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Wednesday, April 11, 1962
Upon returning to his house, don Juan recommended that
I work on my notes as if nothing had happened to me, and not to mention or
even be concerned with any of the events I had experienced.
After a day's rest he announced that we had to
leave the area for a few days because it was advisable to put distance
between us and those "entities." He said that they had affected me deeply,
although I was not noticing their effect yet because my body was not
sensitive enough. In a short while, however, I would fall seriously ill if
I did not go to my "place of predilection" to be cleansed and restored.
We left before dawn and drove north, and after an
exhausting drive and a fast hike we arrived at the hilltop in the late
afternoon.
Don Juan, as he had done before, covered the spot
where I had once slept with small branches and leaves. Then he gave me a
handful of leaves to put against the skin of my abdomen and told me to lie
down and rest. He fixed another place for himself slightly to my left,
about five feet away from my head, and also lay down.
In a matter of minutes I began to feel an exquisite
warmth and a sense of supreme well-being. It was a sense of physical
comfort, a sensation of being suspended in mid-air. I could fully agree
with don Juan's statement that the "bed of strings" would keep me
floating. I commented on the unbelievable quality of my sensory
experience. Don Juan said in a factual tone that the "bed" was made for
that purpose.
"I can't believe that this is possible!" I
exclaimed.
Don Juan took my statement literally and scolded
me. He said he was tired of my acting as an ultimately important being
that has to be given proof over and over that the world is unknown and
marvelous.
I tried to explain that a rhetorical exclamation
had no significance. He retorted that if that were so I could have chosen
another statement. It seemed that he was seriously annoyed with me. I sat
up halfway and began to apologize, but he laughed and, imitating my manner
of speaking, suggested a series of hilarious rhetorical exclamations I
could have used instead. I ended up laughing at the calculated absurdity
of some of his proposed alternatives.
He giggled and in a soft tone reminded me that I
should abandon myself to the sensation of floating.
The soothing feeling of peace and plenitude that I
experienced in that mysterious place aroused some deeply buried emotions
in me. I began to talk about my life. I confessed that I had never
respected or liked anybody, not even myself, and that I had always felt I
was inherently evil, and thus my attitude towards others was always veiled
with a certain bravado and daring.
"True," don Juan said. "You don't like yourself at
all."
He cackled and told me that he had been "seeing"
while I talked. His recommendation was that I should not have remorse for
anything I had done, because to isolate one's acts as being mean, or ugly,
or evil was to place an unwarranted importance on the self.
I moved nervously and the bed of leaves made a
rustling sound. Don Juan said that if I wanted to rest I should not make
my leaves feel agitated, and that I should imitate him and lie without
making a single movement. He added that in his "seeing" he had come across
one of my moods. He struggled for a moment, seemingly to find a proper
word, and said that the mood in question was a frame of mind I continually
lapsed into. He described it as a sort of trap door that opened at
unexpected times and swallowed me.
I asked him to be more specific. He replied that it
was impossible to be specific about "seeing."
Before I could say anything else he told me I
should relax, but not fall asleep, and be in a state of awareness for as
long as I could. He said that the "bed of strings" was made exclusively to
allow a warrior to arrive at a certain state of peace and well-being.
In a dramatic tone don Juan stated that well-being
was a condition one had to groom, a condition one had to become acquainted
with in order to seek it.
"You don't know what well-being is, because you
have never experienced it," he said.
I disagreed with him. But he continued arguing that
well-being was an achievement one had to deliberately seek. He said that
the only thing I knew how to seek was a sense of disorientation,
ill-being, and confusion.
He laughed mockingly and assured me that in order
to accomplish the feat of making myself miserable I had to work in a most
intense fashion, and that it was absurd I had never realized I could work
just the same in making myself complete and strong.
"The trick is in what one emphasizes," he said. "We
either make ourselves miserable, or we make ourselves strong. The amount
of work is the same."
I closed my eyes and relaxed again and began to
feel I was floating; for a short while it was as if I were actually moving
through space, like a leaf. Although it was utterly pleasurable, the
feeling somehow reminded me of times when I had become sick and dizzy and
would experience a sensation of spinning. I thought perhaps I had eaten
something bad.
I heard don Juan talking to me but I didn't really
make an effort to listen. I was trying to make a mental inventory of all
the things I had eaten that day, but I could not become interested in it.
