and Life)
    • Apr 3, 2018 Public Alchemy: Notes on Street Performance
    • Dec 1, 2017 Why the Tutu?
    • Sep 14, 2017 Art is a Portal
    • Aug 17, 2017 Put the Potatoes on Your Face
    • Dec 28, 2016 How to Make Magical Oranges
    • Dec 19, 2016 Wakey Wakey, Inner Kiddo
  • Interviews
    • Jul 18, 2018 Artist Interview: Kayle Karbowski
    • Jun 4, 2018 Artist Interview: Sally Nicholson
    • Apr 23, 2018 Interview: Yogi Ron Katwijk
    • Mar 1, 2018 Artist Interview: Lawrence Blackman
    • Feb 21, 2018 Artist Interview: Samantha Blumenfeld
  • Magical Thinking
    • Jun 21, 2023 Magick for Reshaping Life and Transmuting Trauma
    • May 18, 2023 Magick is a Sentient Entity: Using the Imagination to Co-Create with Magick
    • Dec 4, 2020 The Healing Voice: Wounds, Addiction, and Purgation
    • Aug 5, 2019 Celebrating Your Misery
    • Jun 21, 2019 White Peacocks, Constipation, and Emotional Liberation
    • Aug 23, 2018 Melting a Snowball of Misery
    • Jul 2, 2018 About the Folks Who Think You Stink (Notes on Performance and Life)
    • Jun 22, 2018 The Freedom and Fear of Being Yourself (Notes on Performance and Life)
    • Apr 16, 2018 Questions for Limitations
    • Apr 3, 2018 Public Alchemy: Notes on Street Performance
    • Jan 5, 2018 Chaos' Playground: Finding Gold in the Shitstorm
    • Dec 1, 2017 Why the Tutu?
    • Sep 14, 2017 Art is a Portal
    • Aug 7, 2017 Three Reasons to Destroy Yourself (Or Not)
    • Jul 6, 2017 Nerves and Tutus
    • Feb 19, 2017 Why Does Heartache Happen?
    • Jan 15, 2017 Following Fear
    • Dec 28, 2016 How to Make Magical Oranges
  • Tarot
    • Oct 24, 2019 TAROT QUESTION #5: Why does my skin crawl with wonder and fascination as such important relationships in my life are connected by the eyes?
    • Oct 11, 2019 TAROT QUESTION #4: How long will it be until I have a new job?
    • Sep 25, 2019 TAROT QUESTION #3: Why can't I find more hours in a day?
    • Sep 3, 2019 TAROT QUESTION #2: Do abusers know they're being abusive, or is that just their sense of reality?
    • Aug 25, 2019 TAROT QUESTION #1: Why is the Present Moment So Much All the Time?
    • Aug 18, 2019 Today's Tarot: Shifting Pain by Surrendering to It
    • Aug 13, 2019 Today's Tarot: The Golden Devils Inside You
    • Aug 12, 2019 Today's Tarot: The Moon of Self-Loathing
    • Jun 27, 2019 Today's Tarot: Snot, Beauty, and Tea for Pain
    • Feb 28, 2018 Today's Tarot: The World is in the Seed
    • Aug 26, 2017 Tarot as a Tool for Reality Construction
January 15, 2017 /Ben Miller
benjonmiller, fear, writing, blog, monkey
Magical Thinking
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How to Make Magical Oranges

December 28, 2016 by Ben Miller in Art, Magical Thinking

“Magick is the science and art of causing change to occur in conformity with will.” 
Aleister Crowley, Magick in Theory and Practice


THE ACTION

This is a plan for a participatory act to take place during my musical performance tonight:

While on stage, present in your hands a bundle of oranges to the audience.

Ask them to raise one or both hands toward the oranges. 

Request that they make a sound of happiness. As they make this sound, they can imagine that the sound is creating happiness and transmitting it to the oranges. Let them know that they needn’t believe it is real. They need only imagine. Try to stimulate a big feeling, in yourself, the room, and the audience.

Finally, after the sound is made and the action is complete, give the oranges to willing volunteers. Thank them.


THE REASON

Feelings can be triggered by events or we can choose to activate them ourselves, simply by imagining them and acting as if they are real. When we imagine something to be real, the effects of the imagined form can be experienced as real, felt effects. In this case, it becomes irrelevant if it is real or not. The effects are felt regardless.

When the audience is asked to imagine they are transmitting happiness to the oranges, they are pretending. When we pretend something is happening, we can receive the effects associated with the imagined occurrence.

In this act, the audience is invited to create a feeling. The oranges are used as a tool to help stimulate the imagination. They are objects that give us something to play with. They help provide the incentive to create the chosen feeling. The real magical act here isn’t to create mystical fruits. 

The magical act is to intentionally use our imagination to alter our experience of life.

The participants invoking happiness and transmitting it to the oranges.

Shifting our physical, mental, emotional state changes our reality immediately. In this act, different processes are used to assist this inner shifting. To shift the physical, we raise the arms and make a sound. To shift the mental, we entertain the idea that we are enchanting oranges. To shift the emotional, we imagine the feeling of joy. Each of these aspects--the physical, mental, and emotional--are intertwined. Altering one of them affects the others. Actively creating a change in each of them reinforces the effectiveness of the whole process.

