INTRODUCTION
I
| |
The
more clearly you understand yourself and your emotions,
the more you become a lover of what is.
Baruch Spinoza |
The first time I watched The Work, I realized that I was
witnessing something truly remarkable. What I saw was a
succession of people, young and old, educated and uneducated,
who were learning to question their own thoughts, the thoughts
that were most painful to them. With the lovingly incisive
help of Byron Katie (everyone calls her Katie), these people
were finding their way not only toward the resolution of
their immediate problems, but also toward a state of mind
in which the deepest questions are resolved. I have spent
a good part of my life studying and translating the classic
texts of the great spiritual traditions, and I recognized
something very similar in process here. At the core of these
traditions in works such as the Book of Job, the
Tao Te Ching, and the Bhagavad Gita there is an intense
questioning about life and death, and a profound, joyful
wisdom that emerges as an answer. That wisdom, it seemed
to me, was the place Katie was standing in, and the direction
where these people were headed.
As I watched from my
seat in a crowded community center, five men and women,
one after another, were learning freedom through the very
thoughts that had caused their suffering, thoughts such
as My husband betrayed me or My mother
doesnt love me enough. Simply by asking four
questions and listening to the answers they found inside
themselves, these people were opening their minds to profound,
spacious, and life-transforming insights. I saw a man who
had been suffering for decades from anger and resentment
toward his alcoholic father light up before my eyes within
forty-five minutes. I saw a woman who had been almost too
frightened to speak, because she had just found out that
her cancer was spreading, end the session in a glow of understanding
and acceptance. Three out of the five people had never done
The Work before, yet the process didnt seem to be
more difficult for them than it was for the other two, nor
were their realizations any less profound. They all began
by realizing a truth so basic that it is usually invisible:
the fact that (in the words of the Greek philosopher Epictetus)
we are disturbed not by what happens to us, but by
our thoughts about what happens. As soon as they grasped
that truth, their whole understanding changed.
Before people have
experienced The Work of Byron Katie for themselves, they
often think that it is too simple to be effective. But its
simplicity is precisely what makes it so effective. Over
the past two years, since Katie and I first met (we are
now married), I have done The Work many times, on thoughts
I hadnt even been aware of. And Ive watched
more than a thousand people do it in public events across
the United States and Europe, on the whole gamut of human
problems: from major illnesses, the deaths of parents and
children, sexual and psychological abuse, addictions, financial
insecurity, professional problems, and social issues, to
the usual frustrations of daily life. Again and again, I
have seen The Work quickly and radically transform the way
people think about their problems. And as the thinking changes,
the problems disappear.
Suffering is
optional, Katie says. Whenever we experience a stressful
feeling anything from mild discomfort to intense
sorrow, rage, or despair we can be certain that there
is a specific thought causing our reaction, whether or not
we are conscious of it. The way to end our stress is to
investigate the thinking that lies behind it, and anyone
can do this by himself with a piece of paper and a pen.
The Works four questions, which you will see in context
later in this introduction, reveal where our thinking isnt
true for us. Through this process Katie also calls
it inquiry we discover that all the concepts
and judgments that we believe or take for granted are distortions
of things as they really are. When we believe our thoughts
instead of what is really true for us, we experience the
kinds of emotional distress that we call suffering. Suffering
is a natural alarm, warning us that were off center,
but when we dont listen, we come to accept this suffering
as an inevitable part of life. Its not.
The Work has striking
similarities with the Zen koan and the Socratic dialogue.
But it doesnt stem from any tradition, Eastern or
Western. It is American, homegrown, and mainstream, having
originated in the mind of an ordinary woman who had no intention
of originating anything.
II
| |
To
realize your true nature, you must wait for the right
moment and the right conditions. When the time comes,
you are awakened as if from a dream. You understand
that what you have found is your own and doesnt
come from anywhere outside.
Buddhist Sutra |
The Work was born on a February morning in 1986 when Byron
Kathleen Reid, a forty-three-year-old woman from a small
town in the high desert of southern California, woke up
on the floor of a halfway house.
In the midst of an
ordinary American life two marriages, three children,
a successful career Katie had entered a ten-year-long
downward spiral into rage, paranoia, and despair. For two
years she was so depressed that she could seldom manage
to leave her house; she stayed in bed for weeks at a time,
doing business by telephone from her bedroom, unable even
to bathe or brush her teeth. Her children would tiptoe past
her door to avoid her outbursts of rage. Finally, she checked
in to a halfway house for women with eating disorders, the
only facility that her insurance company would pay for.