It did not seem to matter.
"Watch the way the sunlight changes," he said.
His voice was clear. I thought it was like water,
fluid and warm.
The sky was totally free of clouds towards the west
and the sunlight was spectacular. Perhaps the fact that don Juan was cuing
me made the yellowish glow of the afternoon sun truly magnificent.
"Let that glow kindle you," don Juan said. "Before
the sun goes down today you must be perfectly calm and restored, because
tomorrow or the day after, you are going to learn not-doing."
"Learn not doing what?" I asked.
"Never mind now," he said. "Wait until we are in
those lava mountains."
He pointed to some distant jagged, dark, menacing
looking peaks towards the north.
Thursday, April 12, 1962
We reached the high desert around the lava
mountains in the late afternoon. In the distance the dark brown lava
mountains looked almost sinister. The sun was very low on the horizon and
shone on the western face of the solidified lava, tinting its dark
brownness with a dazzling array of yellow reflections.
I could not keep my eyes away. Those peaks were
truly mesmerizing.
By the end of the day the bottom slopes of the
mountains were in sight. There was very little vegetation on the high
desert; all I could see were cacti and a kind of tall grass that grew in
tufts.
Don Juan stopped to rest. He sat down, carefully
propped his food gourds against a rock, and said that we were going to
camp on that spot for the night. He had picked a relatively high place.
From where I stood I could see quite a distance away, all around us.
It was a cloudy day and the twilight quickly
enveloped the area. I became involved in watching the speed with which the
crimson clouds on the west faded into a uniform thick dark gray.
Don Juan got up and went to the bushes. By the time
he came back the silhouette of the lava mountains was a dark mass. He sat
down next to me and called my attention to what seemed to be a natural
formation on the mountains towards the northeast. It was a spot which had
a color much lighter than its surroundings. While the whole range of lava
mountains looked uniformly dark brown in the twilight, the spot he was
pointing at was actually yellowish or dark beige. I could not figure out
what it could be. I stared at it for a long time. It seemed to be moving;
I fancied it to be pulsating. When I squinted my eyes it actually rippled
as if the wind were moving it.
"Look at it fixedly!" don Juan commanded me.
At one moment, after I had maintained my stare for
quite a while, I felt that the whole range of mountains was moving towards
me. That feeling was accompanied by an unusual agitation in the pit of my
stomach. The discomfort became so acute that I stood up.
"Sit down!" don Juan yelled, but I was already on
my feet.
From my new point of view the yellowish formation
was lower on the side of the mountains. I sat down again, without taking
my eyes away, and the formation shifted to a higher place. I stared at it
for an instant and suddenly I arranged everything into the correct
perspective. I realized that what I had been looking at was not in the
mountains at all but was really a piece of yellowish green cloth hanging
from a tall cactus in front of me.
I laughed out loud and explained to don Juan that
the twilight had helped to create an optical illusion.
He got up and walked to the place where the piece
of cloth was hanging, took it down, folded it, and put it inside his
pouch.
"What are you doing that for?" I asked.
"Because this piece of cloth has power," he said
casually. "For a moment you were doing fine with it and there is no way of
knowing what may have happened if you had remained seated."
Friday, April 13, 1962
At the crack of dawn we headed for the mountains.
They were surprisingly far away. By midday we walked into one of the
canyons. There was some water in shallow pools. We sat to rest in the
shade of a hanging cliff.
The mountains were clumps of a monumental lava
flow. The solidified lava had weathered over the millennia into a porous
dark brown rock. Only a few sturdy weeds grew between the rocks and in the
cracks.
Looking up at the almost perpendicular walls of the
canyon, I had a weird sensation in the pit of my stomach. The walls were
hundreds of feet high and gave me the feeling that they were closing in on
me. The sun was almost overhead, slightly towards the southwest.
"Stand up here," don Juan said and maneuvered my
body until I was looking towards the sun.
He told me to look fixedly at the mountain walls
above me.
The sight was stupendous. The magnificent height of
the lava flow staggered my imagination. I began to wonder what a volcanic
upheaval it must have been. I looked up and down the sides of the canyon
various times. I became immersed in the richness of color in the rock
wall. There were specks of every conceivable hue. There were patches of
light gray moss or lichen in every rock. I looked right above my head and
noticed that the sunlight was producing the most exquisite reflections
when it hit the brilliant specks of the solidified lava.
