Journey to Center: Lessons in Unifying Body, Mind, and Spirit
By Thomas Crum
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About this ebook
This practical guide introduces readers to the Zen principles Tom Crum has lived by and taught for many years. As a black belt in aikido, a motivational speaker, and an instructor in everything from mathematics to skiing, Crum learned that the key to success in any endeavor is mastering the art of "centering." He teaches here the vital techniques for achieving a more relaxed, energized, and integrated approach to our lives.
Thomas Crum
Thomas Crum is an author and presenter in the fields of conflict resolution, peak performance, and stress management. He is known throughout the world for “The Thomas Crum Approach,” designed to help people become more centered under conflict, more resourceful when facing challenges, and more effective under stress.
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Journey to Center - Thomas Crum
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ADVANCE PRAISE
FOR JOURNEY TO CENTER
"More than anyone I know, Tom lives what he teaches, and once again with rare wit and insight, Tom teaches us lessons of life that continually add value and that magically bring me back home again, to center. Journey to Center is a must-read."
—John Denver
"Centering is the art of being fully alive, and I would recommend no one to be your guide in this important journey more than Tom Crum. Journey to Center is a book that will be very important in your life."
—Ken Blanchard, coauthor, The One Minute Manager
Tom Crum put his heart and soul into this book. It is an easy read, but very rich in content. I am proud to call Tom Crum a friend and I highly recommend Journey to Center to anyone who needs to move toward Center and lead a richer life.
—Charlie Eitel, President and Chief Operating Officer, Interface Inc.
Tom’s artistry as a storyteller and his humble, generous spirit come together to lead the reader on a fascinating journey to center. This lively and compelling personal account offers interpretations of a profound topic—that of moving through life from a center-point which radiates calm, confident inner strength. Anyone who is interested in developing a powerful center should read this book.
—Ginger and Hiroshi Ikeda
"Tom Crum has again put this crazy life into simple perspective—sharing his wisdom and knowledge through the art of Centering. Tom taught me the valuable skill of Centering—a powerful skill that I used in competition—and Journey to Center reestablished for me that value of being centered in everyday life. Tom’s clever and insightful ways have struck a familiar chord. The ability to Center allows us the freedom to enjoy the journey, as the outcome will occur regardless—cherish the moment."
—Mark Tache, professional ski racer
Tom Crum was my ‘sensei’ instructor for many years in aikido. His wonderful philosophy is applicable to all of life, to working with people socially and in business, as well as to all sports that one engages in. It brings about win-win situations. I’m deeply thankful to Tom for the inspiration that he is sharing with all of us.
—Klaus Obermeyer, President, Sport Obermeyer Ltd.
ALSO BY THOMAS F. CRUM
The Magic of Conflict
Journey to
Center
Lessons in
Unifying Body,
Mind, and Spirit
Thomas F. Crum
A Fireside Book Published by Simon & Schuster
FIRESIDE
Rockefeller Center
1230 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10020
www.SimonandSchuster.com
Copyright © 1997 by Thomas Crum
All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole
or in part in any form.FIRESIDE and colophon are
registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster Inc.
Designed by Katy Riegel
Manufactured in the United States of America
7 9 10 8 6
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Crum, Thomas F.
Journey to center: lessons in unifying body, mind, and spirit/Thomas F. Crum.
p. cm.
1. Self-actualization (Psychology)
2. Centering (Psychology)
3. Body-mind centering
4. Crum, Thomas F.
I. Title
BF637.S4C77 1997 97-25840
158.1—dc21 CIP
ISBN 0-684-83922-9
eISBN: 978-1-439-14690-3
To Tommy, Eri, and Ali,
on their own journey to center.
