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My Uniquely Ordinary Journey as a Recovering Four: An Introduction

My Uniquely Ordinary Journey as a Recovering Type Four by Michael Naylor, 2023, An Introduction

Amidst a time of great turmoil, I sought counseling with my future Gurdjieff guide. I was fifteen years sober (the blessing of AA) as my life as I knew it had dissolved through some Type Four Trap-of-Death-and-Most-Unlikely-Redemption porthole in the cosmic fabric, as I dragged my aching soul through a mapless desert of sorrow and confusion. It was then that my therapist said, “Ah, Michael, read this book Personality Types and pay close attention to the Type 4 description. See what you discover. Oh, and take a look at this book, In Search of the Miraculous.” 

In reading Personality Types it felt as if the skin of my soul was being ripped off leaving me in a pool of just-realized delusions particular to my type. Horrifying. What I thought was most interesting about me, what I drank as the vodka of grandiosity, was causing me substantial suffering and the capacity to make the same mistakes over and over again, most especially in my relationships. Entranced by my Type 4 patterns, i.e., most especially by the engine of infatuated-attraction-to-imaginary-and-idealized romantic partners, I relentlessly and passionately chose partners who I was not attuned to, and who were not attuned to me. Yes, a prescription for residing in hell. My imagined Type Four self-image of being so deep and sensitive that even God cheered for me instead was revealed as an illusion, a distortion of epic proportions, pride preceding a cavernous great fall, and fall I did into a great wasteland.  Well, no, a vast and bottomless abyss handmade for my Type 4 temperament. I lost everything I cared for…Kaboom! Gone! My future teacher and now therapist was cheered up by this, as was my Zen teacher, Genpo. Well, Genpo, when I told him the results of what I thought was a superior journey into authenticity that had gotten horribly side-railed by my Type 4 delusion of being an advanced-yet-sorely-overlooked-and-misunderstood-emotional-genius-in-the-making, said, “Michael, you are on the brink of a great break-thru. People sit on their zafu for fifteen years before they get to this possibility. Just don’t do anything stupid.” Okay, captain, I hear you, I thought to myself. Something good could come of this spirit-crumbling experience. Little did I know just how long it would take. My dear friend Margaret added this consideration: “Michael if you’re not willing to wait seven years for what you care for, you’re not committed!” (Gulp. Who made up these rules, anyway!) Lo and behold a door swung open and I was sling-shotted through it! Zing!

And now, a moment of silence, breathe…and let’s continue. Finding myself pressed to the ground with new awakenings regarding how my inner world was twisted in a hundred different knots, I began the work of healing my heart, my mind, my body, and my connections with others. As fate and very good luck would have it, I met Donna, my wife, my companion to-be through all of my desert journeys looking for my map home, my near-death-abyss escapes, and what seemed like never-ending soul-retrievals from my most interesting swamp-like emotional body. Thus, I continued to walk through unknown territory assisted by Donna’s kindness and support. Peeling away one layer of my defensive structure after another from the soul of my being and learning that each healing and soul retrieval was a journey down a spiral such that each time I felt I’d finished with a particular healing theme, lo and behold I’d meet the same themes at a deeper level several years later. At first, I thought, “I’ve made no progress whatsoever.” But learned soon enough that indeed, I meet my inner issues at deeper and deeper levels until finished with them. Onward I pressed, doing bodywork, Jungian therapy, breath work, Zen practice, yoga, Primal Therapy, observing the quickness of my patterns, and apologizing way more than I thought I should have. I asked my Zen teacher about this. “It seems that I’m getting worse. I see more and more of my patterns and they often take me where they want. What am I doing wrong?” He replied, “Do you want the good news first or the bad news?” Hit me with the bad news, I replied. “Okay, this apologizing for unconscious behavior, that will get worse. You’ll see yourself and your unconscious reactions more clearly than ever as you continue your inner work and this of course won’t cheer you up. But if you can relax, and not beat the hell out of yourself each time you observe a pattern, things will get better. You’ll begin to get some freedom from your patterns, slowly, however, very slowly.                                                                                                   

“But in the meantime, you’ll discover that you have many of the same patterns and difficulties that everyone else does, and then you will begin to build a heart of compassion for yourself and others. You will feel it more deeply–that everyone suffers as you do. You’ll be kinder and much less judgmental. Your heart will soften and love will be able to reach you. These are the fruits of your labor, this observing your patterns run away from you like an elephant-on-steroids, then apologizing for the suffering this elephant causes via your reactionary patterns–which you didn’t create and which you didn’t decide as a little boy to be ruled by–and then having to make amends again. And again. You’ll experience moments of genuine tenderness, calmness, and inner peace. And then, of course, you’ll lose it because the personality takes a very long time to observe, unwind and tire out. It’s nearly immortal.” As Mr. Almass says:

