雙語閱讀:打開心靈的結(jié)
摘要:我看著鏡中的自己,依然是那個中年人,依然漸生華發(fā),但我感覺到,也許是迄今以來第一次,我覺得自己能面對生活了。
My first session with Ann E. began as they all would:I stood against a wall wearing only a sports bra andunderwear while she stood against the opposite wall,looking me over. She had me face north, south, eastand west, and each time her eyes seemed to betracing invisible lines down my body.
第一次接受安·E(Ann E.)按摩時,和所有治療一樣:我先是只穿著運動胸衣和短褲,靠墻站著,她則靠著對面的一堵墻站著,看著我。她讓我分別面朝東西南北四個方向,每一次,她的眼睛都像是循著一些看不見的線條,審視我的身體。
打開心靈的結(jié)
Being with Ann E. feels a little like being in psychotherapy, except you’re usually lying on amassage table in your underwear. It costs about the same for a session, although it lasts a lotlonger and she doesn’t care if you doze through most of it.
和她在一起,感覺有點像是在接受心理治療,不過你通常都是穿著內(nèi)衣,躺在按摩臺上。每次按摩的收費也和心理治療相近,不過她的時間要長得多,而且她也不介意你大部分時間都在打瞌睡。
Settled on her table that first day, I explained to her that I’d had many intractable physicalproblems in the last several years, the most recent being a pain in my knee that no medicalprofessional could make heads or tails of. I couldn’t sit cross-legged on the floor or rise upout of a full squat, and I’d feel a sharp stab whenever I slipped that leg into my jeans. Someyoga practitioners that my husband knew had recommended I see her about this.
第一天,在按摩臺上躺好后,我向她描述了過去幾年身體上出現(xiàn)的許多難治的毛病。就在前不久,我一條腿的膝蓋疼,卻沒有哪位醫(yī)學(xué)專業(yè)人士知道是怎么回事。我沒法盤腿坐在地上,也不能從全蹲的姿勢站起來。每當(dāng)要穿牛仔褲的時候,那條腿都會感到一陣鉆心的痛。我丈夫認(rèn)識的一些練瑜伽的人,建議我來找她。
After I’d spent 30 minutes on the table, Ann E. still hadn’t attended to my knee.
我在按摩臺上躺了30分鐘后,安·E依然沒有管那只膝蓋。
She hadn’t so much as looked at it. In fact, she didn’t even touch me. She just held her openpalm a few inches from my body — first at my hip, then my feet, then my other hip, then at thetop of my head — and I became so relaxed I fell fast asleep in the middle of her talking to me.
她甚至連看都沒看它一眼,也根本沒接觸我的身體。她只是把打開的手掌放在離我身體幾英寸的地方——先是髖關(guān)節(jié),然后是腳,再然后是另一邊髖關(guān)節(jié),最后是頭頂——我變得非常放松,以致于在她和我說話期間睡著了。
I barely woke up as she started pressing her finger into my C-section scar. “What are youdoing?” I asked her.
在她開始把手指伸向我剖腹產(chǎn)留下的傷疤時,我勉強醒來。“你在干嘛?”我問她。
“Releasing fascia,” she said. Fascia is a connective tissue throughout our bodies that acts likewebbing, keeping our innards where they’re supposed to be.
“放松筋膜,”她回答。筋膜是一種結(jié)締組織,遍布我們的全身,像網(wǎng)兜一樣把內(nèi)臟固定在它們應(yīng)該在的地方。
As she pressed on my scar, Ann E. talked to me about my body in a way I wouldn’t really cometo understand for many months, but which I could experience the effects of right then andthere. She used one or two fingers, touching my torso gently until she felt something release,then she’d move her fingers an inch or two to a new spot and press gently there.
在按壓那處傷疤時,她和我談?wù)撈鹆宋业纳眢w。她那種說話方式,我在后來很長一段時間都無法真正理解,但它的效果,我卻是當(dāng)場就感受到了。她用一根或兩根手指輕輕按壓我身體的軀干部分,直到覺得什么東西放松了。然后,她會把手指移開一兩英寸,換到另一個地方,繼續(xù)輕輕按壓。
I didn’t know what I should expect from this subtle prodding, but it wasn’t for my lungs toinflate like balloons. As Ann E. worked, my breath deepened, my lungs filling as they never had. “My breath just completely changed,” I said.