Acknowledgments
A deep bow of thanks to a cast of wonderful guides: to my own brilliant in-house editor and lifelong partner, Cathy Crum, without whom this book would be 3,000 pages long and useful only in the smallest room of my house; to Judy Warner, Aiki Works trainer and director of our New York office, whose organizational, cattle-prodding, and deciphering skills somehow kept this manuscript together despite the fact that I often wrote it on tiny yellow Post-it pads and truck-stop napkins; to Major Hal Bidlack, Ph.D., U.S.A.F., who used his years of disciplined, regimented military intelligence to keep this book funny, witty, and irreverent; to my Simon & Schuster editor, Sarah Pinckney, who, despite all of her talents, has still not broken free of N.Y.C. to go skiing with me in Colorado; to a group of wonderful friends and colleagues for their invaluable tips and suggestions: Gail Hammack, Jeanie Tomlinson, Judy Ringer, Glen Dutton, Pam Stacey, Karen Valencic, Rio de la Vista, Jeff Finesilver, Ellen Stapenhorst, Jane Lawson, Rod O’Connor, Puja Dhyan, John Phillips, Weems Westfeldt, and Maggie Jones. And a special thanks to Ram Dass, whose wonderful teachings through story-telling over the years have been an inspiration to my work. And finally to all my family, friends, and students, without whom the experiences in this book never would have happened.
Contents
Introduction
PART I: Aha!
Center of the Storm
Coloring Outside the Lines
Letting Go
Leg It Be
Hero
The Briar Patch
PART II: Uh-oh!
Back in the USA
The Big Draw
Downhill Magic
It’s About Time
PART III: Ah, Yes!
Slings and Arrows
Centered Relationship
Almost Gone
Gone
The Warrior Spirit
Afterword
Introduction
I am a teacher. I once thought I taught many things. I taught mathematics. I taught martial arts. I taught skiing. I taught conflict resolution and stress management. Not too long ago I realized that I didn’t really teach many things. Only one. I study and teach the art of centering. Joseph Campbell once suggested that we are not searching for the meaning of life. We are searching for the experience of being alive. Centering is the art of being fully alive. And wherever the art of centering is practiced, things change dramatically.
Once after a three-month-long meditation training in the Swiss Alps, I was skiing near my home in Colorado. I paused to center on a sunny rock. When my eyes opened again, everything looked so different. Was it because I had been overseas for so long, or was it something else? The diamond sparkles reflecting from sun and snow, the delicate beauty of the orange and red flora decorating the rock’s surface, my ski poles standing in the snow, framed a mystical scene of clouds and mountains, the arms of heaven and earth intertwined. I was like an infant hypnotized by a dangling mobile.
Sitting on my rocky perch looking out over those familiar slopes, I noticed an old man slowly weaving his way toward me. I could see that this was not an ordinary skier. The sparkle in his eyes and the curl of contentment on his lips showed a person fully present—connected, alive, aware. He may have been more powerful in his younger days, but I am certain his artistry and his presence were never more evident. He planted each ski pole delicately and purposefully, and flowed into each turn as if saying Yes!
to the mountain. He was beyond caring what others thought. He was simply there, present and joyful. He was centered.
Centering is not an abstract term, but rather a practical tool available to all of us. We each have the ability to unify body, mind, and spirit in a manner that will make us more relaxed, energized, and integrated than ever before. We can release stress rather than acquire it. When we center, it manifests in harmonious relationships, peak performance, heightened awareness, and creativity. The old skier was a study in energized awareness. He was of the mountain, not just on it. This book will shed light on what that means and how to do it.
Centering happens as the mind, body and spirit begin to align. Our muscles noticeably relax, our body straightens, clarity of thought and action become more prevalent, and vitality builds. Centering is not a stoic tightrope through life keeping us from our feelings and passions. Instead, centering is a spacious field in which we can embrace emotions and events with awareness and compassion. Centering will allow us to fully feel emotions and will at the same time give us the strength to take action not from the ever-changing weather patterns of emotions but from our highest purpose.