I stared at an area in the mountains where the
sunlight was being reflected. As the sun moved, the intensity diminished,
then it faded completely.
I looked across the canyon and saw another area of
the same exquisite light refractions. l told don Juan what was happening,
and then I spotted another area of light, and then another in a different
place, and another, until the whole canyon was blotched with big patches
of light.
I felt dizzy; even if I closed my eyes I could
still see the brilliant lights. I held my head in my hands and tried to
crawl under the hanging cliff, but don Juan grabbed my arm firmly and
imperatively told me to look at the walls of the mountains and try to
figure out spots of heavy darkness in the midst of the fields of light.
I did not want to look, because the glare bothered
my eyes. I said that what was happening to me was similar to staring into
a sunny street through a window and then seeing the window frame as a dark
silhouette everywhere else.
Don Juan shook his head from side to side and began
to chuckle. He let go of my arm and we sat down again under the hanging
cliff.
I was jotting down my impressions of the
surroundings when don Juan, after a long silence, suddenly spoke in a
dramatic tone.
"I have brought you here to teach you one thing,"
he said and paused. "You are going to learn not-doing. We might as well
talk about it because there is no other way for you to proceed. I thought
you might catch on to not-doing without my having to say anything. I was
wrong."
"I don't know what you're talking about, don Juan."
"It doesn't matter," he said. "I am going to tell
you about something that is very simple but very difficult to perform; I
am going to talk to you about not-doing, in spite of the fact that there
is no way to talk about it, because it is the body that does it."
He stared at me in glances and then said that I had
to pay the utmost attention to what he was going to say.
I closed my notebook, but to my amazement be
insisted that I should keep on writing.
"Not-doing is so difficult and so powerful that you
should not mention it," he went on. "Not until you have stopped the world;
only then can you talk about it freely, if that's what you'd want to do."
Don Juan looked around and then pointed to a large
rock.
"That rock over there is a rock because of doing"
he said.
We looked at each other and he smiled. I waited for
an explanation but he remained silent. Finally I had to say that I had not
understood what he meant.
"That's doing!" he exclaimed.
"Pardon me?"
"That's also doing."
"What are you talking about, don Juan?"
"Doing is what makes that rock a rock and that bush
a bush. Doing is what makes you yourself and me myself."
I told him that his explanation did not explain
anything. He laughed and scratched his temples.
"That's the problem with talking," he said. "It
always makes one confuse the issues. If one starts talking about doing,
one always ends up talking about something else. It is better to just act.
"Take that rock for instance. To look at it is
doing, but to see it is not-doing."
I had to confess that his words were not making
sense to me.
"Oh yes they do!" he exclaimed. "But you are
convinced that they don't because that is your doing. That is the
way you act towards me and the world."
He again pointed to the rock.
"That rock is a rock because of all the things you
know how to do to it," he said. "I call that doing. A man of knowledge,
for instance, knows that the rock is a rock only because of doing, so if
he doesn't want the rock to be a rock all he has to do is not-doing. See
what I mean?" I did not understand him at all. He laughed and made another
attempt at explaining.
"The world is the world because you know the doing
involved in making it so," he said. "If you didn't know its doing, the
world would be different."
He examined me with curiosity. I stopped writing. I
just wanted to listen to him. He went on explaining that without that
certain "doing" there would be nothing familiar in the surroundings.
He leaned over and picked up a small rock between
the thumb and index of his left hand and held it in front of my eyes.
"This is a pebble because you know the doing
involved in making it into a pebble," he said.
"What are you saying?" I asked with a feeling of
bona fide confusion.
Don Juan smiled. He seemed to be trying to hide a
mischievous delight.
"I don't know why you are so confused," he said.
"Words are your predilection. You should be in heaven."
He gave me a mysterious look and raised his brows
two or three times. Then he pointed again to the small rock he was holding
in front of my eyes.
"I say that you are making this into a pebble
because you know the doing involved in it," he said. "Now, in order to
stop the world you must stop doing."
He seemed to know that I still had not understood
and smiled, shaking his head. He then took a twig and pointed to the
uneven edge of the pebble.
