Watch out for blackouts
Babara Gates
The writer is co-editor of ‘Inquiring Mind’
Years ago a goddess from Vector Control saves our family
from a rat. Early one morning that rat had confronted me
from a shelf in the refrigerator - beady eyes engaging
mine from behind the tortillas, a long hairless tail
twitching. I slammed the fridge door, called Vector
Control; the warrior goddess arrived to capture our rat
in a cage.
She took him (she promised) to the mountains. It seems
so easy in retrospect. So kind. This time, not so. Seven
years after that first confrontation, we suffer what
feels like an invasion, with legions of rats travelling
from our luscious garden into our home. While that first
solo rat certainly incited fear and loathing, its
recently arrived cousins feel like true provocateurs,
inflaming unexpected violence in me. I want to
investigate this.
I write as a longtime student of loving kindness,
committed to the first Buddhist training precept not to
kill, and as a person struggling to heal old tendencies
toward terror and anger. Recalling Gary Snyder’s take on
the human race as a gang of “primate clowns,” I’m
trying, when I can remember, to keep the “evolutionary”
view and to laugh at the wild antics of my own soaring
reactions. Best to start by tracking my rat-infested
mind.
Late in the night the mewling begins. It’s so soft I
don’t know for sure that I am hearing. In the dark there
are no directions, just what cries or moans. When I pull
the comforter up over my ears, I so want to sink back
into dreams, to be free of this. But alone in the bed,
with Patrick out of town, I cannot sleep. No robust
bodyguard is here to ward off intruders, only Roxie -
sweet border collie pup dozing in her basket by my side
of the bed. Even as I scooch down beneath the blankets,
the sound seems to rise in pitch. Do I hear thrashing?
My body seizes up, beyond alert. Another rat! Much as
I’ve tried to reason with myself, I’m consumed with
primal images - rats carrying the bubonic plague,
eyeball eating rats from Orwell’s 1984 and I’m driven
into a panic.
A rancid taste returns to my mouth as I recall the rat
we killed last week, a frantic thumping this way, then
that; in the morning the carcass limp and distorted in
the trap; and the next day, another trap sprung but no
rat in sight, just droplets of blood trailing under the
stove. Now, I eavesdrop with all of my senses (is it the
trap next to the stove or the one behind the TV?). I
anticipate the fatal smack.
In our episode years ago, the fridge so serendipitously
trapped our one rat - before my alarm had time to
escalate. But now, after weeks of failed Havahart traps,
after scrubbing every hidden cupboard, boarding up every
hole, baptizing the floors in Clorox, we awaken each
morning to trails of fresh rat shit. Here I am -
childhood ban-the-bomber, would-be pacifist, host of a
neighbourhood sitting group dedicated to the Buddha Way
- in the role of the aggressor. How have I arrived at
this? “Break its wretched neck!”
My focus narrows now to one essential question; When and
how did I make the decision to kill? There must have
been a decision. But no matter which way I tell myself
this tale, I arrive at the same disturbing impasse, the
opaque shift from Havahart traps to full-on homeland
security.
“What size do I need for a rat?” I found myself at the
hardware store studying traps. (informed that it was a
rat by the dimensions of the shit). Floor-to-ceiling
shelves displayed poison traps, glue traps, snap traps.
I finally settled on one of the snaps as if choosing
among miniature guillotines.
I scour my memories for this decision; My alarm may have
peaked the weekend Caitlin came home from college; I
pictured furry rodents burrowing through the roof,
violating her attic bedroom. And when the kidlets from
next door came over to be “babysat” with their crayons
and cookies, already in their pajamas cuddled on the
couches I heard the rats - I was sure of it - scuttling
along the baseboard underneath. Visions of rats pouncing
into babies’ cribs exacerbated a protective panic. I had
to do something. Anything!
Somewhere between the “provocations” and setting that
first deadly trap, this mission turned into war. But I
still can’t pinpoint the shift. All I know is that now
we are in a state of siege - all out defense against the
rats. We secure our home. We block off all borders,
sealing every hidden crawl space. We are on red alert
against any creature that sounds like a rat, smells like
a rat. Exterminate them all!
When I was a child I was consumed with a horror that I
would be kidnapped and hurt in some unimaginable way.
Whenever I told myself this story, I would arrive at the
same perfect escape: I would black out. Even now at age
sixty-three, when I picture a like scenario — an
accident or being jailed and tortured — I see myself
“saved” by a similar escape. I simply black out.
Blacking out sets me free, protects me from pain I
cannot tolerate. This strategy could surely offer
protection, salvation even, against something that for a
tender child, or indeed a tender human of any age, might
be a seriously traumatic.
But such blackout can become a habitual way of relating
to life — a disconnection from experience — tuning out
all that is too painful, too scary, too sad or even
threateningly pleasurable or joyful and, in my case,
bursting out in anger. In Buddhist teachings, there’s
suffering state of mind seen as a form of craving called
vibhava tanha, when you want desperately to get rid of
something or want it to cease with such intensity that
you crave annihilation. Was that my mind-state when I
started killing rats?
