Not too long ago, there was this quote of the day on Sott by Buddhist spiritual advisor Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoch:
Well, it got me thinking about my understanding of compassion, what it really means, and how mirrors, shocks and feedback, as the concepts are understood and applied here, can very well be considered coming from a place of compassion. Thinking on it can certainly put the prospect of getting feedback in an interesting new light. But how is this so, when our experience of this form of compassion – being on both the receiving and giving ends can be so very uncomfortable, or even painful? I mean, compassion – real compassion – can exist in a from that does 'hurt', and doesn't feel like compassion since we are so used to thinking of it in terms that are generally more about the feelings of being supported, cared for, etc. But all of these more conventionally understood forms are certainly not the whole enchilada, even if they are important. So, again, one may ask - why is calling ‘objective feedback’, mirroring, shocks, etc, a form of compassion?
I wondered also what, if anything, Gurdjieff had to say about the subject. We're pretty familiar with his teachings about waking up and alarm clocks, and there is also much in his writings to suggest that he was a very compassionate man. But did he ever have anything to say about it? Seems he did.
From the Diary of Madame Egout Pour Sweet by Rina Hands:
Aside from being hilarious, the truth of what G was saying here hit home with me. How many times in my life have I behaved like a Compassionate Idiot? Giving little to no thought to who, why and how I was giving something to someone ie. being mechanical, arbitrary, or selfish about being "compassionate". Now, this isn't to say that there weren't times I hadn't responded appropriately - even times that may stand as good examples, but it does seem to be true that there were times when my "compassion" was ill considered. Rounding this out a bit, there have been times when I know I have behaved with apathy and indifference in situations that could have used some compassion. That is every bit as important too.
On the subject of idiot compassion though, one can take a little heart in the fact that Gurdjieff had to have been able to see these things in himself before he could come to the point of joking about it with such insight I think. Developing this idea of the compassionate idiot further though, and what true compassion actually is or may be, the following passage puts a few good ideas forth.
So finding inner courage and using intelligence seems to be required of us in ways we normally do not consider when we think of being compassionate. How many difficulties could be avoided - and how could we be helping people (and ourselves) if we chose to acknowledge that the pain that may arise as a result, was just part of the process of receiving compassion?
Something else to consider is that, because so many of us have wounds or scars from past events - that when we hear something ‘critical’ of our behavior we are really reacting, in part, to these past hurts that have had a hold on us and tend to keep us back in ways we don’t even realize. That’s when the work of considering the feedback can get difficult if we refuse to acknowledge what’s being said, actually see it for ourselves. But maybe more importantly, to recognize how this form of compassion can really help us towards having a future, so that we can fit better in a world that isn’t consumed with being mostly self-serving.
When we talk about compassion, we talk in terms of being kind. But compassion is not so much being kind; it is being creative [enough] to wake a person up.
Well, it got me thinking about my understanding of compassion, what it really means, and how mirrors, shocks and feedback, as the concepts are understood and applied here, can very well be considered coming from a place of compassion. Thinking on it can certainly put the prospect of getting feedback in an interesting new light. But how is this so, when our experience of this form of compassion – being on both the receiving and giving ends can be so very uncomfortable, or even painful? I mean, compassion – real compassion – can exist in a from that does 'hurt', and doesn't feel like compassion since we are so used to thinking of it in terms that are generally more about the feelings of being supported, cared for, etc. But all of these more conventionally understood forms are certainly not the whole enchilada, even if they are important. So, again, one may ask - why is calling ‘objective feedback’, mirroring, shocks, etc, a form of compassion?
I wondered also what, if anything, Gurdjieff had to say about the subject. We're pretty familiar with his teachings about waking up and alarm clocks, and there is also much in his writings to suggest that he was a very compassionate man. But did he ever have anything to say about it? Seems he did.
