At War with Desire

“I am at war with my desire; I keep trying to be free of it … but I’m tortured instead,” I said to him, this man I regard so highly. 

He said, after an extremely Buddhist pause, “the teaching is not to be rid of desire. Lean into desire. Lean into desire and take inspired action toward your desires — but know that the fruits, whether the fruits come and when, this is a result of the Brahman. We cannot control the fruits … but lean in. Lean into your desire.” 

The Brahman is the summation of all that is: all energy, deity, decisions and thoughts, all of creation. The Brahman brings the fruit; the human desires. 

So, desire. Desire and surrender to the Brahman … or, like Ram Dass said, “you cannot rip the skin off of the snake.”

Desiring Freedom

To be free of desire . . . this is my recurring theme, lately. As a yogi and mystic, I’ve obviously dabbled in this concept – more than dabbled, though, haven’t I? Years of celibacy, living alcohol-free, a life lived largely in voluntary solitude . . . I read the old texts, I know the old stories, I tell them, too. The Prophet, the Four Agreements, the Yamas and NiYamas, the practice of non-attached manifestation and all the ways I love mySELF; blah fuckity blah. We get it. Free your mind, free your life.

But why doesn’t it feel free, then? I mean – okay, I am freer than most. But why have I not arrived at the blissful atma sort of broken out of the system la la land walking on air joy one would expect to accompany said freedom?

I just attended my first Porcfest, which, to many, will be a dirty word. I describe it as a freedom festival because frankly that’s what it is. And, as I also just finished reading the Tao de Ching in its entirety for the first time, it occurred to me how very Daoist the Libertarian movement is. Don’t hurt us. Don’t touch our stuff. To poorly summarize the Tao itself, “a government that meddles with its people will have a rebellious people; a government that limits its interference will enjoy a peaceful population.”

At the festival, a recently-freed, formerly wrongly imprisoned man addressed the crowd of a thousand or more people. After eleven years as a political prisoner, I expected any number of things to come out of his mouth: vive la revolution, alternate currency, political grandstanding – what would it be?

He spoke of Presence. He told the story of sitting on a bench on a hundred-degree day in the prison yard in Tucson, Arizona and feeling at once entirely present and grateful . . . and free. Free of desire. Even the desire to be free.

His words did not just move me, they jolted me back to a state of profound presence, standing there under the New Hampshire sun on asphalt in my little dress, suddenly feeling the convergence of every enlightened person who had ever found freedom – not externally, but within their own mind, first. In that moment, I, too, was free of desire.

This concept has haunted me since, though. I find myself irritably at war within my mind, with only brief moments of divine presence/freedom from my inner battle. One such moment of freedom was last week at ecstatic dance, when ironically, I was both free of desire and desirous of being free of it.

The war goes something like this: “we want what we want because we are meant to have it; some people’s dreams are other people’s nightmares, so we may as well go for our own,” (that’s me, my quote)

versus

“remain non-attached to the outcome; live as though it already is,” (manifest-y jargon) versus Rumi “the breeze at dawn has secrets to tell you / do not go back to sleep / you must ask for what you really want . . .” versus everydamn thing I am reading right now from Autobiography of a Yogi to the actual Tao de Ching speaking endlessly about non-desire, non-action, peace in not-doing, not-wanting.

What is it that I really want? Is it that I have not asked for it clearly enough? Or is it that the fates themselves are at odds with my desires?

I know the answer to the first two. I want what I have always wanted: freedom and love. And for that to be shared, for me to feel present, in The Presence, and wrapped up and held in this reality by the presence of others. And – yes, I know that I am loved. I am blessed by community and friendships and most of all my beautiful (nearly 10 years old!) boy. All of these things, these connections, I have made, I have dug from the bones of the earth and nurtured with the water of my love and tears and have held onto through the many storms.

Can we not be free of desire by – and this might sound crazy – simply satisfying the desire?

Tonight, I read a passage of Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire to my son in which the families of the kids were coming to support them. Harry, like me, has no such family. I relate to him now like I did when I was young because I know what it is to be the Only One Like Me, to be alone in the world and fighting against unfair odds and enemies, to become bigger and braver and stronger than the longing.

I want to be free of desire, but I am simply not. Perhaps desire is fuel for passion? Perhaps desire is the key to transformation? Maybe I am not meant to have what I want. It has been seven years since I left my marriage, seven years since I felt safe, secure, chosen, part of a family, at peace.

