Life Advice
Summer 2006
Excerpted from Catherine's column in Alternatives Magazine, a quarterly journal widely distributed throughout the Pacific Northwest.
Dear Catherine,
Joseph Campbell says, "Follow your bliss," but this can render you broke.
It seems to be a choice to follow your bliss, heart, truth, etc., or follow
dollars, security, and a comfy old age. If I were to do what I really enjoyed,
I would be a Japanese ink painter, but I would end up in complete poverty.
What advice do you have on this subject?
C.S.,
Byron Bay, Australia
Dear C.S.,
If taken too literally, Campbell's advice could certainly render one broke
and would be more appropriately offered to the wealthy leisure class. But
another way of understanding his famous dictum is to lean in directions
of your own interests in your fields of work. Find a way to engage your
most joyful talents in your existing job or have them be foremost in your
mind when entering into new endeavors. And be willing to be uncompromising
about doing things that are contrary to your nature or integrity, as these
activities will harm you in body and mind. Many have to work to support
families or loved ones and do not have the luxury of doing exactly what
they would have done if money were not an issue. But it is possible to find
a middle way in which your work is both engaging and aligned with your own
conscience. It is also good to feel grateful for the ability to work at
all.
Catherine
Dear Catherine,
For all the talk about finding "the beloved" within oneself, I wonder if
my yearning to find a mate can actually be fulfilled internally. For me,
although finding a soul mate is probably an insecure and seemingly rare
circumstance, that instinct just does not abate. Is there a way of existing
that somehow fulfills and shortcuts such instincts as the desire to love
and seek a beloved in the form of a person?
A.J., Scotland
Dear A.J.,
Of course, spending one's life with a loving partner is a happiness that
is hard to beat. However, if that is not happening or doesn't come to be,
it is best not to obsess about its being missing or tell ourselves a story
that we are not quite living due to its lack. Some people never seem to
find a fulfilling relationship, but many relationships that seem fulfilling
are not, or don't work out for long, or any number of things happen that
involve parting. Find love with friends, family, and community. Be as loving
as possible to all those in your own orbit. It goes a long way to filling
those deep yearnings, or at least assuaging them. Let a quiet calm float
in your heart around the yearning - a wonderment about whether that kind
of relationship is in the cards for you - but not a cry to the heavens that
your life is less until it comes.
Love Catherine
Dear Catherine,
My dog of 10 years has cancer. I know it sounds like a cliché but
she is my best friend. Although she doesn't seem to be in any great pain,
she is dying and I am in what I call a pre-grieving state. I don't want
to be so sad with her while she is still here but I cannot help but think
about the fact that she will soon be gone and it breaks my heart every time
I look at her. I wish I could just be present with her for whatever time
we have left together and save the grieving for after she is gone. Is that
possible?
N.W.,
San Rafael, CA
Dear N.W.,
Your experience in the dying process is universal, applicable to being with
any loved one in a dying process. The grieving starts as soon as it becomes
clear that death is relatively imminent. This is natural and is, in its
way, a blessing. It is a gentle letting go rather than the shock that comes
with a sudden death. It allows a little time for your love to be fully expressed
and gives you the opportunity to care for your loved one so that you will
feel complete in that love after she has gone. See this phase of your time
together as a journey of love and loss and let your feelings of grief flow
as needed.
Love, Catherine