29 November

Surrender: Me And Trump, Yielding To The Flow Of Life

by Jon Katz

I always thought surrender had bad connotations. I resisted surrendering to teachers, parents, rule-makers, stubborn or irrational people,  religious dogma, labelers.

I lost touch with reality; I was so preoccupied with defiance.

Yes, just like President Trump.

Surrender, I was taught, is defeat; defiance is strength.

Surrender has always been associated with yielding to the power, control, or possession of another person upon compulsion or demand.

It means being a prisoner, retreating, or being defeated.

This is especially timely for me and our country right now.

Our President proclaims proudly every day that he will never surrender to the November election results as if losing it is humiliation, not a reality.

I see in this the tragedy of Manthink, the ideology that is despoiling the earth and our politics. It feels sad to me.

I can’t see the heroism in fighting hopeless battles grounded in fantasy.

I see our President equating the acceptance of reality,  as I did for years, as a form of surrender, a humiliation, something he can never accede to, and keep his manly pride.

It comes down to how you see yourself really, as General Custer going down in glory or as the wise man learning lessons of wisdom and taking a turn for the better.

Trump has no interest in being the person who surrendered wisely; he insists on being the person – the man – who never surrenders, Lord Nelson facing the Spanish Galleons.

Only the child can’t surrender; the flow of life will wash right over the rest of us.

At some point, this defiance is the fantasy of every boy on the earth.  What is more heroic than standing up to overwhelming power, even at a great cost, even to death?

In later years, things are usually not so clear cut. Life is like waves pounding on the beach; they wear the hardest rocks down to pebbles. Victory and defeat take on grayer, softer meanings. Some men learn that; some never do.

I remember trying to teach my very young daughter that life has a lot of ups and downs, but she couldn’t grasp the concept then, and I realized this was a lesson she would have to learn for herself.

And she has. Our President never learned this lesson.

We really can’t win them all; the real victors accept their losses and their gains. They each really are the same thing,  the flow of life.

I have often felt that way about surrender, that it was a defeat. I’ve changed.

President Trump helps me to realize that I think very differently now about the idea of surrender than I once did and that he does and of how he does.

There can be something liberating about surrender, something freeing. The ability to surrender gracefully is grace itself.

Surrender, says philosopher Eckhart Tolle, is the simple but profound wisdom of yielding to rather than fighting or opposing the flow of life.

The only place where you can truly experience the flow of life is “the Now,” says Tolle. To surrender is to accept the present moment unconditionally and without reservation.

It is not a defeat, but as letting go of the inner resistance to the truth, to what is real and to what is.

I wonder if President Trump realizes how much easier it would be for him and us and for everyone who loves him if he could see that his fierce resistance to what is, through mental judgment and emotional negativity, becomes hard and pronounced when things go wrong.

Or when life does not flow in the way we are taught to believe it should.

Tolle calls this “the pain gap,”  the space between the demands of rigid expectations of our mind and what is.

When I was younger, I really didn’t know that things go wrong quite often in life, at least as often as not.

I am no longer stunned or angry or defiant when the flow doesn’t go the way I wanted it to.

Think about 2020.

I hoped that our enraged and aggrieved President would be defeated, but I was also prepared to surrender to it. If he weren’t, life would go on. I understand that I either accept the now or face being overwhelmed by it.

It is precisely at those moments that surrender to the now is essential if I or anyone else wants to reduce or even eliminate the pain and sorrow that comes with all of our lives.

Acceptance of what is frees me from disappointment, even rage and fear, and reconnects me with being human now.

I practiced this during the efforts to overturn the presidential election. There were victories and defeats, ups and downs every day. The earth seemed to hang in the balance.

I knew I had to practice surrendering to keep myself grounded and useful, and at peace with myself.

I nodded to the moment, good and bad, and saw that I am learning to see things in terms of the larger picture, that flow of life, not the hour-by-hour roller coaster of living in America.

I stayed steady and at peace.

Sometimes, I fantasize about a chat with the President, a friendly chat. Listen, I wanted to say to him this week, you’ve done well, you’ve had great victories, great wealth.  You have made your mark on the world.

Why not surrender to the moment?

Surrender to the truth of what you see, and then you will be free to go on with your life in any way you wish.  Your life can continue. You can put all this rage and poison aside.

And I surrender to the certain knowledge that this can’t happen and won’t happen. That’s how people make defeat so much worse by never accepting it.

Surrender doesn’t mean being passive or submissive; it isn’t about loss and defeat.