"In the case of this little rock," he went on, "the
first thing which doing does to it is to shrink it to this size. So the
proper thing to do, which a warrior does if he wants to stop the world, is
to enlarge a little rock, or any other thing, by not-doing."
He stood up and placed the pebble on the boulder
and then asked me to come closer and examine it. He told me to look at the
holes and depressions in the pebble and try to pick out the minute detail
in them. He said that if I could pick out the detail, the holes and
depressions would disappear and I would understand what "not-doing" meant.
"This damn pebble is going to drive you crazy
today," he said.
I must have had a look of bewilderment on my face.
He looked at me and laughed uproariously. Then he pretended to get angry
with the pebble and hit it two or three times with his hat.
I urged him to clarify his point. I argued that it
was possible for him to explain anything he wanted to if he made an
effort.
He gave me a sly glance and shook his head as if
the situation were hopeless.
"Sure I can explain anything," he said, laughing.
"But could you understand it?"
I was taken aback by his insinuation.
"Doing makes you separate the pebble from
the larger boulder," he continued. "If you want to learn not-doing, let's
say that you have to join them."
He pointed to the small shadow that the pebble cast
on the boulder and said that it was not a shadow but a glue which bound
them together. He then turned around and walked away, saying that he was
coming back to check on me later.
I stared at the pebble for a long time. I could not
focus my attention on the minute detail in the holes and depressions, but
the tiny shadow that the pebble calst on the boulder became a most
interesting point. Don Juan was right; it was like a glue. It moved and
shifted. I had the impression it was being squeezed from underneath the
pebble.
When don Juan returned I related to him what I had
observed about the shadow.
"That's a good beginning," he said. "A warrior can
tell all kinds of things from the shadows."
He then suggested that I should take the pebble and
bury it somewhere.
"Why?" I asked.
"You've been watching it for a long time," he said.
"It has something of you now. A warrior always tries to affect the force
of doing by changing it into not-doing. Doing would be to
leave the pebble lying around because it is merely a small rock. Not-doing
would be to proceed with that pebble as if it were something far beyond a
mere rock. In this case, that pebble has soaked in you for a long time and
now it is you, and as such, you cannot leave it lying around but must bury
it. If you would have personal power, however, not-doing would be
to change that pebble into a power object."
"Can I do that now?"
"Your life is not tight enough to do that. If you
would see, you would know that your heavy concern has changed that
pebble into something quite unappealing, therefore the best thing you can
do is to dig a hole and bury it and let the earth absorb its heaviness."
"Is all this true, don Juan?"
"To say yes or no to your question is doing.
But since you are learning not- doing I have to tell you that it
really doesn't matter whether or not all this is true. It is here that a
warrior has a point of advantage over the average man. An average man
cares that things are either true or false, but a warrior doesn't. An
average man proceeds in a specific way with things that he knows are true,
and in a different way with things that he knows are not true. If things
are said to be true, he acts and believes in what he does. But if things
are said to be untrue, he doesn't care to act, or he doesn't believe in
what he does. A warrior, on the other hand, acts in both instances. If
things are said to be true, he would act in order to do doing. If
things are said to be untrue, he still would act in order to do
not-doing. See what I mean?"
"No, I don't see what you mean at all," I said.
Don Juan's statements put me in a belligerent mood.
I could not make sense of what he was saying. I told him it was gibberish,
and he mocked me and said that I did not even have an impeccable spirit in
what I liked to do the most, talking. He actually made fun of my verbal
command and found it faulty and inadequate.
"If you are going to be all mouth, be a mouth
warrior," he said and roared with laughter.
I felt dejected. My ears were buzzing. I
experienced an uncomfortable heat in my head. I was actually embarrassed
and presumably red in the face.
I stood up and went into the chaparral and buried
the pebble.
"I was teasing you a little bit," don Juan said
when I returned and sat down again. "And yet I know that if you don't talk
you don't understand. Talking is doing for you, but talking is not
appropriate and if you want to know what I mean by not-doing you
have to do a simple exercise. Since we are concerned with not-doing
it doesn't matter whether you do the exercise now or ten years from now."
