
Contemplative Outreach News
Volume 8, Number 1 - Spring, 1994
Will and Intention || Post-Intensive
Scrooge Effect
The Mystery Moves || Mary
Caparosa Mrozowski
Will and Intention in Contemplative Prayer
By Father Thomas Keating
Part II
The sacred word is something
like the focusing apparatus on a video camera. If I were panning an audience, I
would have to adjust the lens a bit for those up front but those in the middle
would then get fuzzy. For those in the middle I would have to adjust the lens
again to get them in focus, and once again for those in the rear. In the above
simile we are talking about physical clarity. I am using it in another context
there. The focusing process that the sacred word serves is not to bring a
particular face, object or symbol into focus in the imagination, but to focus
our intention when it gets fuzzy. Intention is the most important factor
in any contemplative prayer practice, but especially in Centering Prayer in
which our only activity consists in maintaining our intention to consent to
God's presence and action during the time of prayer.
The intention becomes fuzzy
when stimulated by one of the emotional programs for happiness. Even after one
has consciously rejected it for the sake of the values of the gospel, it may
still be present in the unconscious. For example, one may have a great emotional
investment in the security symbols of a particular culture. The pain of one's
insecurity may have been so painful in early childhood that one repressed into
the unconscious the very memory of the privation. But the unconscious remembers.
The emotions are energy and they don't go away if repressed. They get stored in
the body. The body is the storehouse of emotional energy that was not adequately
processed. As a result, one develops blockages to the healthy flow of energies
in the body and nervous system. This only reinforces the need for compensatory
activity to hide the pain. Addictions are the ultimate way of distracting
oneself from pain one is unwilling to face.
The spiritual journey from
this aspect is a course in growing up and becoming liberated from childhood
fixations at emotional levels that have become disruptive of our adult life and
that interfere with our relationships. The journey is a form of divine
psychotherapy in which God tries to heal us on every level, beginning with the
body and the emotions.
For each level of emotional
intensity there is a corresponding set of almost endless commentaries that are
pre-recorded. When a strong emotion goes off, one is instantly besieged by a
surge of commentaries, all of which take one farther and farther out of the
peace, calm, and detachment that contemplation requires. That is why we need to
have a focusing apparatus when our intention, our consent to God's presence and
action, begins to get fuzzy because of boats (thoughts) going by on the surface
of our awareness that attract or stimulate the programs in the unconscious.
It is not our attention that
needs adjusting, because attention is secondary in Centering Prayer. We are not
attending to a particular thought or object, or even to the sacred word as we
would be the case in a mantric kid of prayer. Our attention is a general and
loving awareness of the presence of God. The actual work of Centering Prayer is
ever-so-gently, without effort, consenting to God and letting go of the present
moment with its psychological content. If some other thought or feeling causes
the unconscious programs to get stimulated along with their commentaries, then
before one gets on the boat, one returns to the sacred word. In this way, one
develops with time, patience, and may failures, the habit of letting go of
thought promptly, not by thinking about the fact that one is thinking, but
simply by returning ever-so-gently to the sacred word. If you find yourself on a
boat, just get off. There should be no self-recriminations, no sighs, no
annoyance that you have had a distraction. Any such reflection is another
thought, another boat.
This prayer recommends itself
as a prayer of great simplicity, a simplicity that is characteristic of
childhood, which is to be present to the present moment and to forget what
happened before. That is why the mood changes of the child are so striking. They
go from tears to laughter. Just the consent to return to the sacred word is all
the activity that is required in Centering Prayer. Any analyzing, commentaries,
guilt feelings, or recriminations are more distracting than the original
thought. The original thought may simply have been a plan for the future
or a memory. It is not nearly as effective in taking you out of interior silence
as a feeling or an emotionally charged thought such as shame or guilt.
In this prayer we need to
develop a certain jolly acceptance of our thoughts. We can't avoid them all. If
we could avoid them all, we would already be perfect in contemplation. I presume
if that were the case, you would not now be reading this paper. If you are like
99.9% of the human race, this is a process that is going to take some time and
may not even be completed in this lifetime. But cheer up. Every bit of progress
is a bonus for the next life.
