A couple of quick notes before this week's blog. I will be in NYC from
Jan. 10-17. Although food and shelter are assured for my trip, the next
most crucial life resource, wi-fi, is not, so you may not get a blog
next week. I've just a finished a months long upgrade/revision of the
Zap Oracle. We're in a new decade so this may be a propitious time to
consult an oracle.
Avoiding
the vampire path is not as easy or as obvious as it might seem. For
example, someone scanning personal ads looking for someone that will
make him feel better could be said to be on a vampire path. Whenever
our focus is on what we want, or feel we need from others, we have
stepped onto the vampire path. We've all done it and had it done to us.
It's a lonely and difficult world, so it's inevitable that at times we
will look for someone to make us feel better, to fulfill our needs
and/or wants, someone that will give us nourishment. After all, we're
mammals, and the definition of a mammal is an embodied being that
begins life drinking nourishment from the body of another mammal. Many
times we find ourselves, through whatever means — food, drink, sex,
emotions, trying to return to mother's breast, reaching for something
or someone to make us feel better. The most classic motivation for
someone going to a party, bar, dance, festival, etc. is to find someone
that will make them feel better. A great many social events are sloppy
vampire carnivals consisting of hungry mammals on the prowl, looking
for someone from whom they can draw nourishment. In fact, the vampire
path is so classic, so common that it is accepted, even embraced as the
norm, and for most the only question is: How do I succeed on the
vampire path? Do I have the right pick up lines? Are my clothes,
cosmetics, cologne or perfume good enough for me to succeed on the
vampire path? If I lost weight and worked out more, or perhaps had a
complete makeover, wouldn't I do better at drawing nourishment from
others?
Some will ask: "But what's wrong with seeking
another person to make yourself feel better?" It's a deceptively simple
question because the answer is multi-layered and beyond the scope of
this card. But briefly: Pleasure is not a sufficient basis for a high
quality relationship. Inevitably there is pain in relationships and
pleasure lights up elsewhere, so there is no real loyalty or trust in
such relationships. If we look to find wholeness through another person
we injure our relationship to our inner wholeness. Alternatively, if
don't want wholeness, but merely pleasure, resources and/or status by
being with the other, we degrade both the other person and ourselves.
When physically intimacy occurs without a heart connection, we may
diminish our ability to connect physical intimacy with deep feeling.
When we carelessly have sex with people we barely know, we forget that
merging with another can be as energetically perilous as it can be
hazardous on the microbiological plane.
"In real love you want the other person's good. In romantic love you want the other person."
— Margaret Anderson
As you travel the vampire path you encounter various stock characters,
as most vampires are highly stereotyped. For example, there are the
overt predator types. This type ranges from the murder/rapist to those
who use every sort of manipulative tactic and deception, but stop short
of brute force, to obtain sexual gratification. Any attractive young
woman walking down a busy street, for example, must endure continual
vampiric/predator scanning. Even more classic is the neurotic vampire
who feels the victim of other vampires while at the same time laments
not being a more successful vampire himself. One of the most common
sub-species of the neurotic vampire is the drama queen, a person who is
forever pulling others into their vortex of self-pity so that they can
feed off of their emotional energy. Many movies, songs and other
cultural artifacts revolve around the vampire path. For example,
romantic comedy movies are usually about the supposedly funny antics of
well-groomed yuppies feverishly trying to succeed on the vampire path.
