Poetic Exploration of the Heart

Ecstasy Experience

Ecstasy Experience

My teacher, Miki, is about ten years older than me, but her heart is not. One night Miki came to my house very excited; she had brought with her two tablets of ecstasy and wanted us to take it together. I was diffident, and immediately went into giving her all the reasons why we ‘shouldn’t take it’. But Miki knows how to talk to me. She smiled reassuringly, and said, “You know what your problem is…? When you think ‘ecstasy’, you’re seeing rave parties and junkies. I’m asking you to forget that. Let’s go out by the pool, or down to the beach, and let the drug teach you what it can. You know how we always ponder on how it would really feel to center our being and feel in harmony with the world, a state of eternal love….? Well, this is the chance to experience it firsthand, darling.”

Still, I was hesitant. I was worried that if we were both under influence, we wouldn’t be able to watch out for each other, and I insisted we at least get a ‘baby-sitter’. Seeing it would calm me down, she agreed, and went next door to ask my neighbor (who was also her friend) to come over. Her friend’s name was Sylvie, and although she lived next door to me for several years, we hardly knew each other. There was no dislike, only a lack of personal interest between us. It seemed that whenever we were together, there wasn’t much to talk about. But I didn’t mind it was Sylvie, as long as somebody was present.

Miki and I took the pills and then the three of us walked out to the swimming pool. Miki dived in the water at once, and Sylvie and I sat down by the side of the pool. I was impatiently waiting for something to happen, a sensation at least, but nothing was happening. Sylvie and I started talking politely, and somehow the subject got to mothers, and our relationship with them. I still wasn’t feeling any special sensation, but ecstasy was working its way with me from inside out. I had gotten so carried away in telling Sylvie about my mom and me, that tears of true sadness started falling down my cheeks. The story I was telling was honest, impartial, and – very intimate, just as the tears I was shedding were alleviating and liberating because there was no anger, nor remorse in them. Realizing that these invaluable personal revelations were inspired by Sylvie, someone who until yesterday, was a stranger to me, I took another look at her and recognized the truly beautiful being she was.

Then I understood… I was ‘on ecstasy’… Wow! The first lesson was that other people are what we make of them. By keeping our heart open to love, and our mind free of prejudice, we can always be pleasantly surprised with the world we live in.

Miki was sitting in a plastic pool chair she’d placed in the shallow part of the pool. She yelled to me to grab another chair and join her. I laughed at the ludicrousness of the idea, but I did it anyway. Once I was seated, my head supported against the back of the chair, I leaned backwards until my ears were covered with water. My eyes were open, but all I could see was a part of the night sky. The moon was full, and two stars were shining brightly next to it. It was a humble view comparing to other starry nights, but it held me mesmerized for hours. My body was numb and I had no sense of it. With my ears underwater, all I could hear was the sound of my breathing. As I inhaled, the sky above seemed to contract, and when I exhaled it would expand… I watched the picture, focused on my breathing until it slowed down so that I could not hear my breath at all. I could only feel myself vibrating in tune with the Moon and the stars. As my body was in the water, I had no sense of it at all. I could not feel the place where my legs and arms end and the outer space begins, and this gave me a sensation of ‘bodylessness’, and of inclusion. I was the Moon, and I was the stars…

I spent almost the whole night sitting in the pool, merging with the universe. Free of all thoughts, just meditating on the purity of love that had absorbed my whole being. This was a completely new world to me; I had read about the altered states of mind, but not in my wildest dreams had I imagined it would be anything like this… What I was experiencing now was deeply religious, and I wasn’t religious at all.

My interest in the spiritual plane was immense, but whenever I was faced with ‘believers’, my zeal would wane. Enthusiasm always alarms me and provokes my doubt. In the same way, when I was confronted with condescending minds that rule out any possibility of spiritual existence, I easily turned into a passionate believer. The inner struggle was very much about accepting my own spirituality. This was also obvious in my attitude towards clairvoyants, mediums, yoga-instructors, Reiki-masters, astrologists, and all the like who could be considered ‘spiritual teachers’. I seemed to expect too much of them, and inevitably, I’d get disappointed. Add to this my tendency to get into conflict with the authority figures, and you’ll spot the problem easily.

But here, under the summer sky, I was so captivated by the oneness I was feeling that it made everything seem so simple… A sense of enlightenment washed over me, and doubt disappeared, as I understood that there is no wrong way, only my way. Whatever attracts me, whatever I think is right, and whatever feels good to me, is a sign on its own. If I follow that sign it will lead me to the Teacher.

After some time, Miki’s face appeared above me. Smiling lovingly, she asked me if I wanted to go to the beach. I didn’t. But what Miki asks, Miki gets. The moment I stood up, I started shivering; my whole body was freezing, and I quickly reached out for a towel, trying to warm up a bit. It was four o’clock in the morning, and I had spent five hours in the pool. Naturally, it had taken some time to warm up. Sylvie was long gone, but I didn’t mind. The love and the peace I was feeling did not leave any room for fear or paranoia.

Miki and I walked to the beach. The moon was a huge reflector, lighting up a narrow path on the surface of the sea, leading from the beach to the horizon. Miki sat down, and I went on into the sea. The sea was shallow for several miles ahead, and so I kept walking in the moon’s path. The water was clean and purifying and the air smelled of the sea. Feeling free, I started to dance to the rhythm of the waves. The moonlight was sheer love, and I was bathing in it.

Just before dawning, I got out of the sea, and walked to where Miki was sitting. She was meditating, so I quietly sat down, and placed my hands on the sand.

It felt soft and warm, and compelled me to play with it. I’d take it in my hands and hold it, letting it slowly slip through my fingers. It reminded me of so many things and prompted me to contemplate on them… At one point I realized that Miki was watching me, and I smiled, telling her that playing with sand feels like making love to it.

For me, the peak experience had been in the swimming pool, with the moon and the stars, but at about eight o’clock in the morning, I was still feeling quite ‘high’. Still, my body was tired, and we decided to eat something and go to sleep. Over breakfast, I said to Miki, “God…! If I could only get a container of this stuff, I’d die happy…!” She laughed. But then she looked at me seriously and said, “Look, if you take another tablet tomorrow, you won’t feel anything special because your mind’s already accustomed to the sensations. You’d only abuse the drug and your body. Take time to absorb all that’s happened last night, and incorporate this new awareness into your life. That’s how drugs should be used.” I couldn’t agree more, and I made a promise to myself that when I take ecstasy again, it wouldn’t be any time soon.

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Alienated Me
Alienated Me

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