When a piece suddenly goes
missing from the quilt of your relationships you tend to give some thought to the
person who used to be there. After mum’s
death three days ago I was looking through some old photos. This one brought back
memories of 1966 to be exact, and all the experiences and images from that time,
almost none of which have bothered to amble into my mind for a good 30 years. This
photo was taken at the beginning of what was to become nearly a decade of emotional turmoil. What with the
onset of puberty, increasing difficulties in my parent’s marriage, being
bullied at school and later, very serious bouts of depression, I was not a
happy youth. Some sympathy from my parents could have been a real comfort. But mum’s
preoccupied with my baby brother (that’s him on her knee) and the war of attrition
she was waging against my father (he’s taking the picture) meant that she had
little time for me. Dad never has any time for me even when things were
okay. Aware that he had made several decisions that had upset the family’s
previous middle-class comfort and financial security his hair-trigger temper
had become worse than ever. I didn’t want his sympathy, I just tried to keep
out of his way as much as possible. Despite all the disruption they were enduring
neither of my parents ever failed to provide for our material needs. Dad always
brought home the bacon, never spending any on himself, and mum performed her
household duties with all the diligence and skill she had always done. That was
one aspect of being a good parent that they both excelled at and I am grateful
to both of them for it.
My mum also passed onto me a love of books and reading, a concern for animals, a fascination with history and something I sometimes wish I had less of but which been very helpful to me nonetheless, a sceptical turn of mind.
My mum also passed onto me a love of books and reading, a concern for animals, a fascination with history and something I sometimes wish I had less of but which been very helpful to me nonetheless, a sceptical turn of mind.
However, looking back I would have to say that by the
time I left home I was a bit of an emotional mess. I had what would now be called
“low self-esteem”; then we just called it being a misery guts. I also suffered
from periods of dark depression which I inadvertently made worse by listening
to Tchaikovsky’s Pathetique from my small record collection. To this day I when
they play this symphony on the radio I have to turn it off. Then one
day I found a copy of The Mind Unshaken,
John Walters’ account of Buddhism and why he became a Buddhist. I was riveted, especially
by the Buddha’s idea that while dukkha
was an integral part of life it can be overcome. This seemed to arouse a
determination to pull myself out of the bog I found myself in. Over the next
decade or so I absorbed the Dhamma and as I did I gradually “untangled the
tangle” and straightened myself out. I can say with honesty that my last 30
years have been generally happy, satisfying and fulfilling and I owe that entirely
to the Dhamma and my own efforts. I am convinced that one need not be held back
by difficult or unpromising beginnings and that the recourses needed for this
task are available in the Dhamma.