Hey, Mel! Good to hear from you. Was starting to think you'd been abducted by aliens or eaten by all those bliss ninnies out there in the woods. *LOL*
Melancholy Man wrote:
Been going through some rough spots re my personal journey for the past few months and can't seem to get a handle on what the problem is. Went to a spiritual retreat for two weeks and came away more disillusioned then when I went. Not good, huh?
Not necessarily a bad thing either, though. It's often when we become "disillusioned" that we realize we've been chasing shadows. Once I identified my shadows - the things I THOUGHT were real - it was like peeling back a veil. That, of course, leads to a new version of clarity, which seems to be where you're going with this.
The thing about disillusionment is that it seems to come in two distinctly different varieties. On the one hand, I remember becoming rather abruptly disillusioned with the world - I simply *saw* the overlay and the programs for what they were, and it was quite disheartening to realize that the things in which I had placed value or meaning were nothing more than objects on the table of the tonal. Job, family, friends, career, beliefs, even lovers... all just so much folly.
From what I've observed (in myself & others) is that there is a period of adjustment wherein we learn to reassign the values we have placed in things. We learn to see things for what they are - some are beautiful despite their folly, some are ugly despite their folly. Some will have greater meaning to us as individuals because they are our 'PERSONAL' folly, while others will lose meaning altogether and begin to fall into the realm of a stalker's controlled folly.
The hard part for me was what amounted to losing my "faith" in humanity, in the world at large, in our so-called leaders, in everything. But the good part was finding a new level of "faith" in myself - really coming to terms with what it means when we say we are the creators of our own reality.
Melancholy Man wrote:
The long and the short of it is this. I felt like the counselors as they were called, were just shelling out a lot of lovey-feelie stuff and the other participants were what Della and Dan have called bliss ninnys. hehheh. Guess theres nothing wrong with that but I still felt like I was on a set for some Disney flick where everybody is so blissed out they would have needed insulin if things got any sweeter.
I'm wondering what my problem is here. Why does that piss me off? Maybe I was expecting it to be something else, but a good friend of mine said it was the enemy of clarity rearing up. When I thought about that I wondered if that's true, but I still don't get WHY it would bug me so much. By the end of the first day I was looking around for the exit but decided to stick it out as a lesson in stalking myself.
Glad you stayed as a stalking maneuver.

I've never actually gone to a spiritual retreat because my perception of 99% of them has always been exactly what you say here - somebody selling feel-goodism or otherwise attempting to seek a consensus or gather a group of followers. Maybe nothing wrong with that in and of itself, but
it's not what I'm looking for, so it would be entirely ineffective. We either *see* that before we go, or we *see* it after we arrive. But either way, it can be disturbing at a certain level, because even for warriors there is what we want-to-believe with regard to others on a parallel path.
As for the bliss ninies, I tend to agree w/ what PZ was saying - they're good for a laugh, and laughter is good. For the most part, they tend to remind me of a commercial for douche powder - all clad in flowing white dresses, running through a field of daffodils in slow motion with a vapid smile. If that's not good for a laugh, then your funny bone must be broken. *LOL*
You asked specifically why the bliss ninnies piss you off. I think THAT is where your clarity is creeping in, and may be what your friend was perceiving as well. When we see people (others or self) going through life in an altogether deluded manner, maybe we can just sit back and laugh at them, or at our own self-importance which would make us laugh at them in the first place.

But the problem MAY be that some aspect of yourself is perceiving the BN's delusional reality and projecting onto them the question most warriors ask themselves several times a day: "Is this a manifestation of the authentic self, or a projection of the illusion?"
Wendy and I recently went to see SWING VOTE. The audience clapped & cheered at the end, yet I was sitting there asking myself how they could be so blind to the fact that they had just had
a huge suppository of neurolinguistic programmingstuffed up their keesters, and they were bending over to beg for more!
Point being... I think bliss ninnies can be annoying on the surface because they tend to remind us of the deeper problems in our alleged society, wherein all problems are swept under the rug while we're asked to whistle the chorus to "Don't worry, be happy." Nice theory, maybe, but the reality of it clearly leaves a lot to be desired.
Melancholy Man wrote:
I feel like my friend was right when he said it was the enemy of clarity but I can't get a handle on what's going on with me. Been feeling like the more I commit myself to the way, the more it slips away.
There's that famous quote which goes something like, "The tao that can be spoken of is not the true tao." Maybe what's happening is that your clarity is actually forcing you to lose the
illusions about the path, so that what you are left with is the actuality of it all: there is no path except the one we forge for ourselves. I used to have certain expectations of other people in my life, but found rather quickly that that's the fast track to disappointment, disillusionment and dismay. If you have expectations in me, I will surely disappoint you (intentionally if not accidentally). If you have expectations in yourself - even if you cannot live up to them - at least you are working with what is authentic and real. I've disappointed myself plenty of times, but then I always know EXACTLY where to place the blame, eh?
Melancholy Man wrote:
Sorry to be negative but I know it's something very simple that I'm not seeing.
Maybe simple, but clarity is a bitch. We *see* things we might choose *not* to see if given a choice, but the reason clarity is an enemy is because 1) when we have clarity, we really DON'T have a choice; and 2) we can get caught up in it if we're not careful. So my advice is simply this... when you reflect on your time at the retreat, ask yourself what you really learned that you can take with you. What do you know about
yourself now that you didn't know before?
And never forget - it's all folly in the end, which is why clarity is often the tool that leads a warrior to becoming a better stalker. Controlled folly is still folly, but at least it is then performed with awareness and usually the ability to laugh at the whole big mess.
Knowing you, I suspect you were stalking yourself all along - which is why you went to the retreat in the first place. *heh* But that's another story for another day, eh?
*hugs*
D