From the Diary of Madame Egout Pour Sweet by Rina Hands:
A pupil of J.G. Bennett, Rina Hands was given the honorary title of "égout," a French word for sewer or drain, by Mr. Gurdjieff. Present at his dinners in the last year of his life, she has a deep experience with his toasting to 21 different idiots; "The Science of Idiots," he calls it. Sitting in Gurdjieff's dining room she recounts, for example, how when the toast came to all Compassionate Idiots, he suddenly asked her, "You, Blonde there—natural or not I never know—are you Compassionate Idiot?" Later, she learns from Bennett that the whole of Beelzebub was being retyped. Knowing how to make herself useful, Hands offers her services as a typist and so goes to Gurdjieff 's apartment each day, "taking part in whatever was going on at the time."
Of Jokes & Idiots
And so we sit with the author at the lunches and dinners, hear Mr. Gurdjieff recounting his English, Scottish and Irish jokes and, of course, toasting to the idiots, the toasts usually not getting beyond nine or ten idiots. (Mr. Gurdjieff says he is Idiot No. 17.) Recounted are Gurdjieff 's insights into the various idiots. For example, there are three kinds of Compassionate Idiot. The first sees a man in need of help and immediately helps him, even giving him his own shirt. The second does exactly the same, but only because his fianceé's father is observing. The third kind, says Gurdjieff, "So-so-so, sometimes he gives and sometimes not, depending on many things, perhaps even the weather."
Aside from being hilarious, the truth of what G was saying here hit home with me. How many times in my life have I behaved like a Compassionate Idiot? Giving little to no thought to who, why and how I was giving something to someone ie. being mechanical, arbitrary, or selfish about being "compassionate". Now, this isn't to say that there weren't times I hadn't responded appropriately - even times that may stand as good examples, but it does seem to be true that there were times when my "compassion" was ill considered. Rounding this out a bit, there have been times when I know I have behaved with apathy and indifference in situations that could have used some compassion. That is every bit as important too.
On the subject of idiot compassion though, one can take a little heart in the fact that Gurdjieff had to have been able to see these things in himself before he could come to the point of joking about it with such insight I think. Developing this idea of the compassionate idiot further though, and what true compassion actually is or may be, the following passage puts a few good ideas forth.
Chogyam Trungpa borrowed from Gurdjieff the very useful notion of “idiot compassion.” Gurdjieff, a rather fascinating spiritual teacher of the early to mid-20th century, had said that we are all idiots of one kind or another, and his extensive lists of the various types of idiots included “the compassionate idiot.”
Compassion is wishing that beings be free from suffering. Idiot compassion is avoiding conflict, letting people walk all over you, not giving people a hard time when actually they need to be given a hard time. It’s “being nice,” or “being good.”
It’s not compassion at all. It ends up causing us pain, and it ends up causing others pain.
The more someone self-consciously thinks of themselves as compassionate, the more likely it is that they’re a compassionate idiot.
Idiot compassion lacks both courage and intelligence.
Idiot compassion lacks courage because “being nice” and “being good” are held to be the most important qualities we can manifest, and so we’re afraid to do anything that might make us unpopular. It’s not uncommon to see a related phenomenon, “idiot kindness,” in parents’ interactions with their children. Some parents want to be their children’s best friends, and don’t want to be unpopular. And so they indulge their children, giving them what they want and never disciplining them, or using very inconsistent discipline. But it’s not a parent’s job to be a BFF for their children. It’s their job to help bring their children up to be responsible adults.
Idiot compassion lacks intelligence, because it doesn’t lead to happiness or to freedom from suffering. If someone cheats you, and you immediately decide to trust them again, you’re not helping either them or you. The person who cheats you is unlikely to have a sudden conversion to being conscientious. Any easy promise they make to change their ways is likely to be just another form of cheating. And so by letting them off the hook you don’t help them. In fact you become an enabler of their dysfunctional behavior, and thus you’re helping them to suffer more in the future, when their unskillful behavior catches up with them. And you end up suffering as well. At some point either resentment against the cheat, or against themselves, is going to kick in.
