Jay Michaelson

Jay Michaelson

Posted: May 18, 2009 09:30 AM

What It's Like to Spend Five Months in Silence

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I have been a law professor, magazine editor, and the director of national nonprofit organization. I went to Yale Law School, founded a successful dot-com software company, and have written three books and 200 articles. My childhood nickname was "Chatterduck." But last year, I decided to spend five months on silent meditation retreat, mostly in Nepal.

What, my friends have asked (at least the ones who didn't think I'd lost my mind), is it like to spend five months without talking, writing, or even updating my facebook status? Short answer: not what you'd expect, but more powerful.

First of all, not talking is the easy part. You don't go crazy, and you don't forget how to speak. (The silence was never absolute, either; I had a ten-minute interview with my teacher every day.) There's just not that much to say anyway, when all you're doing is sitting and walking, and noticing the moment-to-moment sensations of whatever is going on. Eventually, the silence becomes second nature -- even for someone like me.

Much harder than not talking, though, is not thinking. In the form of Buddhist meditation I practiced, vipassana, or "insight," meditation, the objective is neither to indulge thought nor to suppress it, but simply to let it be, along with everything else. Thoughts arise, thoughts pass, and the job of the meditator is just to notice them and move on. In this way, it's possible to gradually unlearn the habitual tendency to grab onto pleasant perceptions, thoughts, and feelings and push away bad ones. The Buddha, my teachers, and I have found that some measure of liberation eventually results.

Easier said than done, of course. In practice, it's just about impossible to stop thinking. This, itself, is an important lesson: that the mind is not under our control. Nor does it naturally stay on lofty topics like the meaning of life, the universe and everything. I often daydreamed of utterly meaningless drivel -- I must've rehashed the plots of the Star Wars saga a hundred times over the five months of retreat, for reasons which still escape me. (I think it had something to do with meditation training being a lot like Jedi training, but who knows.) All this without any intention from me.

It's at this point in the story that most of my friends usually roll their eyes and say that the whole thing sounds crazy. However, having emerged from five months of silence, I can safely say that it was among the sanest things I've ever done. Not the easiest, to be sure, but infinitely more balanced, awake, and instructive than the chatter-filled world I live in most of the time.

Eventually, you see, the noise really did subside, and the mind started to relax. This is the trick: that in meditation, every goal is achieved by giving up on it. The more force one applies, the more resistance arises in response. On the other hand, the more letting-go, the more letting-be -- the more peacefulness, clarity, and awareness.

Once again, this is easier said than done, because for several billion years, we've evolved the basic instinct to hold onto the pleasant and push away the unpleasant. If we didn't do this, we wouldn't eat, run away from predators, fight when necessary, or reproduce. Natural selection does not favor Buddhism. So while "letting go" may sound pleasant and relaxing, it runs against aeons of biological conditioning.

But it is possible. For example, many times on retreat I would taste a delicious food, and be able just to notice the many sensations of chewing, tasting, and swallowing; the knowledge that the taste was pleasant; and the desire to have more of the food. Or, I would experience great hunger -- in this particular Buddhist tradition, no food is eaten after noon -- and being able simply to notice, without judging or acting out, the physical sensations of hunger, the emotional effects that came with it, and the multitude of thoughts that arose as well (why am I doing this, I'd really like a granola bar, etc.).

What's the point of noting all these mundane sensations, feelings, and thoughts? Well, enlightenment, of course, which comes as a result of seeing directly and in one's own experience that perceptions arise and pass of their own accord, that none of them ever really satisfies, and that there's no self or soul separate from the sensations, feelings, and thoughts themselves. Consciousness just happens, and the interiority of our experience is an illusion. There's no there, here.

The trouble with "spiritual" truths such as these is that they are often banal when conveyed secondhand. But when seen directly, in one's own experience, even the simplest of bumper-sticker bromides has the power to change one's life. For example, just knowing that you are perfectly okay without that car, house, success, lover -- and with that backache, mortgage, conflict, and envy -- can be moving to the point of tears, even though, intellectually, it's pretty lightweight stuff. I can't really explain why this is so, but I have seen that it is so. What to a busy mind is just another spiritual throwaway may, to a quiet mind, be the gateway to liberation. Thus even extremely mundane perceptions of eating, breathing, and walking around are grist for the mill of awakening.

In other words, when it comes to insight, it's not the "what," it's the "how." There weren't many weird mystical fireworks that shot off during my months of silence -- just a lot of time to see the ordinary very, very clearly. This is true in everyday experience, too. It's not like most of us don't know what's good for us; we do. We're just too busy chasing the next pleasant experience to live up to our own ideals. Sure, what really matters is timeless and free -- but the timeless and free is also boring. So we get back on the hamster wheel and start spinning.

Five months of silence is long enough for the wheel to slow down, and real progress to be made along the path of insight. According to the tradition in which I practiced, the mind really does relearn some of those basic instincts, growing a little wiser and a little less obsessed with itself, and those new lessons don't disappear, even as noise and distraction return. Well, easier said than done.

I have been a law professor, magazine editor, and the director of national nonprofit organization. I went to Yale Law School, founded a successful dot-com software company, and have written three boo...
I have been a law professor, magazine editor, and the director of national nonprofit organization. I went to Yale Law School, founded a successful dot-com software company, and have written three boo...
 
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Thanks, Jay, this is very nicely written. It will give folks an idea of what meditation can do.