Really, the oranges, the sounds, and the raised arms are not necessary. They are tools used to shift the focus of our attention. Whatever we give our attention to will increase its presence in our awareness.

For example, if I give my attention to the thought of a skeleton bleeding into the mouth of a crying man lying on a bed of dead squirrels, I might not feel so great. If I give my attention to the thought of those same squirrels being resurrected by the man’s tears of joy in order to dance with the skeleton upon a road of rainbows, I might feel a bit nicer than before. 

The focus creates the effect.

In the case of the ritual with the oranges, we give our attention to the feeling of happiness. By pretending that we are activating a feeling, we end up doing just that! Beginning with an act of imagination, we achieve real effects. By real, I mean that they are felt and cause a discernible difference in our experience.

Consciously shifting our attention toward a chosen form (a feeling, a thought, an object, etc.) allows us to influence our experience “in conformity with will”, as Crowley put it. That is, we can begin to direct the shape and quality of our life, rather than feeling it is only something which happens to us, something about which we have no say.

This isn’t meant to say that I want to always control my attention and the world around me. There’s certainly benefit to surrendering control and opening up to whatever happens. The process described above is just one option we have at our disposal. Something to play with.


The writing above was written in preparation for a performance at the monthly event Lyrically Minded, hosted by Jackie Carillo at The Alley Bunker in Seoul, South Korea, December 17, 2016.   

If you enjoyed this post, please stay tuned for weekly updates to my blog here. Writings about art, dreams, tarot, psychological constipation and liberation, and how all of these things can be relatable and practical.

Photos: Lawrence Blackman.

subscribe via rss
  • Art
    • Jul 2, 2018 About the Folks Who Think You Stink (Notes on Performance and Life)
    • Jun 22, 2018 The Freedom and Fear of Being Yourself (Notes on Performance and Life)
    • Apr 3, 2018 Public Alchemy: Notes on Street Performance
    • Dec 1, 2017 Why the Tutu?
    • Sep 14, 2017 Art is a Portal
    • Aug 17, 2017 Put the Potatoes on Your Face
    • Dec 28, 2016 How to Make Magical Oranges
    • Dec 19, 2016 Wakey Wakey, Inner Kiddo
  • Interviews
    • Jul 18, 2018 Artist Interview: Kayle Karbowski
    • Jun 4, 2018 Artist Interview: Sally Nicholson
    • Apr 23, 2018 Interview: Yogi Ron Katwijk
    • Mar 1, 2018 Artist Interview: Lawrence Blackman
    • Feb 21, 2018 Artist Interview: Samantha Blumenfeld
  • Magical Thinking
    • Jun 21, 2023 Magick for Reshaping Life and Transmuting Trauma
    • May 18, 2023 Magick is a Sentient Entity: Using the Imagination to Co-Create with Magick
    • Dec 4, 2020 The Healing Voice: Wounds, Addiction, and Purgation
    • Aug 5, 2019 Celebrating Your Misery
    • Jun 21, 2019 White Peacocks, Constipation, and Emotional Liberation
    • Aug 23, 2018 Melting a Snowball of Misery
    • Jul 2, 2018 About the Folks Who Think You Stink (Notes on Performance and Life)
    • Jun 22, 2018 The Freedom and Fear of Being Yourself (Notes on Performance and Life)
    • Apr 16, 2018 Questions for Limitations
    • Apr 3, 2018 Public Alchemy: Notes on Street Performance
    • Jan 5, 2018 Chaos' Playground: Finding Gold in the Shitstorm
    • Dec 1, 2017 Why the Tutu?
    • Sep 14, 2017 Art is a Portal
    • Aug 7, 2017 Three Reasons to Destroy Yourself (Or Not)
    • Jul 6, 2017 Nerves and Tutus
    • Feb 19, 2017 Why Does Heartache Happen?
    • Jan 15, 2017 Following Fear
    • Dec 28, 2016 How to Make Magical Oranges
  • Tarot
    • Oct 24, 2019 TAROT QUESTION #5: Why does my skin crawl with wonder and fascination as such important relationships in my life are connected by the eyes?
    • Oct 11, 2019 TAROT QUESTION #4: How long will it be until I have a new job?
    • Sep 25, 2019 TAROT QUESTION #3: Why can't I find more hours in a day?
    • Sep 3, 2019 TAROT QUESTION #2: Do abusers know they're being abusive, or is that just their sense of reality?
    • Aug 25, 2019 TAROT QUESTION #1: Why is the Present Moment So Much All the Time?
    • Aug 18, 2019 Today's Tarot: Shifting Pain by Surrendering to It
    • Aug 13, 2019 Today's Tarot: The Golden Devils Inside You
    • Aug 12, 2019 Today's Tarot: The Moon of Self-Loathing
    • Jun 27, 2019 Today's Tarot: Snot, Beauty, and Tea for Pain
    • Feb 28, 2018 Today's Tarot: The World is in the Seed
    • Aug 26, 2017 Tarot as a Tool for Reality Construction
December 28, 2016 /Ben Miller
benjonmiller, writing, magic, magick, orange, performance, art, alchemy, music, ritual, oranges, happiness, reality, consciousness, awareness, feelings, intuition, fruitbaby
Art, Magical Thinking
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