Surrender doesn’t mean giving up on plans or taking strong and positive action. There is no judgment of the now, just acceptance.

Therefore, there is no resistance, no anger or disappointment, no vengeance or grievance.

I can be bigger than the defeat or disappointment of the moment. Then I can take action – positive action – and do what I need to do to get to a better place.

I needed to learn how to do this from 2016 to 2020, and it worked for me. To me, this is the choice between positive action and negative action.

The flow of life doesn’t rule my emotions; I do, I accept it, I don’t wrestle with it. I can’t live in resistance to the truth; I can’t always have it my own way; I am learning to accept life as it is, not as I think it should be.

I didn’t deny the existence of Donald Trump. I surrendered to him and let him show me how to be better. But what is really teaching his supporters? How to make life better, or how to make it much worse?

Positive action, I’ve learned these past few years, is much more effective than negative action, which arises from anger, despair, and frustration. The bad works for me as well as the good; both are gifts that each and reveal.

There is no need to label either one. Both are life.

I think of the President and how he suffers inside, I think Tolle imagined him when he wrote, “non-surrender hardens your psychological form, the shell of the ego, and so creates a strong sense of separateness.  The world around you and people, in particular, come sot be perceived as threatening.  The unconscious compulsion to destroy others through judgment arises, as does the need to compete and dominate.

Even nature becomes your enemy, wrote Tolle, and your perceptions and interpretations are governed by fear.

The mental illness that we call paranoia, he says,  is only a slightly more acute form of this dysfunction and unhinged state of consciousness.

Men, in particular, are taught that surrender is always a defeat or retreat.

The flow of life teaches otherwise. Surrender can be the biggest and most rewarding victory of all.

8 Comments

  1. Hi Jon. Thank your for all of your election post mortem writing, I have appreciated it as much as your pre-election musings. Not that it matters, but here is my own take…DJTrump is mentally dis-abled, therefore incapable of personal, let alone spiritual introspection. I think surrender is a highly tuned spiritual achievement which will never be on his bucket list, nor on any of his followers. Trump and the Right Wing media empire have been stoking the while male grievance schtick for so long……never gonna happen. It is always someone else’s fault….always.

  2. Wow. This is so beautiful and you illustrated how surrender can be a courageous act. Love this, Jon:) I am thinking about the civil disobedience movement, and how surrendering your person is an act of courage and protest against wrongs being committed.

  3. Scott Peck wrote “The Road Less Travelled” and many follow-on books. He was a successful psychiatrist, a spiritual seeker, but his private life was a total mess. The messiness of his life doesn’t negate his reflections. One that struck me was: “Love isn’t a feeling; it’s an action”. Another one: “Absent psychosis, mental illness starts with denial of reality”.

  4. “Trump” the word, conjures up the act of slapping down a power card on top of a stack of other, weaker cards, in a dominating manner – desstroying any meaningful constructive relationship between the cards themselves.

    “Biden” on the other hand, brings to mind “abiding”, awareness and acceptance of things as they are. A place of meaningful stillness from which proper action can be taken.

    Who each of these men are is reflected even in their names.

  5. Jon…
    RE: “Surrender to the truth of what you see, and then you will be free to go on with your life in any way you wish.”

    Perhaps Donald Trump is unable to do this. However, a number of his followers and unwitting “Trump Train” riders stand at this threshold.

    Surrendering could signal, not only a freedom to go on, but to start in a new direction to rejoin the flow of life. Moving ahead can set us onto paths that were untried, or not even known.

    While surrender releases us into the flow of life (“reality”), resistance entraps us in our past outcomes. Job counselors teach interviewees to discuss past engagements using benign responses that indicate growth and learning. Doing otherwise reveals that the candidate hasn’t moved on.

    Moving ahead could be induced through a candid, impartial analysis of the transition event — not to relive it, but use it as a foundation for improvement. Such an analysis had opened me to:

    • Evaluating my contributions leading to the transition event
    • Clarifying my goals and identifying the training and experience to meet them
    • Seeing my unrecognized talents as potential assets
    • Broadening my horizons by considering non-traditional roles
    • Relocating geographically (or in today’s world, enabling a virtual presence)

  6. Women have had to coexist on this earth with men who carry powerful egos. We are there to rebuild the destruction they cause. I can only hope more men come around to your way of powerful thinking, Jon. But I do not see it yet.

  7. I like the philosophy of the great pool shark, Nick the Greek, “the next best feeling to winning is losing”. A despot or a tyrant could never accept this bit of reality, this notion of excitement of life. Thanks Jon, no matter the content you brighten my days!

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