On this insomniac night, as I search for the fulcrum of
my decision, for those lost moments when terror turned
to violence, the dread sounds persist. Through a locked
door, through my comforter. Did a rat tunnel into the
living room wall and find a secret hole through a
heating vent into my bedroom? The clamor increases in
volume — a rasping, a gurgling. Are these some kind of
thug rats rioting?
Bolting up, I knock over the lamp, flick on the light. I
scan the newly lit room. In her basket, there’s Roxie,
loyal pup. I reach for her silky ears, her soft belly.
Then I hear her rumbling. A wild thought. I grab the
flashlight, stare at Roxie. That symphony of rat
ravings, has it simply been Roxie’s gaseous belly, tuned
stereophonic with the midnight flaring of my rat terror
and guilt? Are these the only sounds I’ve been hearing
all along tonight? Am I going crazy?
Real rats or imaginary? Nothing is so creepy as this,
not to trust my own rat tormented mind.
What is this rat? An innocent bloke doing his job, an
honest night’s work.
When Caitlin was little, she and her friend Elias used
to play for hours with his pet “ratties”. So sweet. And
smart too. Maybe the minds of rats can’t do
trigonometry, but scientists are now finding that their
brains share many structures with those of primates and,
indeed, of humans. While some neuroscientists are
studying the brains of spiritual adepts, others are
studying the brains of rats in order to understand the
circuitry of the brains of humans.
The killing of these fellow mammals deserves clear and
heartful consideration. But, I see it now, in my case,
this was missing. On danger alert, the ancient, more
primitive parts of the brain were aroused; the amygdala,
that almond-shaped structure buried deep in the brain,
reacted in terror and violence. I did indeed black out.
And what do I do now? My preference would be a composed
ending, a eureka where I recognize my nondecision, see
how barbaric it is to turn my kitchen into a killing
field, and I ... what?
* Move out, bequeathing the kitchen to the rats, the
living room? Hell, give them the whole house!
* Summon another goddess for a kindly capture?
* Block off all holes, purify all surfaces, and if the
rats come yammering in the rafters, scuttling behind the
sink, tearing into our dinners, be dammed; zip tight all
sleeping bags, screw closed all jars, seal off all that
is vulnerable and tender, live here together in armoured
harmony?
Even the Dalai Lama says that there may be situations
where force is the only recourse. Maybe my attacks on
the rats is one of those. Sometimes one thing cannot be
saved unless something else is exterminated. A house
safe for children in pajamas and teenage daughters who
sleep in attics may not be possible without killing
rats. I don’t know. But this logic could be treacherous.
Once followed, it might pardon unending sacrifices,
whole countries and categories of beings destroyed for
the sake of mythical safety.
No fixed solution or line of reasoning satisfies me. The
more I think on it, I know: What matters is considered
response — instead of reaction. If I am completely aware
of, and deliberate about, each step of a decision — even
to the point of killing rats — I wonder if I can live
with that.
As I understand it, mindfulness in cultivating non-harm
is the basic practice of Buddhism: training the mind to
be aware of the moment-to-moment choices and of the
intimate connection between intentions and the life
situations they engender. Of course, it’s particularly
challenging to sustain awareness when the mind is taken
over by fear. So awareness training strengthens the
recently evolved parts of the brain; these can override
the reactivity of the amygdala even in the face of our
most primal fears, allowing us to make aware choices.
Any moment when awareness is absent is what I call a
moment of blackout.
Out of some last cache of memories, a teaching comes
back to me that I heard many years ago. Zen teacher Reb
Anderson examined the First Precept not to kill — from a
koan-like perspective. As he phrased it, life is not
killed: “What is it not to kill? When you meet a
sentient being, to give complete attention to that
sentient being, to be totally devoted to your friends,
to your family, to your dog: that is not to kill and
that is what life is”.
The “not killing” Reb is talking about — offering
complete attention — is supremely challenging; that’s
why we sit on the meditation cushion training ourselves
to stay present, rewiring the circuitry of the brain;
that’s why we regularly take the precepts, reminding
ourselves of the commitment to offer our attention, as
we fumble along, trying,forgetting and trying again.
But the moments of blackout between commitment to
Havahart traps and purchasing snap traps — any moments
such as these — can have far-reaching and devastating
consequences. Often there are even group blackouts.
Neighbourhoods black out, as do counties and states and
whole societies; the Senate or Congress can black out.
It was during just such blackouts that decisions were
made to wage war in Vietnam, Granada and Iraq. So too,
we have blindly turned our fear into a war of terror,
spying and torture.
Such madness begins with the moment-by-moment blackouts
in our daily lives. radical “not killing” is to be
completely present.
This is what I aspire to, while keeping a tender heart
for myself who is so committed yet still often blacks
out, for the rest of our gang of suffering primate
clowns (as well as for other sundry mammals) -
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