That kid Supertramp from that book all the men love – the one who burned all his money and went traipsing into the American wilderness in search of true freedom (Into the Wild, it’s called) – that kid died alone in a fuckin’ bus, man. And his last written words, his own epitaph, went:

“Happiness is only real when shared.”

Maybe the same could be said of freedom. Are we truly free if we are alone in it? Or should I just be grateful for the community I have, the friendships, the ability to speak and live and be in my freest truth? Freedom and love look a lot different here in “real life” than they do in my dreams . . . but I am grateful for the ability to dream, after all.

“Do not go back to sleep / People are moving back and forth across the doorsill where the two worlds touch / The door is round and open / Do not go back to sleep.” – Rumi writes … but then, “You must ask for what you really want. Do not go back to sleep.”

** Writer’s note: this has been sitting in my “drafts” for months — it wasn’t until recently that an elder taught me about the fruits of desire, putting this “war with desire” to rest inside my soul. I’ll share what he taught me in my next post.

a Bittersweet Breakthrough

PSA: This post is about suicidal thoughts.

Disassociation. That’s what I have to call it, because “constantly bombarded by a graphic, intense obsession with suicide” is off-putting. It also sounds absolutely fucking crazy. Yet, it’s been my reality for thirty years.

I’ve tried to tell people. I’ve worded it carefully and crassly, described it in writing and over coffee, in lengthy text paragraphs and mumbled check-ins with friends. I’ve called it “suicidal ideation,” placed it in a “symptom box,” and allowed it to coexist with my brain, like a nice tame demon in my head.

But the true horror of it can’t be told. Y’all look at me with my sparkles and my twirling and you think I’ve got it mainly under control. High functioning crazy lady, or maybe not all that crazy at all maybe just making attention-seeking victim content – and I don’t blame anyone for any judgements like that about me. Because I am about as high functioning as they come, huh?

I smile loudly to drown out the suicide screaming inside my head.

Had I not the skills and spirituality I do, I would’ve been gone already. And this often feels like a lie to say. But, thankfully, things got real bad again this summer and I finally reached out for help – like, ongoing help, a “real doctor,” in the form of therapy (she’s woo woo but she’s accredited and that’s enough for me).

Anyway. We finally figured out where this is coming from, and it’s kind of bittersweet.

I don’t really want to suicide myself. Sure, I get hopeless and depressed and frustrated, but I learned long ago to separate myself from my pesky thoughts. I am not the obsession; it just lives here.

Turns out, when I really looked at it – this screaming urge inside my head – I recognized her. She is the very well established subconscious voice of an 8-year-old version of me that has decided to take her destiny into her own hands. The “I can just kill myself right now” urge is old programming, like a suicide pill hidden in the pocket of a coat I used to wear when I was behind enemy lines, developed at a time when people literally were trying to kill me (or threatening it, or killing parts of my soul, one trauma at a time).

So it’s not even darkness. It’s not even sickness. It’s not even a fucking symptom.

It’s deep, embedded, established neuropathway nonsense that attempts to hijack my life (to save it!!!) whenever my defenses are down, or chaos comes to call, or I feel uncertain about the future. This “you should jump off a cliff” urge is a very brave and loving little me that is attempting a final fail-safe of control, of free will, of … if not “happy,” at least “not defeated.”

Cool, cool. So my brain really is trying to kill me. All day, every day. Honestly – that felt like a relief to hear.

I am told we can retrain this little me. I’ve already started … in fact, for her to even be visible, to have come out of hiding from the depths of my soul, and to let me see her for who she is (instead of the demon I let myself make her into), took incredible courage. She is ready to heal, to be loved, to consider an alternate ending: a long life. A happy life. A life without torture – at all.

PSA: I do not want to, nor plan to, hurt or kill myself or anyone else. This is being shared from a place of empowerment and transparency, in hopes I may connect with like-hearted others. I am under the supervision of a therapist, so no further reporting is necessary.

First Person Singular: a College Prompt

In communication, we tend to avoid using the first person singular.  So, we pretty diligently avoid the use of “I,” “me,” “my” and the like when referring to ourselves.  Most readers want to read about things to which they can relate and communication that suffers from “I” strain can turn them off.  An exception would be a blog about an unusual first-person story.  Please write a blog of a couple of pages on this, telling the story chronologically. 