當(dāng)時,我不知道應(yīng)該期待這種微妙的按壓會有什么效果,但肯定沒想到它會讓我的肺像氣球那樣膨脹起來。在她按壓時,我呼吸加深,肺變得從未有過的充盈。“我的呼吸完全變了,”我說。
“Yeah, I just created some real estate in your torso so your lungs are less constricted,” shesaid.
“是的,我剛在你的體內(nèi)開辟出了一些空間,這樣你的肺就舒展了,”她說。
Now she had my attention.
這時,我開始重視她了。
Although I have spent about three decades — nearly my entire adult life — in talk therapy, Ihave always felt fundamentally unfixable.
盡管在幾乎整個成年生活的30年時間里,我一直在接受談話治療,但我總覺得自己的問題無法從根本上治愈。
My longest therapy stint started in my late 20s. I was always sort of unhappy, but went to atherapist specifically to stop smoking cigarettes and to leave my job. At the end of six years, Iwas still at the same job and still smoking. Then, my company closed and I got pregnant, so myjob ended and I quit cigarettes. But I don’t think I really changed at all.
快到30歲時,我開始了最漫長的一段治療。那時,我總是有些不開心,去看這名治療師卻只是為了戒煙并辭職。我接受了六年的治療,卻依然干著同一份工作,也依然在抽煙。后來,我所在的公司倒閉,我也懷孕了。于是,我不再干這份工作,也戒了煙。但我覺得自己并沒有真正改變。
I had always been skeptical of anything too “alternative,” until about eight years ago, when Ifirst started to see the connections between mind and body. I’d been referred to apsychologist to deal with back pain. But even that experience, despite eliminating the distressin my back, felt like more of the same — we sat across from each other, I told my story, I talkedabout my “feelings,” I cried.
我總是對特別“偏門”的替代療法持懷疑態(tài)度,直到八年前開始看到身體與心靈之間的關(guān)聯(lián)。當(dāng)時,有人介紹我去找一名心理醫(yī)生治療背痛。那段治療經(jīng)歷盡管消除了我背部的疼痛,但感覺也大同小異——我們面對面坐著,我講述自己的經(jīng)歷,談?wù)撟约旱?ldquo;感受”,我還哭了。
I could have gone on like that for years, just as I had with other therapists, because no matterwhat I said, or how I looked at my story, the emotional pain always felt fresh and new. I feltstuck.
那樣的治療我本來可能會持續(xù)多年,就像我接受的其他治療一樣,因為不管我說什么,不管我如何看待自己的經(jīng)歷,精神上的痛苦永遠(yuǎn)歷久彌新。我覺得自己被困住了。
After pressing on my C-section scar, Ann E. moved around the table to my right shoulder. Ihad injured this shoulder twice. It took almost a year for the first injury to heal and then eightmonths later I reinjured it, leaving me in such discomfort I had to prop my arm with pillowswhen I drove. After doctor visits and months of physical therapy, the pain was gone, but I nolonger had full range of motion.
在按壓了我的剖腹產(chǎn)疤痕后,安·E繞過桌子來到我的右肩。這只肩膀傷過兩次。第一次受傷用了將近一年才恢復(fù),八個月后我又把它弄傷了,留下了很嚴(yán)重的不適感,導(dǎo)致我開車的時候都要用枕頭撐著手臂。經(jīng)過醫(yī)生的診治和好多個月的理療,疼痛消失了,但我的這只手臂再也不能全幅度運動了。
I hadn’t told Ann E. any of this. I’d told her only about my knee, which she continued toignore.
這些我一點也沒跟安·E提起過。我只對她說了膝蓋,而她一直無視膝蓋的問題。
“Don’t touch me there,” I said as she approached my shoulder. “It makes me uncomfortableeven having you near it.”
“別碰那里,”我對正在靠近肩膀的她說。“光是接近它都會讓我感覺不舒服。”
Yet ever so gently, she slid one hand under my shoulder and then even more gently, laid herother hand on top of it, holding it as lightly as you would a baby bird, and in an instant I wassobbing uncontrollably.