We have each had the experience of being centered hundreds of times in our lives (often without being mindful of it). Centering happens in shades, in degrees of intensity. We don’t have to be perfect about it, because each shade makes a difference. Centering is the zone
spoken of by great athletes. It can also be a barefoot run on the grass on a summer’s eve, with the wind in your face and the senses wide open. Center is a focus so present that time seems to stop as it does for a child at play. Center is a connection so deep that there is no separation between subject and object, an awareness so heightened that beauty and truth, the form and formless, melt together. It is like a delicate flower growing out of solid rock. Center can be a cosmic laugh rippling out to the ends of the universe. It can be simply relaxing in rush-hour traffic. Center is returning home. It is always a choice we can make.
This book is a storybook, a series of adventures about my own journey to center. People may forget theory, concepts, and suggestions, but rarely do they forget a good story. At the end of each chapter I offer ideas and suggestions to help you on your own journey to center.
In my first book, The Magic of Conflict, and in the various programs on conflict management, optimum performance, and skiing that I lead for organizations and the general public, I devote much time to the teaching of centering. I often draw from my background as a student and teacher of the graceful martial art of aikido. In my workshops, I teach the participants a variety of physical and mental exercises, some of which I have included in this book, to support them in beginning their own practice of centering. Through centering, we can turn a life of work into a work of art.
Centering works!
I have taught centering skills to audiences as diverse as elementary school students and the top management of major corporations. It’s quite a sight to see one thousand uniformed Air Force Academy cadets or a hotel ballroom full of seasoned Wyoming cattlemen standing together and enjoying the practice of center.
Anyone can return to center no matter what the situation. When I teach the employees of a major corporation how to practice centering techniques, they are creating an environment in which enthusiasm, awareness, and quality follow naturally. They automatically begin to align as a team. Centering is enjoyable and valuable at the same time.
The first section of the book, Aha!
is about those magical moments when the importance of center became glaringly obvious. It is as much about falling off center as it is about being centered. In either direction great learning takes place.
Do you want to be centered all the time? I know how to do it. Stay in a comfy bed. Or, better yet, stay under your bed and only have those persons who love you unconditionally serve you. You may be centered, but you’ll live a terribly unfulfilled life. A far more satisfying life would be to add value to the world and to learn and grow from it. Falling flat on our faces is an integral part of that process. Life is painful at times, but there is a distinction between suffering and pain. Suffering results when, after we’ve been thrown off center, we wallow in the mud of our self-judgment and forget to get up. As you will see in the stories that follow, I’m in the mud a lot.
The second section, Uh-oh!
concerns the difficulties of centering in our daily lives: in relationships, at work, and at play. The choice to return to center is where some of our most intense learning takes place. In returning to center we become aware of the stumbling blocks that tripped us up in the first place. Things like ego, cluttered thinking, greed, laziness, or anger. Little things.
All right, so those aren’t such little things. But they sure do show up in life’s little happenings—a judgmental look from our employer, a red light in rush-hour traffic, the sudden ringing of a telephone, or the dog leaving a gift on the carpet. No big deal, right? But those little things can throw us way off center. And there’s our opportunity!
For example, we can learn to take a moment during the first ring of the telephone and at every red light, to settle down, breathe deeply from the abdomen, and get centered. All of life’s little upsets are simply bells to remind us to get centered and to smile at life.
Our centering ability grows with practice. And isn’t life itself the ideal practice time? The challenges and chaos that we live in can be the sandpaper to smooth out our rough edges. And centering is a tool to help us get the job done with maximum joy and minimum effort. Life is worthy of our awe, our focus, and our laughter. A Christian monk, Brother Lawrence, once said, It is not necessary to have great things to do. I turn my little omelet in the pan for the love of God.
The third section, Ah, Yes!
deals with the significant transitions of healing, relationship, dying, and death. We are immersed in a world of major transition, both planetary and personal. Many of us are confused about our profession, our relationships, our purpose, our world. By staying busy, we can avoid taking a deep look and unveiling the truth about our cluttered lives and deepest fears. We can hide from the confusion, the uncertainty. But we do have a choice. We can be courageous enough each day to go inside, to our own center. We can discover who we really are and take a stand on our deepest values. This is how we mindfully live a life of center.