The personality will do anything in its power to preserve its identity and uphold its domain. This tendency – or, let’s say, this need – is so deep, so entrenched, so completely the fabric of our identity, that only the person who has gone a long way toward establishing the essential life will be able to apprehend and appreciate this. This need is in our flesh, blood, bones even our atoms. The power of the personality is so great, so immense, so deep, so subtle that the person who contends with it for a long time will have to give it its due respect. Its power is awesome. Its subtlety is unimaginable. Its intelligence is limitless.’

 So don’t be discouraged if you can. Well, you’ll be discouraged but relax into this process more and more and you’ll develop an awesome sense of humor, and you’ll have much greater patience for the mechanical patterns of others. You’ll see that they too aren’t in control, just like you. You’ll come to understand the words of Maurice Nicoll who said…’You’re a fool and I’m a fool, so we can relax and have a conversation. Change happens slowly, and you don’t make it happen.’ “As a result of your inner work, habitual personality patterns will begin to transform. But you don’t ‘will’ these results. There is magic in nonjudgmental observation. So be of good cheer if you can. The more joy you bring to this, well, the more fun and the easier it is to sit in the grace of unconditional kindness towards self and others.”                                                                                                 

So, back to this Four journey. Several things caught my attention as a result of understanding more clearly my Type Four inner psychology. I discovered that I’d had this relationship with ‘longing’ since I was a little boy, this inexplicable hunger for something I could not put words on. That which could not be named (much like Voldemort from Harry Potter). I wanted something in my depths that showed itself as a hunger, an emptiness, a sense that something was missing that I craved–what the heck was it! And as a little guy I didn’t have a language for it. Mom did not say, “Dear son, I see you’ve got the heart and soul of the Type Four, so with it comes an inexplicable yearning for something that is invisible. It’s haunting in that it won’t leave you alone. This particular facet of human life, which many will experience as they take a deeper dive into themselves, you as a Type Four cannot put to sleep so easily. Others can, temporarily at least, until the great spiritual hunger begins to haunt them too. But you, little one, you start with this. And at times you will misinterpret its meaning, well, for many years you will attach to the idea that you are different than others, unique in your suffering, and somehow an outsider to the human experience. But alas, one in nine human beings have this predilection (gasp!), and this will take time to discover. And I, as your mother, having no formal training to help you with this, I will mostly be as kind to you as I can and wonder to myself, what is my son dreaming about that makes him so apparently unhappy and dissatisfied? And why is he so sensitive that his heart can appear broken at the drop of a hat?” Poor mom. But, her kindness, she being a Type Two, did wonders for me in the long run. Her love was constant.                                                                                                             

So, you can imagine what it was like for this little guy, at a very young age, Uncle Wiggly at his side, as he experienced this weird internal dilemma: a longing for something no one knew about or had ever articulated to him. It roamed in the waters of his awareness as an ever-circulating confusion. After moments of grace and joy, it was patiently waiting for him in the form of the ’mysterious emptiness,’ ’nothingness,’ ‘nobody-ness–you are but an insignificant grain of sand–playing through him like a jeering ghost. Such that privately and wordlessly to himself he thought, “There must be something wrong with me. I shouldn’t be experiencing this.” Add to this the huge sensitivity to other people’s suffering, somehow having inherited eyes to see and feel the hidden darkness and emotional pain of mom and dad that often was tucked underneath the rug, or buried in the back yard, or placed in the basement, or masqueraded as fake happiness, or covered by competitive zeal. Yet he had eyes for the dark and could see it and feel the accompanying sorrow and heartbreak that resided in them. This too was a mystery, this serious side of his psyche that also could not rest. He had a good heart, a kind heart, that just needed a little bit of guidance for navigating this inner world. Not that anyone could actually do that for him, because, well, they couldn’t. That would be his work. But it colored his world with a pretty thick lens of darkness particular to his Type Four temperament. Alongside, of course, were moments of exhilaration, especially when he was absorbed on the baseball playing field, or basketball hardwood floors. Still, the inner song was always there. Chanting and humming in the background.