然而她的一只手還是滑到了我的肩膀下,前所未有地輕柔,隨后放在肩膀上面的另一只手還要更輕柔。她的雙手就像捧一只小鳥一樣,輕輕捧著肩膀,剎那間,我難以自制地啜泣了起來。
What she was doing did not hurt and there was no sadness — or any specific feeling —attached to the crying. Tears streamed from my eyes, and my chest heaved. It went on like thatfor maybe five minutes, and then the crying stopped suddenly and completely, as if it hadnever happened at all.
她的動作并沒有導(dǎo)致疼痛,而哭泣也無關(guān)傷感——或任何其他具體的感受。淚水從眼中流淌出來,我的胸口起伏有致。這樣的情況保持了大概五分鐘,而后哭泣突然而徹底地停止了,仿佛什么都沒發(fā)生過。
And without moving a muscle, I could tell that my shoulder had changed.
雖然一動未動,我已經(jīng)能感覺到肩膀不一樣了。
Ann E. refers to her work as “unwinding” and likens the process to taking apart a big ball oftangled necklaces. Each tangle has come about through some emotional or physical injuryfrom which our body has attempted to heal. But the body compensates in areas where it isweak, and those compensations turn into habits. The pain we feel is largely due to a onceefficient system no longer working the way it should.
安·E稱她的工作是“松解”,就像是解開一團(tuán)纏繞在一起的項鏈。每一個結(jié)都是某些情感或身體的傷痛留下的,而我們的身體已經(jīng)嘗試過去治愈它。但身體會在一些弱的區(qū)域進(jìn)行補償,這些補償又會變成習(xí)慣。很多時候,我們感覺疼痛,是因為一個曾經(jīng)高效的系統(tǒng),已經(jīng)不能再像往常那樣運轉(zhuǎn)了。
When Ann E. presses into fascia that has become gummed up like glue, holding parts of ourinsides where they don’t rightly belong, her touch somehow “dissolves” the gooeyness andallows the fascia to revert to its original light, fluffy nature. With each of these releases, the“necklace tangle” loosens and our bodies can start to sort out the mess that has beenaccumulating for so many years.
筋膜像膠水一樣,把我們體內(nèi)一些本不在一起的部位粘在一起。當(dāng)安·E按壓筋膜時,她的觸碰以某種方式“溶解”了粘滯感,讓它恢復(fù)到原本輕盈而松軟的狀態(tài)。隨著每一次的松弛,“項鏈結(jié)”解開了,在我們體內(nèi)淤積多年的困擾得到梳理。
As I discovered on that first day, she rarely works where the pain is. She says that the bodyprovides her a map of where it’s really hurting, pulling, stagnant, frozen, and she starts there,unfurling one little piece of the necklace ball, so that the body can begin its own organicprocess of unwinding itself back to health.
她很少去直接處理疼痛的地方,這是我從第一天就發(fā)現(xiàn)了的。她說身體給了她一張地圖,上面注明了真正疼、扯、滯、僵的地方在哪里。她會從那些地方下手,解開一個個小項鏈結(jié),好讓身體自行開始松解的有機過程,恢復(fù)到健康狀態(tài)。
My shoulder was not the only area that incited sobbing. This would happen many times, withother parts of my body, during my work with Ann E. Every episode came on the same way: Isuddenly felt very vulnerable, almost unbearably so, and then the tears came, completelydevoid of emotion, and then they stopped, leaving me feeling as if I were suddenly freed ofsomething.
我的肩膀并非唯一一個促使我哭泣的區(qū)域。在接下來與安·E的合作中,還會出現(xiàn)很多次,事關(guān)身體的其他部位。每一次都是這樣:我突然感到自己很脆弱,幾乎難以承受,然后眼淚就下來了,完全不帶感情,然后就止住了,給我留下突然擺脫了某種東西的感覺。
What happened on that table was like nothing I’d ever experienced. I cried harder than when Iwas 17 and lost my father to cancer, harder than when our family dog was run over by a trucka month later, and harder than when I was dumped by my first love.
在那張按摩桌上發(fā)生的一切,都是我未曾經(jīng)歷過的。我的哭泣比17歲時父親因癌癥去世,比一個月后我家的狗被卡車軋死,比我被初戀拋棄,都要來得更痛徹。
But this is a body crying, not the crying of a heart.
