The Online Meditation Crew has a Facebook group. At first I was hesitant to join.
Sometimes I feel like I’m holding two different worlds in tension. There is the one that I grew up with, where Christianity is the norm. Then there is the one in which I can explore spirituality and religion without worrying about what society expects of me.
Facebook and Twitter mirror those worlds for me. In Twitter, I have the shield of anonymity that I can hide behind if I need to, so it feels safe. It is the place that I can explore and connect and get answers and try things on for size.
Facebook is more like “real life” for me. All of my friends on Facebook (save two) are people that I know in real life – whether it’s friends from high school, former coworkers, or people from my current social circle, which centers around the Episcopal Church (in fact 18% of my friends are priests).
The Online Meditation Crew is Twitter. It is a place where I can let my guard down, ask questions, explore. I really like what I see, what I am doing, and what I am learning and experiencing. I don’t hold any illusions that I actually know the people I’m sitting with, but it really doesn’t matter. We are all part of the same universe, and as such part of each other. All the rest is details.
My fear was that my Twitter/OMC/Buddhist world would suddenly collide with my Facebook/Christian world and I would somehow end up chucked to the side from both.
And, lest you think this fear is unfounded, I must relate a story about two things that happened in church recently.
There was an opportunity for parishioners to join in “centering prayer“. I thought it sounded great and joined the group on their first “sit”. To me, everything about centering prayer was what I had learned about meditation. There was one person in the group who was adamant (and I don’t think that’s a strong enough word) that this wasn’t meditation at all, and he tried to throw some theology in behind it to back up his opinion. I still say that if you strip away all the trappings…it’s meditation.
The second story is about a person who was coming in to the parish to lead a workshop on yoga. There wasn’t anything religious about her presentation from what I could tell – it was just about using yoga techniques to help center you in both mind and body. The person who was organizing this workshop got up on two consecutive Sundays to try to get people to sign up. She stressed both times that it was not some other religion that was being practiced so no one had to worry.
So, I see fear from the Christians, and I don’t know the Buddhists (or enough about Buddhism to be secure in it) yet, and I was afraid of what would happen when the two met.
During today’s OMC scheduled meditation session, it suddenly hit me. It’s not about Christianity, or Buddhism, or Facebook, or Twitter, or “real life”, or “online life”. It’s about ego. My ego was getting in the way of me being who I am. This is the way I am experiencing the universe, and the way the universe is experiencing me right now. At this moment.
And this moment will be gone immediately to be replaced by another moment and another way of experiencing. It’s time to let go and be.
I joined the OMC Facebook group.
I’m glad to hear you joined.
There was a time where I felt similar to you. When I first started posting about my practice on FB, my brother in law called my wife and said “did you know Nate is posting all sorts of Buddhist stuff?” No shit McFly, she told him, he practices Buddhism. I don’t know why this practice is frowned upon so much, I’m sure it has to do with the fact people don’t want to take the time to understand it, so it’ll always be foreign to them.
That’s when the metal-head in me comes out and I raise and fist in the air and don’t give an eff what people think, this is my path that I’ve chosen, for myself AND for all others!
@punkrockbuddha here and I had the same dilemma, but with my family. My mom inparticular had trouble with my choice of Buddhism over Christianity. I am not a believer, but I don’t see why they both can’t coexist. I wish you well friend.