Contemplative prayer is a kind
of purgatory. Purgatory is a state in which we complete the contemplative
journey in the next life if we may not have quite finished it here. Every bit of
progress means an enormous benefit for us and for everyone else in the human
race. To be on this journey is really the greatest contribution one can make to
the human family. This journey does not just involve what happens in prayer, but
what happens in prayer enables one to live daily life as a continuation of the
purification process. The ups and downs of daily life, including its very
everydayness, is the arena in which the Christian journey takes place. God is in
solidarity with our lives and deaths, just as they are. Perfection does not
consist in feeling perfect or being perfect, but in doing what we are supposed
to do without noticing it: loving people without taking any credit. Just doing
it.
To sum up, we use the sacred
word only as a focusing apparatus to bring our intention into full clarity,
whenever, because of the weakness of human nature and the fact that the
emotional programs for happiness in the unconscious are still active, we need
some means of returning to our original intention, that is, consent to God's
presence and action within us. With regular practice, we develop a certain ease
in letting go. We then enter into the cloud of unknowing which develops through
repeated small acts of consent. This means that we have dismantled the emotional
programs sufficiently that we are alert to when they go off and can return to
our original intention much more promptly and indeed, without necessarily
returning to the sacred word or sacred symbol.
The movement established by
introducing the sacred word as the symbol of our intention to be open to God's
presence and action brings us to the spiritual level of our being, or to use
another analogy, to a general attentiveness to the river of consciousness itself
rather than to what is passing along the surface of the river. The sacred word
is simply the symbol of our intentionality. There is no special word therefore,
that is better than another except that some words set off an association of
ideas and the tendency to think about other matters. In this prayer we are
developing the capacity to wait upon God with loving attentiveness. The loving
character is expressed by fidelity to the practice and patience when doing it.
Will and Intention || Post-Intensive
Scrooge Effect
The Mystery Moves || Mary
Caparosa Mrozowski

The Post-Intensive Scrooge Effect
After emerging from a ten day Intensive Christian Practice
Workshop/Retreat at St. Benedict's Monastery in Snowmass, Colorado, my good
friend Darleen and I drove to the nearest town. I had begun visualizing savoring
a cup of gourmet coffee. We stopped to buy gasoline and drive through a car wash
before finding the perfect coffee shop. At each stop, I encountered one or two
people who struck me as delightfully open, friendly and bright. They looked at
me with clear, pleasant eyes while we exchanged friendly banter. I left each
place of business feeling enriched by these encounters, and frankly relieved
that so many ordinary people were behaving as if they too had just left a ten
day Intensive Retreat. The practice of Centering Prayer sure seemed to be
catching on in the Snowmass area! Even a rather scary looking man loitering in
front of a bar gave me a shy smile when I turned and looked fully at him with a
friendly greeting.
As Darleen and I sipped our chocolate-raspberry decaf beside a
brimming river, I remarked that people we met seemed unusually delightful. Then
it hit me--I was experiencing what I dubbed "The Scrooge Effect."
Because Scrooge is typically identified with stinginess, perhaps this should be
called "The Post Intensive Scrooge Effect."
It has been a tradition to watch "A Christmas
Carol," the Alistair Sims version, almost every Christmas season. After
many viewings, I still feel a tearful open-heartedness at the moment when
Ebenezer Scrooge, coming to his senses in his bedroom after his night of
reckoning, begins to dance for joy. Flinging open his window, he bids a child
who is standing in the snowy street to fetch the prize goose and have it
delivered to Tiny Tim's house. All the while, Scrooge chortles and marvels at
what an intelligent, willing and energetic lad this is. Of course, everyone he
meets that Christmas Day now appears to him as delightful, and on each one he
gleefully pours out his love and generosity. The world has been revealed to him
in a wholly new way, as though all the grime of self-centeredness had been
cleaned from his spectacles. Not only can he see better, but his own love and
light can shine forth. I realized that Scrooge's night with the Spirits of
Christmas Past, Present and Future could be regarded as a spiritual journey--the
short course! Revisiting his past in the company of a Spirit, Scrooge's ability
to feel compassion was recovered-compassion for his own losses and
disappointments, for the pain and suffering of those close to him, and for the
sorrow he had caused others during his lifetime. It was during the final
encounter with Death, the awe-filled realization of his own inevitable
mortality, that he completed his repentance. His "false self" had been
stripped away, leaving his heart open both to the suffering and joy of this
world. He began taking action at once to better the lives of others and to
reconnect with his own estranged relatives and friends. Thenceforth, "he
lived every day as if it was Christmas," everywhere living out the good
news of Christ's redeeming love.