This is great writing practice and a good way to get “I” and “me” out of your writing. 

Once upon a time, there was a little girl whose life at home did not feel much like “home” at all: instead of a doting mother making dinner in the kitchen, there were violent people making loud noises . . . and not enough to eat, most of the time. She knew what “home” should look like because she saw it on TV and had friends at school whose moms packed full lunch boxes with notes inside. She didn’t often talk about “home.”

Instead, she escaped it.

Not physically, like in some TV shows about kids who run away – or better, those who get moved to a real home by the police – no, she learned from the grownups that to run away or get taken away would be even worse, somehow. So she stayed at whatever place her mom was at.

But she did escape.

She said, much later, that she remembered her first memory: it was of a big angry man yelling at her mom, bursting through the door of the motel room where they slept, punching her mom in the face and splattering blood all over her blankie. The angry man and her mom threw away the blankie after they made up over beer and cigarettes, while she cowered on the corner of the bed. This was before she learned how to escape.

Before she learned how to read.

She remembered her first memory, and she remembered her first poem, written in a spiral-bound floral hardcover notebook with The Serenity Prayer on front. It was called Smoke, Smoke, Smoke, and it was about how her eyes burned from the gray clouds her mom’s friends made while they got loud and drunk every night, how it was hard to sleep because of the noise and the smell, and how she would be free of it all someday.

By then, she did know how to escape. Anyone could tell, just by reading her poems, that she had already found her way out.

When she learned how to read, she devoured books by the dozens, by the hundreds. She learned that the limit at the library for how many books she could take out at a time was actually 100, and she used that allowance as often as she could, filling her backpack and arms with books about dragons, magic, and powerful, far away people.

This was until the night the smoke wasn’t just from cigarettes. That night, she really did escape, if only for a little while, down the street to call 9-1-1 from the neighbor’s house. She watched the firetrucks come and saw the black spot that used to be her apartment the next day. 100 books had burned, but she never had a chance to explain to the library what had happened to them all; she just moved to a new library.

When she was in high school, the little girl learned of a writing contest. To enter, she had to read a book by Ayn Rand called Anthem, which was also about far away places and powerful people, but less about magic than it was about escaping. Her stepdad, the angry man from her first memory, didn’t let her enter contests or do much at all, really. But she read the book anyway.

It was about a world where everything, all decisions and jobs and even words, was controlled by some ruling council of people. In it, there were only “people.” There was what “we” wanted, what was good for “us,” and the way things were for “all.” There didn’t seem to be any choice, and that was supposed to be a good thing for “us.” What was, simply was.

Until a person, a man, learned to read.

He, too, learned to escape.

He and I are the same, I think, now that I am older and free. There’s power in “me.”

bb
6.5.25

Dark Bits, Unposted

“Even though you’re at your most hopeless, I’d bet those times are some of your most creative,” she said. I browsed my notes app the other night to discover dark bits I hadn’t posted. Sometimes, it’s just not worth the explanation I’d have to give to post these things in real time. Past-tense, but tense nonetheless. Here are some excerpts from the last months.

____

Maybe today is the day
I wake up and think
With delusional audacity
Turning my face toward the window,
hoping to feel some light, some warmth,
some indication —

Every day is the same
sometimes it’s four pm before I use my
voice at all, I’ll realize
My hips ache —
I blame it on the gym, or
The sitting.

But I know it is the sacral ache:
A primal longing to connect
To create
To be woven into

Long ago I learned I am not my thoughts
Especially when darkness haunts me
Unfortunately, the price of disassociating
In isolation
Is sanity.

These thoughts are not my desires,
But when they play on repeat
In silence
Their power grows, and like a magnet,
they become
Attractive, eventually.

How do I save myself from myself
When no one is around?
Or how to drown out the sound

-bb
4.12.25

____

How strange, she thought — as if outside herself,
To be reading “the philosophy of
happiness”
While so distracted by the ideation–

How sad, how useless, what a waste
To be once again in this place:
Despairing, apathetic, without the
remembrance of joy

The act of joy is easy to make, to fake
To engage in the movements thereof

And it’s not like I don’t feel love
Especially for my boy

But he asked me just the other day:
He said, mom are you ever really happy
Like truly happy
Do you remember when you were?
Or is it always tinged with pain?

