Hello, good people!
First of all, a sincere and hearty welcome to the 40 or so new subscribers who have joined since Expanding Awareness #4. We’re now at 372!
This edition is a fun one, because I get two share two amazing things that happened in the last month: two podcasters got in touch to ask me to discuss Alexander Technique on their shows.
In order of publication, these were:
Do explain #14 with Christofer Lövgren. You can listen on Soundcloud , Spotify or directly on Christofer’s website. It was wonderful to have the space to discuss many of these concepts in a conversational setting. I had so much fun recording this that I didn’t realise that my audio was being recorded through my laptop instead of my headphones, so forgive the patchy audio on my side as I paced around. Lesson learned, and thanks Christofer!
Mostly Harmless #4 with Allan Steele, which you can watch on YouTube. Again, this was a lot of fun to go deep into some of the concepts that I talk about in Expanding Awareness, and the video format really helped me illustrate some points that aren’t so easy on audio. Thanks Allan for having me on!
Now I want to unpick a challenge that was presented to me: why do I say non-doing, which can confuse people, instead of something more clear like non-forcing?
Non-doing or non-forcing?
Indeed, Alan Watts himself preferred the term forcing in translating the ‘wei’ in ‘wu-wei’:
“Wu-wei is the principle of not forcing in anything that you do.”
I also like the term ‘non-forcing’ and agree that it gets closer to what in Alexander Technique is called inhibition – which I talked about in #4 – the skill that gives us access to effortless being and action.
But I still like ‘non-doing’. Why? Because I don’t want to let people off the hook so easily. (🤭)
I am trying to point towards an experience that is subtle. Chances are that the first thing to occur to you when thinking about non-doing is not really it. There needs to be some reason, some invitation, to dig a little deeper.
If I were to suggest something like “life can be more effortless if you learn how to stop forcing”, that may immediately paint a picture of an exaggerated kind of tension. We all know people who are highly strung and ‘tight’ in everything they do, which makes it so easy to say “ah yes, I am aware of those people, and I’m nothing like them, so what a relief it is to discover that I am already non-forcing. Back to Netflix, then.”
You see how easy it is to slip around true examination of the idea. Particularly in contexts like Twitter, where I have 280 characters per tweet to give someone sufficient pause to give the idea a chance, non-forcing doesn’t really cut it for me.
Let’s explore ‘non-doing’ then. For me, non-forcing and non-doing are synonymous, but non-doing gives people new to the idea a better sense of the paradox that needs to be resolved. It’s a term that raises objections:
“So non-doing just means doing nothing, then.”
No. Non-doing is neither doing nor doing nothing, which are in fact the same thing.
”Okay, but surely if I non-do then I won’t get anything done?”
Incorrect. In fact you’ll unlock capacity, creativity and enjoyment you didn’t think possible. And they’ll just happen by themselves.
”But…. what are you talking about? How?”
BOOM. That’s what I want. The term non-doing is like a Zen kōan, a nonsensical paradox designed to get your thinking mind to drop away to reveal a direct understanding of the world in a space bigger than and outside of thought.
I invite you to play with non-doing as we go on. Right now, it’s likely that you are ‘doing’ reading.
Check in with yourself as you read. Is your breathing shallow? Is there tension around your eyes and face? Are you leaning towards the screen?
I’m going to keep giving you some words that you can read while you play with this. I invite you to realise that, for example, if you speak English, you don’t need to try to understand these words.
See if you can notice that there is a part of your mind that desperately wants to involve itself in understanding, even though it happens automatically.
It’s the same with sounds. While still reading, I invite you to notice that there are sounds going on around you, and have been this whole time. Notice that same part of your mind that wants to make sense of, label, or even try to listen. No – again – listening can take care of itself.
(For those of you who, like me, enjoy deep trance with Alan Watts voiceover, this track illustrates this listening point perfectly, and is just wonderful.)
This is the kind of ‘doing’ that is meant in non-doing or non-forcing. To borrow some language from meditative traditions, we could consider the immediate understanding of “forcing” as “gross doing” and the ultimate understanding of forcing as “subtle doing”.