To
many this critique may seem sanctimonious or even puritanical. To
others it may seem that I am being a party pooper, trying to spoil all
the fun in life. To avoid the vampire path we need to work through
these classic objections. Let's start with sanctimonious. I claim no
moral superiority through this or any of the cards because all of them
were created as lessons for myself, signposts I've erected along my own
journey that I hope have relevance for others. I'm writing this card
because it's a struggle for me to avoid the vampire path. For example,
in the card entitled "Grappling with the Dark Side of the Force," I
wrote the following:
"Here's a very mundane example of the
dark side of the force: There is someone I am intensely attracted to
but that person is unavailable and/or does not return the attraction. I
feel a force in me that wants that person to want me, wants that person
not to be who they are, but what I want them to be. I feel a force that
doesn't want that person to be free to choose what they want (unless it
is also what I want), but that just wants this person. There is a rage
inside the force because it is not getting everything it wants. The
rage is not righteous indignation at some injustice; it is the rage of
frustrated infantile omnipotence. The dark force inside of me assumes
that the world is there to satisfy my wants, and everything I want
should be there for my taking. The force wants what it wants when it
wants it. How dare anyone else take what is mine, and it is all mine!
"The
example above is just one of the myriad versions of the dark side of
the force I can find within myself. Because I also have a will and a
conscience and other forces within me, the dark force does not have to
rule me, even though I do have to acknowledge and integrate its
presence. If there aren't strong enough countervailing forces within
me, then the dark thought-forms in the above example could turn me into
a stalker, a predator, or some other sort of malignant narcissist.
Indeed, this is exactly what the dark side of the force does to many
who are out there on the street and in the corridors of power."
So
I don't think I am being sanctimonious. I don't have a religious axe to
grind, and there's no zaporacle.com monastery to join, no burqa or
repressive measure I want anyone to adopt. Next objection: Am I being a
party pooper? Wouldn't giving up the vampire path take all the fun out
of life? The vampire path can be fun at times, but it also one of the
greatest engines of suffering ever created. Romantic comedies only work
because they end with the honeymoon or a giddy feeding frenzy of some
sort. Actual relationships based on the same model go sour as quick as
so many of the off-screen relationships of movie stars. The vampire
path is its own party pooper. As someone once pointed out, few
enterprises, besides diets, begin with such high hopes and typically
end with such miserable results as most modern romances. Do I think the
"sanctity of marriage" is the answer? Ten years after being married,
90% report being much less happy with their marriages than they were at
the beginning.* Through whatever institution, ritual or rite, when you
step on the path of seeking another to make yourself feel better (the
most classic motivation for marriage and children) you are most likely
to experience profound disappointment.
The opposite of the
vampire path is the path of service. Service is often the healthiest
and most fulfilling stance in many relationships. For example, it is
better to raise children from the stance of service than from the
vampiric stance of expecting the children to make you feel better. On
the other hand, I'm not a big fan of identifying with polar absolutes.
(see Dynamic Paradoxicalism — the Anti-Ism, Ism)
A man was once asked, "What's your purpose in life?"
"To help others," he replied.
"Then what are the other people here for?" asked the questioner.
The service stance is one of the healthiest and most fulfilling in many
contexts, but if I come to absolutely identify with it, I've fallen for
another fallacy. The nature of human incarnation is that we all need to
serve and be served by others. Anyone reading this was served by adults
when they were a helpless infant. As we go through the lifecycle there
will likely be times of acute illness and/or old age when we need to be
served by others. Symbiosis is what I aim at; I seek to both nourish
others and to be nourished. If I focus mostly on my nourishment I step
onto the vampire path; if I focus exclusively on being a nourisher, I
become the martyred caregiver type. Both of those paths are boring,
stereotyped and unfulfilling.
Finally, in some of the cards on love I describe someone who found a powerful way to transcend the vampire path:
"Sometime
in the Nineties an eighty-year-old woman, who was a Jungian analyst,
gave a talk I attended in Boulder. At the end of her talk there were
questions from the audience and the first one came from a young woman.
'Now that you are an elder,' asked the young woman, 'what can you tell
me as a young woman about love?' The elder woman replied, 'When I was
your age I was desperately trying to be loved. But now I know that it is better to simply be love."
A great many glossy magazines are vampire manuals purporting to tell
you what you need to know to succeed on the vampire path as the
magazines, inanimate vampires themselves, seduce you into various
purchases.