All of these insights came in the aftermath of my discovery of my Type Four patterns. I began this childhood journey deeply introverted except when I played sports, and at age five, sitting behind the backstop of a baseball field with my dad watching a game, a giant beacon of joy lit inside my chest. The ball, the bat, the running, catching, sliding, and throwing the baseball touched my soul with profound joy. This I must do. This I must learn. Here was a place where relief from this dogged Type Four interior world would occur. Here I would remember myself devoid of the thick emotional texture of my inner states. Miraculously I’d inherited an athlete’s capacity to play sports, to move gracefully, to intuitively sense the next right move, to possess the kind of depth perception and hand-eye coordination that can’t be taught, and to love engaging these gifts from the unknown as often as possible. Home was in my body (not the usually place the type 4 abides.)

I loved baseball from the depth of my soul. Everything about it lit me up. And freed me temporarily from my inner torment, inner seriousness, and inner reflection on psychological issues that I would not be prepared to really deal with until I was an adult. Who knew? Thanks to the heavens for sports and an innate passion to play, run, catch a ball, swing a bat. And a mom and dad who loved sports. Only a year or so later I would discover basketball, and a second home was born in me. Dribbling the ball, shooting hoops, learning the skills of the game–pure joy. On a dark winter night, a string of Christmas lights illuminating my basketball hoop in the driveway, I’d shoot and dribble till my hands were too cold. 30 minutes later, hands warmed, I was back at the hoop. From age 6 to 18, this was my religion, where my spirit was captured. Two homes, baseball and basketball, my instinctual center wired and at one with these sports. The joy of playing sports, the aliveness that came from being on high alert in any game, the energy available, near inexhaustible, the intensity of a close game, was a delight. And so, for many years I lived in two worlds. The inspired world of sports, and the world of Type Four deep concern, sensitivity, introversion, longing for something mysterious. Two strangely wedded worlds. On the one hand, when a game was on the line, the intuitive instinctual center was a bright light of knowing where the opponent was moving, where my teammates were, seeing the path of the ball slowed down and vivid, reading it with an instinctive set of eyes, often driving the ball into the open spaces of the outfield. Or on the basketball court, knowing instinctively the movement of my teammates, able to slip a pass through a sliver of opening between two defense men, and having intuitive capacity to hit shots when the clock was winding down to zero. And in the other world, sensing the suffering around me.                                                                 

Back to the books. Personality Types blew my unconscious world wide awake. There were all my tenacious patterns on paper. How did that happens? And In Search of the Miraculous, well, what can be said about this gem of a weird and difficult-to-read-or-comprehend book by Mr. Ouspensky. On the flight in 1996 from Portland, Maine to Portland, Oregon, my life burnt to invisibility, I entered another hemisphere of awareness. Riveted by the mysterious story unfolding in the book, this man named Gurdjieff, or G, and his concepts utterly distant to me, I read with 1000% attention. Three Centers, the mechanicalness of human beings, the illusion that we are conscious, the Law of Three and Seven were a hurricane-force destroying the conceptual framework of my imaginary life as I knew it, most particularly the Type Four stories I’d collected in the cathedral of my mind cataloging all the hurts and suffering my dear mother and father had caused me, sure I was that I knew who they were and exactly what they were about. Well, up in flames the cathedral went. Poof! And for the first time in my life I met my father and my mother without the heavy context of the stories I worshipped at, and which utterly glutted my objectivity, and for the first time got a glimpse of their souls, and the deep wish and intention and love they felt for me. This was, is, miraculous. For ten years further I spent appreciating and feeling the warmth of my heart for them. The gift of reconciliation was given to me. What an unexpected joy! Miraculous beyond anything I could have imagined. To be with them without the non-stop judgmental stories playing in the background of each moment (acquired from reading way too many self-help, inner child, exile-your-parents-as-a-form-of-healing books), well, it had a very positive effect on them. They were happier and more relaxed in my presence. Little did I realize the heavy climate I brought with me to our meetings. Thank you, Mr. Ouspensky,Mr. Gurdjieff, Mr. Nicoll, and Mr John Bennett. And most especially, Don Riso and Russ Hudson.

And yet, the price was heavy and steep.

Let us continue with Chapter One.

From Nightmares and Inspirations: An Unlikely Path to Grace and Mercy by Michael Naylor.

1 thought on “My Uniquely Ordinary Journey as a Recovering Four: An Introduction”

  1. I really enjoyed this journey into the four!
    As always your exquisite use of words painted a vibrant portrait of the beloved individualist!❤️❤️❤️

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