THE LAST METHOD

You have tried everything.

You know you have tried everything because you are still here, reading, looking for the thing that will work.

If anything had worked you would not be reading this.

The fact that you are reading this is the evidence.

The first teacher told you to sit still and watch the breath. You watched the breath for two years. The breath did not reveal anything. It revealed more thoughts about the breath. You became a very good breather. The thing underneath the breathing did not move.

The second teacher told you the first teacher was too basic. You needed something more advanced. Vipassana. Body scanning. Noting practice. You scanned the body. You noted everything. You became a very good noter. The noting was the mind doing its favorite thing: cataloging. You built a very organized library inside a burning building.

The third teacher told you to stop trying. Just be. Let go. Surrender. You tried to let go. You put enormous effort into effortlessness. You practiced surrender with the discipline of a soldier. You surrendered so hard your jaw ached.

Nobody told you the jaw was the answer.

Nobody told you the aching was closer to the thing than any practice you had ever done.

Because the aching was not strategic. The aching was not for anything. The aching was just the body doing what it does when the thought structure forces it into a shape it cannot hold.

I know about the wreckage because I have been in the wreckage.

The retreat where I cried for four hours and called it breakthrough and three weeks later could not remember what I cried about. The insight at 3am that rearranged everything and by morning had become a memory of an insight which is not an insight which is a souvenir from a country I visited once and cannot find on the map.

The book that changed my life. That is the phrase. The book that changed my life. I have said it about eleven books. My life was changed eleven times and here I am, unchanged, holding eleven receipts.

That is not a confession of failure.

That is a description of hardware.

The hardware does not allow permanent change through the mechanism of seeking. The seeking is the hardware’s way of staying the same while appearing to move. Like a treadmill. The legs move. The scenery does not. You arrive at the same place with better calves.

I have very good calves.

They have not helped.

The people who say they found it are the ones I watch most carefully.

The ones with the soft eyes and the steady voice and the gentle way of saying “I used to be where you are.” They have a quality about them. A stillness. A settledness. And you want what they have and they know you want what they have and the wanting is the transaction and the transaction is the trap.

What they found is a state.

A state is a weather pattern. It arrives. It leaves. The person who found peace is a person who is currently experiencing a weather pattern called peace. The weather will change. It always changes. The person will attribute the change to something they did wrong, or something they forgot, or something they need to return to. They will seek the state again. They will seek it by doing the thing that produced it the first time. It will not work the same way twice because states are not produced. They arrive. The thing that was happening when the state arrived was not the cause. It was the scenery.

But the scenery becomes the method.

And the method becomes the next search.

And the search is the thing I am describing.

Here is the part where you expect the turn.

The part where I say: but there is one thing.

There is not one thing.

There is no turn.

There is no hidden key. No method beneath the critique of method. No final instruction disguised as the absence of instruction.

This is what U.G. meant when he said there is no way out.

Not “there is a difficult way out.” Not “the way out is to stop looking for a way out.” Not “the way out is the realization that there is no way out.”

There. Is. No. Way. Out.

The one who wants out IS the in.

The wanting is the wall.

The wall cannot dismantle the wall.

This is mechanics. Not poetry. Not mysticism. Not a teaching dressed in paradox.

The eye cannot see itself.

The tooth cannot bite itself.

The self cannot free itself.

These are the same sentence.

You are still reading.

You are reading because the machinery told you there might be something at the end. A reward for making it through. A punchline. A last paragraph that quietly delivers the thing the rest of the document said could not be delivered.

The machinery is doing what it does.

I have nothing at the end.

I have nothing at the beginning either.

I have nothing in the middle and the having-nothing is not the thing.

The having-nothing is the mind converting absence into a position. “I have nothing.” That is a possession. Nothing, possessed. The mind took the emptiness and put it in the ledger and now it owns a very special nothing that other people do not have.

You will do this.

You will take the futility and make it yours. “I understand that seeking is futile.” That understanding is the seeking wearing a graduation cap. The seeking just got a degree in its own futility and hung the diploma on the wall and the wall is the same wall and the room is the same room.

I cannot stop this.

Nobody can stop this.

The organism will do what the organism does. The thought structure will convert. The seeker will seek. The machinery will run.

And underneath all of it, absolutely untouched by any of it, the body breathes.

Not for a reason.

Not toward a goal.

The lungs do not know about futility.

They just fill and empty.

Fill and empty.

That is the closest I can point.

And the pointing is not the thing.

These are words.

The mechanism they describe is not words.

You will have to look for yourself.

The mechanism this discourse stands next to lives in The Machinery of Futility.