Center is about accepting the pressures of life. Center is about inviting change, not mindlessly holding on to a position. It takes courage to change our perspectives. It takes courage to examine which beliefs really work for us. It takes guts to get off a limiting, but often comfortable, point of view and shift to a larger viewing point. When we’re lost in a densely wooded area, it helps our perspective to move to higher ground. This enables us to witness our position—not in isolation but in relation to everything around us.
We can all learn, each moment, to pierce through our cluttered thoughts to a higher purpose, and journey to higher ground. It is a path of learning and magic. It is the center of the storm.
1
Aha!
Nothing whatever is hidden;
From of old, all is clear as daylight.
The old pine-tree speaks divine wisdom;
The sacred bird manifests eternal truth.
There is no place to seek the mind;
It is like the footprints of the birds in the sky.
Above, not a piece of tile to cover the head;
Beneath, not an inch of earth to put one’s foot on.
Sitting quietly, doing nothing,
Spring comes, and the grass grows by itself.
If you don’t believe, just look at September, look at October!
The yellow leaves falling, falling, to fill both mountain and river.
—Zenrin
Center or the Storm
The path through the wilderness begins
with the breath—deep and full.
Inhale calmness, exhale awareness.
I was alive. More important, I was still alive. I was breathing. That was enough. It had taken a crisis, but I was awake. Looking out the hut window at big fluffy flakes falling lightly on the pine trees brought joy to my senses. The crackling fireplace in the background warmed my spirit.
The day had started out ideally. John and I had skied cross-country about nine miles through the dramatically stunning Colorado Rockies to a wilderness hut tucked neatly into a mountainside over two miles above sea level and eight miles from the nearest town. The day had been crystal clear, following an evening storm that had painted the earth brilliantly white with eighteen inches of fresh powder. When we arrived at the hut, our depleted energy level magically returned. We noticed the seductive slope above the hut. It was beckoning to be skied.
Sure we were tired. It had been uphill all the way thus far. Why not one more push to the top of the knob
for an ecstatic powder run down to a cozy hut and hot dinner? Sure, the day had grown ominously darker. But we could see the top, our skins
were already on our skis (skins
are a long piece of synthetic material that automatically glues to the bottoms of your skis, giving you the traction necessary to ski uphill), and the lure of powder had us hooked. We quickly threw our heavily laden backpacks into the hut to lighten our load for the day’s last run.
Skiers often talk about that last run
as the one you have to watch, as the one to avoid. It had always sounded like a funny theory to me. Is it ever possible to avoid your last run? I mean there is always a last run,
whether it’s at noon or at 5 P.M. In truth, the only way to avoid your last run is to not take any runs, which may save you from an injury but provides you with a rather empty ski trip. But my rejection of the last run
philosophy did not exactly add credibility to my judgment about being out at dusk with a winter storm settling in, clad in a light windbreaker and a cocky attitude. Maybe it’s the addiction to untracked powder that numbs reason and dulls years of wilderness experience. The lure of the silence as your skis rhythmically porpoise in gravity-free flight through clouds of powder can color the sanest judgment.
Being within shouting distance of your buddy is critical in wilderness skiing. There is no ski patrol to call, no groomed trails, no marked terrain, and darn few fast-food outlets. In the wilderness, beginner slopes can become the most difficult double black diamonds after only a couple of turns, with creek beds, avalanche chutes, logs, and trees lurking in the sea of white. So the buddy system is a must. A holler or yodel is the blessed sound of security in wilderness skiing. Unless, that is, you don’t get one back.
John was my buddy, a trusted partner in wilderness ski trips. As we slowly climbed to the top of the mountain for our last run, the snow began falling heavily. When we reached the top, visibility was poor. We removed the synthetic