He made me lie down and took my right arm and bent
it at my elbow. Then he turned my hand until the palm was facing the
front; he curved my fingers so my hand looked as if I were holding a
doorknob, and then he began to move my arm back and forth with a circular
motion that resembled the act of pushing and pulling a lever attached to a
wheel.
Don Juan said that a warrior executed that movement
every time he wanted to push something out of his body, something like a
disease or an unwelcoming feeling. The idea was to push and pull an
imaginary opposing force until one felt a heavy object, a solid body,
stopping the free movements of the hand. In the case of the exercise, "not-doing"
consisted in repeating it until one felt the heavy body with the hand, in
spite of the fact that one could never believe it was possible to feel it.
I began moving my arm and in a short while my hand
became ice cold. I had begun to feel a sort of mushiness around my hand.
It was as if I were paddling through some heavy viscous liquid matter.
Don Juan made a sudden movement and grabbed my arm
to stop the motion. My whole body shivered as though stirred by some
unseen force. He scrutinized me as I sat up, and then walked around me
before he sat back down on the place where he had been.
"You've done enough," he said. "You may do this
exercise some other time, when you have more personal power."
"Did I do something wrong?"
"No. Not-doing is only for very strong
warriors and you don't have the power to deal with it yet. Now you will
only trap horrendous things with your hand. So do it little by little,
until your hand doesn't get cold any more. Whenever your hand remains warm
you can actually feel the lines of the world with it."
He paused as if to give me time to ask about the
lines. But before I had a chance to, he started explaining that there were
infinite numbers of lines that joined us to things. He said that the
exercise of "not-doing" that he had just described would help
anyone to feel a line that came out from the moving hand, a line that one
could place or cast wherever one wanted to. Don Juan said that this was
only an exercise, because the lines formed by the hand were not durable
enough to be of real value in a practical situation.
"A man of knowledge uses other parts of his body to
produce durable lines," he said.
"What parts of the body, don Juan?"
"The most durable lines that a man of knowledge
produces come from the middle of the body," he said, "But he can also make
them with his eyes."
"Are they real lines?"
"Surely."
"Can you see them and touch them?"
"Let's say that you can feel them. The most
difficult part about the warrior's way is to realize that the world is a
feeling. When one is not-doing, one is feeling the world, and one
feels the world through its lines."
He paused and examined me with curiosity. He raised
his brows and opened his eyes and then blinked. The effect was like the
eyes of a bird blinking. Almost immediately l felt a sensation of
discomfort and queasiness. It was actually as if something was applying
pressure to my stomach.
"See what I mean?" don Juan asked and moved his
eyes away.
I mentioned that I felt nauseated and he replied in
a matter-of-fact tone that he knew it, and that he was trying to make me
feel the lines of the world with his eyes. I could not accept the claim
that he himself was making me feel that way. I voiced my doubts. I could
hardly conceive the idea that he was causing my feeling of nausea, since
he had not, in any physical way, impinged on me.
"Not-doing is very simple but very difficult,'" he
said. "It is not a matter of understanding but of mastering it. Seeing, of
course, is the final accomplishment of a man of knowledge, and seeing is
attained only when one has stopped the world through the technique of
not-doing."
I smiled involuntarily. I had not understood what
he meant.
"When one does something with people," he said,
"the concern should be only with presenting the case to their bodies.
That's what I've been doing with you so far, letting your body know. Who
cares whether or not you understand?"
"But that's unfair, don Juan. I want to understand
everything, otherwise coming here would be a waste of my time."
"A waste of your time!" he exclaimed parodying my
tone of voice. "You certainly are conceited."
He stood up and told me that we were going to hike
to the top of the lava peak to our right.
The ascent to the top was an excruciating affair.
It was actual mountain climbing, except that there were no ropes to aid
and protect us. Don Juan repeatedly told me not to look down; and he had
to actually pull me up bodily a couple of times, after I had begun to
slide down the rock. I felt terribly embarrassed that don Juan, being so
old, had to help me. I told him that I was in poor physical condition
because I was too lazy to do any exercise. He replied that once one had
arrived at a certain level of personal power, exercise or any training of
that sort was unnecessary, since all one needed, to be in an impeccable
form, was to engage oneself in "not-doing."
When we arrived at the top I lay down. I was about
to be sick. He rolled me back and forth with his foot as he had done once
before. Little by little the motion restored my balance. But I felt
nervous. It was as if I were somehow waiting for the sudden appearance of
something. I involuntarily looked two or three times to each side. Don
Juan did not say a word but he also looked in the direction I was looking.