但這是身體在哭,不是心在哭。
I’m not quite sure how to explain how the emotions become unstuck, but as with my shoulderthat first day, much of my lifelong pain now feels as if it had never been there in the first place.The main thing I feel is a kind of unfamiliar optimism, along with a lot more energy — energythat, Ann E. would say, has been freed up from letting go of longstanding trauma.
我不是很清楚該如何解釋這種得到解脫的感覺,但就像第一天肩膀經(jīng)歷的那樣,我的許多長年未愈的痛苦,變得好像從來就不曾存在過。我的主要感受是一種陌生的樂觀情緒,還有更加充沛的精力——用安·E的話說,這種精力是因為放下了一些持續(xù)很久的創(chuàng)傷。
I continue to let Ann E. untangle me. I try to trust that she has my best interests at heart. Iwrestle sometimes with how much I’m willing to let myself need her. But as I unwind, I sleepbetter. I breathe better. Parts of me that have hurt for years have stopped hurting. When Ilook in the mirror, I’m still middle-aged and my hair is still graying, but I feel able, possibly forthe first time, to truly cope with life.
我繼續(xù)讓安·E幫我松解。我努力讓自己信任她,相信她在為我的最大利益著想。有時我會自我搏斗,不想讓自己太依賴她。但隨著我的松解,我的睡眠改善了。我的呼吸改善了。全身上下一些疼痛多年的部位不再疼了。我看著鏡中的自己,依然是那個中年人,依然漸生華發(fā),但我感覺到,也許是迄今以來第一次,我覺得自己能面對生活了。
Love Your Life
熱愛生活
However mean your life is, meet it and live it;
無論你的生活如何卑微,都要正視它,并活下去;
do not shun it and call it hard names.
不要躲避它,也不要惡語相加。
It is not so bad as you are.
你的生活不像你本人那么糟糕。
It looks poorest when you are richest.
你最富有的時候,你的生活看上去倒似最貧窮。
The fault-finder will find faults even in paradise.
吹毛求疵的人即便在天堂也能挑出瑕疵。
Love your life, poor as it is.
你要熱愛你的生活,盡管生活一貧如洗。
You may perhaps have some pleasant,thrilling, glorious hours,even in a poorhouse.
即使身處濟(jì)貧院,你也可能享受一段愉快、興奮、美妙的時光。
The setting sun is reflected from the windows of the almshouse as brightly as from the richman's abode;
西斜的落日映照在濟(jì)貧院窗戶上的余暉,與照射在富貴人家豪宅上的一樣光芒萬丈;
the snow melts before its door as early in the spring.
門前的積雪同在早春消融。
I do not see but a quiet mind may live as contentedly there,and have as cheering thoughts, asin a palace.
在我看來,一個心態(tài)平和的人處事泰然,思想樂觀,過著自得其樂的生活,住在濟(jì)貧院就如同居住在皇宮里一般。
The town's poor seem to me often to live the most independent lives of any.
依我之見,城鎮(zhèn)的貧民倒是往往過著最獨立不羈的生活。
Maybe they are simply great enough to receive without misgiving.
也許他們十分偉大,對任何事情皆可坦然受之。
Most think that they are above being supported by the town;
大多數(shù)人認(rèn)為他們不屑于接受城鎮(zhèn)的施救;
but it oftener happens that they are not above supporting themselves by dishonest means,which should be more disreputable.
但是實際上他們經(jīng)常使用不誠實的手段來維持自己的生計,這是更為不體面的。
Cultivate poverty like a garden herb, like sage.
像圣賢一樣,如同栽培花園中的花草一般來培養(yǎng)貧困吧。
Do not trouble yourself much to get new things,whether clothes or friends.
犯不著千辛萬苦以求獲得新東西,無論是衣服還是朋友。
Turn the old; return to them.
返璞,歸真。
Things do not change; we change.
萬物沒有變,是我們在變。
Sell your clothes and keep your thoughts.
衣履可鬻,所思必存。
God will see that you do not want society.
上帝會證明,你并不需要社會。
If I were confined to a corner of a garret all my days,like a spider,the world would be just aslarge to me while I had my thoughts about me.
如果我每天都躲在閣樓一角,像只蜘蛛一樣,可只要我的思想指引我,世界于我還是一樣的廣闊無邊。