And now I want to really trigger you by suggesting that, where forcing and doing are synonymous, so is ‘caring’.
What about ‘non-caring’?
If I were to ask you not to care about something, what does that bring up for you?
I’m guessing there’s a negative connotation. I can imagine a school teacher writing to my parents to say “Michael simply doesn’t care enough.” In fact, my school had a hilarious evaluation system:
the grades A-E represented performance
the numbers 1-5 represented perceived effort (as I frame it now)
For each subject each term we would receive scores like B2, A1, A3, etc. It didn’t take long to figure out that A3 is obviously a much better grade than A1: “look, I’m getting the same good marks and not really trying!”. You would think it’s a good thing, but that’s not the vibe I used to get from an A3.
Instead, it came with a thin kind of revulsion, judgement or the impression that I was somehow lacking in virtue. The lesson was clear: it’s not enough merely to achieve, you must also appear as though you care about achieving.
The fact that this idea was deeply programmed into me – and, I suspect, also in you – was made abundantly clear to me in my Alexander Technique training. (I also believe it’s a big part of why Total Work is a thing).
My teacher (Peter Nobes) and I would play catch during lessons. Imagine for yourself how you would have responded in the following scenario:
the teacher throws a ball at you
That’s it. That’s the scenario. Can you already feel how your mind and body are reorganising at the prospect?
These are some of the things that I experienced:
it became important that I catch the ball
I worried how silly I would look if I didn’t catch the ball
I got anxious because I was such a bad catcher at school
So I tried to catch the ball
And I sucked at catching the ball like this
That entire process can be called ‘caring’. And every time Peter saw me caring (and believe me, it’s very obvious), he would say “this is the least important thing you’ve ever done in your life”.
Of course that’s true. I was standing in a room with one other person, participating in a training exercise, with no possible negative consequences of not catching the ball. The point of the exercise was not to catch the ball, but to not care about catching the ball. That’s surprisingly hard when you first play with it.
And what I discovered was that, when I cared less – or was able not to care at all about whether I caught, dropped or totally ignored the ball – my ability to catch it improved 100x. I’m not even exaggerating there. My hand would magically send itself to exactly the right place.
Even when I threw the ball back, Peter would just hold out his hand, I would throw it (in an uncaring way), and it would just land in his hand, consistently. He didn’t have to move his hand to catch the ball, the throw was that accurate. There’s no way that I could have done that.
Caring, then, is perhaps a more accessible way into understanding what ‘forcing’ and ‘doing’ are about. The more I ‘cared’ about catching the ball, the more I forced it. When I didn’t care – yet still intended to catch the ball – I didn’t force it, and it happened by itself.
“Well, fine, it’s easy not to care about catching a ball, but what about <all the important things in my life>, Michael? I can’t not care about those, they need to get done!”
I have two answers for you.
First, right now, I’m not suggesting you completely let go of caring about all things. There’s a lot of conditioning to undo and skill to build. Instead, pick some small things: see if you can care less while reading, while cooking, while listening to music, or even while talking to someone.
This doesn’t mean ‘not intend to be engaged in that activity’, but to let go of the caring about getting it ‘right’ or ‘wrong’. You won’t be a bad person if you care just a little less in the sense I mean.
Second, consider why some things are easier not to care about than others. It comes down to trust. It’s easier not to care about catching a ball after I’ve seen my body just do it a few times. It’s less easy to trust that same system when there’s an important report I need to write for the big client by the tough deadline my boss set.
Ultimately, I believe that all things can benefit from this non-doing / non-forcing / non-caring approach. But I can’t do it all the time (yet), some things still hook me and I can’t always let go of the need to interfere.
That’s okay though, we’re all a work in progress.
Thanks for reading this far! If anything here resonated with you then please hit reply and let me know. I have now got my emails under control so will answer you on human timescales.
By the way, I also write articles on my website and run another newsletter called Thinking Out Loud. That’s where I write about stuff like Total Work, solarpunk, carbon removal, sense-making, building communities, creating positive narratives for the future, identity and various other things. I invite you to check them out.