My own spiritual journey is not as dramatic or as compressed
as was Scrooge's, thank God. Yet, after the intensive experience in Snowmass, I
thought, as did Scrooge, that the world had changed. Like Scrooge, I had become
aware of my nastiness, pride and perfectionism. I had also experienced the
indescribable tenderness of God's healing love. Compassion for my own suffering
and inescapable humanness had grown and expanded to include others. Some of the
grime of the false self was cleaned off my spectacles, so that I could see
Christ's light shining in other people. The experience of being fed by the Holy
Spirit on every level (not the least of which was the gourmet cuisine so
lovingly dished up on the retreat!) awoke in me the desire to feed others. The
experience of being seen by God at my deepest levels granted me the ability to
see others in their beauty. Weeks after the workshop, I am still struck by this
beauty and am enjoying my fellow humans more than ever.
Kathy Kramer-Howe
Phoenix, Arizona
Will and Intention || Post-Intensive
Scrooge Effect
The Mystery Moves || Mary
Caparosa Mrozowski

The Mystery Moves: A Centering Poem
In the darkening rest,
Beneath the tumult of thoughts
Memories and storms of the heart,
The mystery moves,
Loosening what is bound,
Releasing what's loose,
Creating space and waves
Flowing to the center.
The mystery moves
About our roots.
Its waters of intimacy,
Not deaf and dumb sleep,
But alive subtle refreshment,
Where peace, silent, healing,
Radiant and pervading
Flows from its source
Kess Frey
Anchorage, Alaska

Mary Caparosa Mrozowski, a member of
the Chrysalis House community, died suddenly on October 18, 1993 in Georgetown,
Colorado. Mary was in Cotorado giving workshops on contemplative prayer in daily
life. She often gave workshops and retreats on Centering Prayer, the Open Mind,
Open Heart Practice and Forgiveness--the Key to Freedom.
Mary was a founding member of Chrysalis House a contemplative
community located in Warwick, New York that serves the larger community of the
New York metropolitan area as a place for deep spiritual work. She was one of
the founding members of Contemplative Outreach, Ltd.
Prior to her work with Contemplative Outreach, Ltd., Mary was
a vital spiritual force on Long Island, one of the founding members of the
Divorced and Separated Catholics and the Beginning Experience. She was a well
known leader of Bible Study and self-awareness groups on Long Island.
Mary was an extraordinary woman who touched thousands of
people all over the world with her deep spirituality and her deep love of God.
She traveled to the Dominican Republic, to Mexico and to Europe with a message
of the ever present love of God for all of us.
People were drawn to Mary's openness, clarity of heart, her
straightforward honesty and her deep love for the people of God. God's children
were her children and she served them with great enthusiasm and peace. She
imparted a message that was so gentle yet profound which will be carried on by
those she served.
Mary's many friends and relatives will miss her. She is
survived by her two married daughters, Judith Thadene Haibreich and Janet
Theresa Polidora; her sonsin-law Dr. Uriel Halbreich, Mr. Anthony Polidora;
grandchildren, Bethany Eleanor Halbreich, John Michael, Luke Anthony, Mary
Judith and Jennifer Ann Polidora; her sister Frances Bove, her brothers Carmen,
Larry and Peter.
Will and Intention || Post-Intensive
Scrooge Effect
The Mystery Moves || Mary
Caparosa Mrozowski