True compassion does not shy away from causing pain when necessary. Causing pain is not the same as causing harm, by the way. The Buddha talked about this in relation to speech, in an interesting dialogue with a prince named Abhaya.
Abhaya was the follower of a rival teacher, and he was sent to try to entrap the Buddha. He was to ask whether the Buddha would say words that were disagreeable to others. If the Buddha were to say he would say things that were disagreeable, then he would be accused of acting just like ordinary, unenlightened people. If he were to say he wouldn’t, then it would be pointed out that his words had in fact caused others to be upset. This was described as a “two-pronged question.” “When Gotama the contemplative is asked this two-pronged question by you,” Abhaya is told, “he won’t be able to swallow it down or spit it up.”
Of course the Buddha has no difficulty in avoiding this trap, and he turns the “two-pronged” metaphor to his advantage.
Now at that time a baby boy was lying face-up on the prince’s lap. So the Blessed One said to the prince, “What do you think, prince: If this young boy, through your own negligence or that of the nurse, were to take a stick or a piece of gravel into its mouth, what would you do?”
“I would take it out, lord. If I couldn’t get it out right away, then holding its head in my left hand and crooking a finger of my right, I would take it out, even if it meant drawing blood. Why is that? Because I have sympathy for the young boy.”
So the Buddha leads Abhaya to recognize that it’s acceptable to cause pain in the short term if you want to save someone from long-term harm. And he goes on to say that:
In the case of words that the Tathagata [i.e. the Buddha] knows to be factual, true, beneficial, but unendearing and disagreeable to others, he has a sense of the proper time for saying them.
And those are the only circumstances under which the Buddha would say something that he knew to be disagreeable.
So this is quite a tough order. What you say has to be true — not just your opinion, but actually true. This requires a great deal of mental clarity. What you say has to be beneficial — which implies that you have a good understanding of psychology and of the spiritual path, otherwise how can you know what it helpful? And you have to have an awareness of what’s the right time to say what needs to be said. This requires some empathy.
I don’t think it’s wise to say, though, that honest but critical communication should be avoided until we’ve attained some kind of near-superhuman state of wisdom. How do we learn when it’s beneficial and timely to tell the truth? How do we clarify whether we’re actually in possession of the truth? We learn by speaking, with as much courage, honesty, kindness, and wisdom as we can muster, and by reflecting on the consequences.
So ask yourself, “Am I avoiding conflict and calling it compassion? Am I afraid to be honest because I might end up being disliked? Am I letting people off the hook too easily? Am I setting myself up for resentment?” And if any of these is the case, muster your courage, and speak up, even if you make mistakes. The spiritual path is, as I like to say, the fine art of making mistakes.
Eventually this all becomes spontaneous. And in fact when the Buddha has done explaining the circumstances under which it’s skillful to say something disagreeable, he goes on to talk about the spontaneous nature of his communication. Those who are most genuinely compassionate don’t think in terms of “being compassionate.” Expressing themselves honestly and with empathy is just what they do.
So be wary of trying to be compassionate in a self-conscious way. The more you do this, the more likely it is that you’re being a compassionate idiot.
So finding inner courage and using intelligence seems to be required of us in ways we normally do not consider when we think of being compassionate. How many difficulties could be avoided - and how could we be helping people (and ourselves) if we chose to acknowledge that the pain that may arise as a result, was just part of the process of receiving compassion?
Something else to consider is that, because so many of us have wounds or scars from past events - that when we hear something ‘critical’ of our behavior we are really reacting, in part, to these past hurts that have had a hold on us and tend to keep us back in ways we don’t even realize. That’s when the work of considering the feedback can get difficult if we refuse to acknowledge what’s being said, actually see it for ourselves. But maybe more importantly, to recognize how this form of compassion can really help us towards having a future, so that we can fit better in a world that isn’t consumed with being mostly self-serving.