Maybe it’s not
as easy to fake
As I’d like to say.

– bb
3.1.25

____

February 4, 2025 at 7:25pm

I feel manic asf. It manifests in troubled, overly active dreams, but not enough sleep, a sense of urgency in every breath, an unnamed anxiety in my throat and tightness in every muscle, racing ambitious thoughts and nothing to do with explosive energy, senses heightened and intuition off the charts, alarm bells ringing like sirens in my head and any attempt to speak to any of it coming out like a rush of harsh volatility, alienating and pushing away everyone I desperately want to warn/help/wake up — it feels like my entire self is on overdrive, a gas pedal in a sports car all the way pressed down while my emergency brake keeps my body stuck and smoke billows out but the screaming is only in my head and nobody else sees the smoke. It feels like being a bird trapped inside a glass cage, battering myself against the glass until I am both exhausted and unable to stop. It feels like the world is on fire and everyone is drowning and I could help fix it all if only they’d listen, if only I could get grounded and speak eloquently. It feels futile and deadly, but in a more urgent and actively helpless way than being depressed. It feels like I’ll be like this forever, flailing, falling, crying out. It feels like more should be happening, like things should be better by now, but they aren’t. It feels like it’s my fault I am so alone, and like it will always be this way.

____

poet’s note: and this is why I don’t take lovers anymore

I don’t like this feeling at all
Spiraling

Hands cold and damp, eyes darting
the echoes of fear and familiarity loud
inside my head

Is it intuition or self sabotage
Something changed last night, the vibes
were off
You didn’t call me darling
Or heart a morning text

You left me on read.

And I don’t know if it’s just in my head
Or if it’s something I said
Or if I shouldn’t have let you into my bed

Round and round we go again.

-bb
11. 2024

____

Today, I got out of bed.
And did stuff I’ve been putting off for 20 years.
Like college.

And even though my body is sick as
shit, my ears feel and hear like they’re
under deep water, my joints and
muscles ache and my head throbs,
even though my own stress and
depression got me here–

I got out of bed today. And I did other
hard things, too.

-bb
10.17.24

____

I enjoyed my brain today, didn’t quiet her voice, numb her banter, scream and run from her narrative … I welcomed her, was awed by her clarity, found joy in perception.

… for anyone who has been crushed by the despairing within their mind, who has for days or weeks been unable to move from bedridden emotional paralysis, who has desperately blown an enormous cloud of medicated smoke across their own inner landscape — to emerge is to breathe clean air again.

-bb
10.23.24

____

What’s your weakness
Your worst quality
They asked her live on TV
She didn’t answer, not really
So I ask it now of me

It is my sadness, my deep inner longing
That makes me weak
The way I search for joy, or force it
Before I speak
The way I glitter for you
But never for me

My brain does not believe the things
My heart tells it to say

The sunlight falls across my face
It’s now my bed is laid
Every morning it shines on me
And I have to fight myself to stay

“The worst is when I wake up crying,
It happens more these days,”
I said at work
The things we should not say
“I hate that too,” he said,
and someone added, “I was joking but
that is sad”
And he couldn’t come to work the next day.

The sadness is a wounded leg
Halfway through the climb —
Ambition should not be a weakness
But in this case,
It’s mine.

-bb
11.2.2024

____

and now all of these people are dead.

sometimes I wonder if ever I was
as happy as
the memories in my head
did my smile ever
really grin as big as it did
that one time?

I remember smoking weed
with all my favorite men
the way Jake taught me how to deal with blend
(but always rolled me plain)
and how Jonathan liked everything organic
(except for his cocaine)

times like these I was all the way me
like slipping away into the alley
undoing my shoes and sitting with bare feet
life of the party but more at home on the street —

I remember the dancing
a sense of nowhere to be
no matter where I was standing,
the sound of the sea

I remember that girl, feeling perfectly free,
I remember men that allowed her to breathe
I remember the yearnings that led her to flee
and I wonder sometimes if she still lives inside me
(while they rest in peace)?

-bb
11.2024
in memory of Jake Campen and Jonathan Lowis, my dearest friends and sweetest conspirators

____

or whatever — anything but this
stagnation, this silence, this petering
out of my longing cry

this endlessness, this muted weighty
nothing — it feels like where manifesting
came to die

-bb
12.1.2024 at 12:33 am