"Shadows are peculiar affairs," he said all of a
sudden. "You must have noticed that there is one following us."
"I haven't noticed anything of the sort," I
protested in a loud voice.
Don Juan said that my body had noticed our pursuer,
in spite of my stubborn opposition, and assured me in a confident tone
that there was nothing unusual about being followed by a shadow.
"It is just a power," he said. "These mountains are
filled with them. It is just like one of those entities that scared you
the other night."
I wanted to know if I could actually perceive it
myself. He asserted that in the daytime I could only feel its presence.
I wanted an explanation of why he called it a
shadow when obviously it was not like the shadow of a boulder. He replied
that both had the same lines, therefore both were shadows.
He pointed to a long boulder standing directly in
front of us.
"Look at the shadow of that boulder," he said. "The
shadow is the boulder, and yet it isn't. To observe the boulder in order
to know what the boulder is, is doing, but to observe its shadow is
not-doing.
"Shadows are like doors, the doors of not-doing. A
man of knowledge, for example, can tell the innermost feelings of men by
watching their shadows."
"Is there movement in them?" I asked.
"You may say that there is movement in them, or you
may say that the lines of the world are shown in them, or you may say that
feelings come from them."
"But how could feelings come out of shadows, don
Juan?"
"To believe that shadows are just shadows is
doing," he explained. "That belief is somehow stupid. Think about it
this way: There is so much more to everything in the world that obviously
there must be more to shadows too. After all, what makes them shadows is
merely our doing."
There was a long silence. I did not know what else
to say.
"The end of the day is approaching," don Juan said,
looking at the sky. "You have to use this brilliant sunlight to perform
one last exercise."
He led me to a place where there were two peaks the
size of a man standing parallel to each other, about four or five feet
apart. Don Juan stopped ten yards away from them, facing the west. He
marked a spot for me to stand on and told me to look at the shadows of the
peaks. He said that I should watch them and cross my eyes in the same
manner I ordinarily crossed them when scanning the ground for a place to
rest. He clarified his directions by saying that when searching for a
resting place one had to look without focusing but in observing shadows
one had to cross the eyes and yet keep a sharp image in focus. The idea
was to let one shadow be superimposed on the other by crossing the eyes.
He explained that through that process one could ascertain a certain
feeling which emanated from shadows. I commented on his vagueness, but he
maintained that there was really no way of describing what he meant.
My attempt to carry out the exercise was futile. I
struggled until I got a headache. Don Juan was not at all concerned with
my failure. He climbed to a domelike peak and yelled from the top, telling
me to look for two small long and narrow pieces of rock. He showed with
his hands the size rock he wanted.
I found two pieces and handed them to him. Don Juan
placed each rock about a foot apart in two crevices, made me stand above
them facing the west, and told me to do the same exercise with their
shadows.
This time it was an altogether different affair.
Almost immediately I was capable of crossing my eyes and perceiving their
individual shadows as if they had merged into one. I noticed that the act
of looking without converging the images gave the single shadow I had
formed an unbelievable depth and a sort of transparency. I stared at it,
bewildered. Every hole in the rock, on the area where my eyes were
focused, was neatly discernible; and the composite shadow, which was
superimposed on them, was like a film of indescribable transparency.
I did not want to blink, for fear of losing the
image I was so precariously holding. Finally my sore eyes forced me to
blink, but I did not lose the view of the detail at all. In fact, by
remoistening my cornea the image became even clearer. I noticed at that
point that it was as if I were looking from an immeasurable height at a
world I had never seen before. I also noticed that I could scan the
surroundings of the shadow without losing the focus of my visual
perception. Then, for an instant, I lost the notion that I was looking at
a rock. I felt that I was landing in a world, vast beyond anything I had
ever conceived. This extraordinary perception lasted for a second and then
everything was turned off. I automatically looked up and saw don Juan
standing directly above the rocks, facing me. He had blocked the sunlight
with his body.