Not eating past noon - you were in the Theravada tradition which means real low cost to no cost. If readers want to check out meditation at no cost, google Theravada monasteries and their links. One is abhayagiri.org which is in northern CA but there are others. Theravada monks/monasteries never ask for money AND they give away free books. The Buddha laid down in 'rules' that monks/nuns were to freely teach the people who should and do support them. That way there is an interdependent relationship.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:40 PM on 05/19/2009
- Rider3 I'm a Fan of Rider3 4 fans permalink

You're lucky you were able to do this, as you have the financial resources. I'd take one day of silence if I could. But, alas, I will never be in such a position.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:26 PM on 05/19/2009
- notAMoron I'm a Fan of notAMoron 5 fans permalink

Whats it like spending years on end with someone who never shuts up?

Get married and find out.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:09 PM on 05/19/2009
- MissAngela I'm a Fan of MissAngela 2 fans permalink

get a divorce then

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:56 PM on 05/19/2009
- wadenelson1 I'm a Fan of wadenelson1 229 fans permalink
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/Lowering the cone of silence.

Shhhh!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:03 PM on 05/19/2009
- BlueZoo I'm a Fan of BlueZoo 44 fans permalink

Monastic orders in the Catholic Church has done this for centuries so it's nothing new; however, these orders do not allow speaking on a daily basis. For all of those posters who would like to experience this, many orders of priests, brothers and nuns offer week and weekend retreats at extraordinarily nominal fees with some as little as $10/day including meals. Call you local diocese and ask about retreats.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:50 PM on 05/19/2009
- MissAngela I'm a Fan of MissAngela 2 fans permalink

It wasn't just the Catholic Church, but they like to think they invented everything.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:57 PM on 05/19/2009

Buddhism has done this for millennia. No one said it was "new".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:24 PM on 05/19/2009
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Thank you for this. Needless to say one must actually experience the blessing of a relatively quiet mind "within" a relaxed body/being to truly appreciate just how valuable and healing this mode of living is. Aside from meditation practice, per se, there exist other methods for helping to achieve this state. One "traditional" practice being energy work -- Chi Kung, Reiki, Jin Shin Jyutsu, etc. being among such practice(s). Reiki and a number of other modalities usually require an attunement­/activatio­n from a Master in order to "work". Often these attunements can be expensive. If anyone is interested in *self* attuning for Reiki and other energy practices the following is helpful. The method described works perfectly. (I've been teaching Usui and other Reikis for almost twenty years and have utilized the "traditional" attunement procedure as well as the one discussed in the link -- as "extended" -- for attuning others)

http://lightworkers.org/forum/62934/self-attunement-for-reiki-and-other-energy-healing-practices

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:42 PM on 05/19/2009

You didn't spend five months in silence. Since you talked each day, you didn't even spend one day in silence. You haven't " emerged from five months of silence" either.

I'm sure you had an interesting and spiritual experience but its misleading to characterize it as something it plainly wasn't.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:28 PM on 05/19/2009
- MissAngela I'm a Fan of MissAngela 2 fans permalink

I think you're missing the point dude. It's not a competition. And he was open about the fact that he spoke, for 10 minutes, everyday.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:59 PM on 05/19/2009
- wm1066 I'm a Fan of wm1066 33 fans permalink
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Well I heard he snores so clearly he failed at the silence thing so everything he says means nothing...­right? Gee Arcantos lighten up!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:32 PM on 05/19/2009

Thanks for your interesting article. Coming Back to Earth by Gil Locks is a great autobiography of a man who spent years in silence. He was known as the "silent guru." It is a wonderful book, hilarious, insightful, and a real page-turner.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:18 PM on 05/19/2009

Beautiful - thanks for sharing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 PM on 05/19/2009

So wonderful that HuffPo put an article about genuine Buddhist meditation on the front page. Thank you!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:48 PM on 05/19/2009

If my last girlfriend had pursued this discipline we might still be together.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:42 PM on 05/19/2009

Congratulations on your 5 months of silence. Sounds marvelous to me! The world would be a better place if more of us practiced some form of a silence or meditation daily.

Another similar practice of silence is Centering Prayer, which is part of the Contemplative Prayer tradition. I sit in silence twice a day for 20 or 30 minutes. When my thoughts become too much, I repeat my sacred word (mine is "silence"), which returns me to my intention to "experience God's presence within, closer than breathing, closer than thinking, closer than consciousness itself."

It's so simple and costs nothing.

Read more on this practice at
http://www.contemplativeoutreach.org/site/PageServer?pagename=about_practices_centering

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:17 PM on 05/19/2009
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This is a nice reminder of what it (can) mean to be simply alive and aware and to appreciate the simplest things around us.

The wonderful thing about Vipassana, is that it doesn't cost anything. I'm not sure about TM, but it seems to have a hidden price tag on it somewhere.

Thoughtful, articulate article though. Thanks.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:59 AM on 05/19/2009
- Chuckwheat I'm a Fan of Chuckwheat 10 fans permalink
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TM used to cost a few hundred to be welcomed in, don't know what their present offer is.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:33 PM on 05/19/2009

The last time I went 24 hours without saying a word was the day before I first uttered, "Mama!"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:47 AM on 05/19/2009
- awake108 I'm a Fan of awake108 5 fans permalink

Meditation brings the truths of religions alive in ones life. Experiential not belief. A breath of fresh air in the crazy busyiness of the modern world.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:43 AM on 05/19/2009
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