I described the unusual sensation I had had, and he
explained that he had been forced to interrupt it because he "saw" that I
was about to get lost in it. He added that it was a natural tendency for
all of us to indulge ourselves when feelings of that nature occur, and
that by indulging myself in it I had almost turned "not-doing" into
my old familiar "doing." He said that what I should have done was
to maintain the view without succumbing to it, because in a way "doing"
was a manner of succumbing.
I complained that he should have told me beforehand
what to expect and what to do, but he pointed out that he had no way of
knowing whether or not I would succeed in merging the shadows.
I had to confess I was more mystified than ever
about "not-doing." Don Juan's comments were that I should be
satisfied with what I had done, because for once I had proceeded
correctly, that by reducing the world I had enlarged it, and that,
although I had been far from feeling the lines of the world, I had
correctly used the shadow of the rocks as a door into "not- doing."
The statement that I had enlarged the world by
reducing it intrigued me to no end. The detail of the porous rock, in the
small area where my eyes were focused, was so vivid and so precisely
defined that the top of the round peak became a vast world for me; and yet
it was really a reduced vision of the rock. When don Juan blocked the
light and I found myself looking as l normally would do, the precise
detail became dull, the tiny holes in the porous rock became bigger, the
brown color of the dried lava became opaque, and everything lost the shiny
transparency that made the rock into a real world.
Don Juan then took the two rocks, laid them gently
into a deep crevice, and sat down cross-legged facing the west, on the
spot where the rocks had been. He patted a spot next to him to his left
and told me to sit down.
We did not speak for a long time. Then we ate, also
in silence. It was only after the sun had set that he suddenly turned and
asked me about my progress in "dreaming."
I told him that it had been easy in the beginning,
but that at the moment I had ceased altogether to find my hands in my
dreams.
"When you first started dreaming you were using my
personal power, that's why it was easier," he said. "Now you are empty.
But you must keep on trying until you have enough power of your own. You
see, dreaming is the not-doing of dreams, and as you progress in
your not-doing you will also progress in dreaming. The trick is not
to stop looking for your hands, even if you don't believe that what you
are doing has any meaning. In fact, as I have told you before, a warrior
doesn't need to believe, because as long as he keeps on acting without
believing he is not-doing."
We looked at each other for a moment.
"There is nothing else I can tell you about
dreaming," he continued. "Everything I may say would only be not-doing.
But if you tackle not-doing directly, you yourself would know what
to do in dreaming. To find your hands is essential, though, at this time,
and I am sure you will."
"I don't know, don Juan. I don't trust myself."
"This is not a matter of trusting anybody. This
whole affair is a matter of a warrior's struggle; and you will keep on
struggling, if not under your own power, then perhaps under the impact of
a worthy opponent, or with the help of some allies, like the one which is
already following you."
I made a jerky involuntary movement with my right
arm. Don Juan said that my body knew much more than I suspected, because
the force that had been pursuing us was to my right. He confided in a low
voice that twice that day the ally had come so close to me that he had had
to step in and stop it.
"During the day shadows are the doors of
not-doing," he said. "But at night, since very little doing
prevails in the dark, everything is a shadow, including the allies. I've
already told you about this when I taught you the gait of power."
I laughed out loud and my own laughter scared me.
"Everything I have taught you so far has been an
aspect of not-doing," he went on. "A warrior applies not-doing
to everything in the world, and yet I can't tell you more about it than
what I have said today. You must let your own body discover the power and
the feeling of not-doing."
I had another fit of nervous cackling.
"It is stupid for you to scorn the mysteries of the
world simply because you know the doing of scorn," he said with a
serious face.
I assured him that I was not scorning anything or
any one, but that I was more nervous and incompetent than he thought.
"I've always been that way," I said. "And yet I
want to change, but I don't know how. I am so inadequate."
"I already know that you think you are rotten," he
said. "That's your doing. Now in order to affect that doing I am
going to recommend that you learn another doing. From now on, and
for a period of eight days, I want you to lie to yourself. Instead of
telling yourself the truth, that you are ugly and rotten and inadequate,
you will tell yourself that you are the complete opposite, knowing that
you are lying and that you are absolutely beyond hope."
"But what would be the point of lying like that,
don Juan?"
"It may hook you to another doing and then
you may realize that both doings are lies, unreal, and that to
hinge yourself to either one is a waste of time, because the only thing
that is real is the being in you that is going to die. To arrive at that
being is the not-doing of the self."
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