The other residents were so frightened of her that she was
placed alone in an attic room.
One morning, a week
or so later, as she lay on the floor (she had been feeling
too unworthy to sleep in a bed), Katie woke up without any
concepts of who or what she was. There was no me,
she says.
| |
All
my rage, all the thoughts that had been troubling me,
my whole world, the whole world, was gone. At the same
time, laughter welled up from the depths and just poured
out. Everything was unrecognizable. It was as if something
else had woken up. It opened its eyes. It was looking
through Katies eyes. And it was so delighted!
It was intoxicated with joy. There was nothing separate,
nothing unacceptable to it; everything was its very
own self. |
When Katie returned home, her family and friends felt that
she was a different person. Her daughter Roxann, who was
sixteen at the time, says:
| |
We
knew that the constant storm was over. She had always
yelled at me and my brothers and criticized us; I used
to be scared to be in the same room with her. Now she
seemed completely peaceful. She would sit still for
hours on the window seat or out in the desert. She was
joyful and innocent, like a child, and she seemed to
be filled with love. People in trouble started knocking
on our door, asking her for help. Shed sit with
them and ask them questions mainly, Is
that true? When Id come home miserable,
with a problem like My boyfriend doesnt
love me anymore, Mom would look at me as if she
knew that wasnt possible, and shed ask me,
Honey, how could that be true? as if I had
just told her that we were living in China. |
Once people understood
that the old Katie wasnt coming back, they began to
speculate about what had happened to her. Had some miracle
occurred? She wasnt much help to them: It was a long
time before she could describe her experience intelligibly.
She would talk about a freedom that had woken up inside
her. She also said that, through an inner questioning, she
had realized that all of her old thoughts were untrue.
Shortly after Katie
got back from the halfway house, her home began to fill
with people who had heard about her and had come to learn.
She was able to communicate her inner inquiry in the form
of specific questions that anyone who wanted freedom could
apply on his own, without her. Soon she began to be invited
to meet with small gatherings in peoples living rooms.
Her hosts often asked her if she was enlightened.
She would answer, Im just someone who knows
the difference between what hurts and what doesnt.
In 1992 she was invited
to northern California, and The Work spread very fast from
there. Katie accepted every invitation. She has been on
the road almost constantly since 1993, demonstrating The
Work in church basements, community centers, and hotel meeting
rooms, in front of small and large audiences. And The Work
has found its way into all kinds of organizations, from
corporations, law firms, and therapists offices to
hospitals, prisons, churches, and schools. It is now popular
in other parts of the world where Katie has traveled. All
across America and Europe, there are groups of people who
meet regularly to do The Work.
Katie often says that
the only way to understand The Work is to experience it.
But its worth noting that inquiry fits precisely with
current research into the biology of mind. Contemporary
neuroscience identifies a particular part of the brain,
sometimes called the interpreter, as the source
of the familiar internal narrative that gives us our sense
of self. Two prominent neuroscientists have recently characterized
the quirky, undependable quality of the tale told by the
interpreter. Antonio Damasio describes it this way: Perhaps
the most important revelation is precisely this: that the
left cerebral hemisphere of humans is prone to fabricating
verbal narratives that do not necessarily accord with the
truth. And Michael Gazzaniga writes: The left
brain weaves its story in order to convince itself and you
that it is in full control... What is so adaptive about
having what amounts to a spin-doctor in the left brain?
The interpreter is really trying to keep our personal story
together. To do that, we have to learn to lie to ourselves.
These insights, based on solid experimental work, show that
we tend to believe our own press releases. Often when we
think were being rational, were being spun by
our own thinking. That trait explains how we get ourselves
into the painful positions that Katie recognized in her
own suffering. The self-questioning she discovered uses
a different, less-known capacity of the mind to find a way
out of its self-made trap.
After doing The Work,
many people report an immediate sense of release and freedom
from thoughts that were making them miserable. But if The
Work depended on a momentary experience, it would be far
less useful than it is. The Work is an ongoing and deepening
process of self-realization, not a quick fix. Its
more than a technique, Katie says. It brings
to life, from deep within us, an innate aspect of our being.
The deeper you go into
The Work, the more powerful you realize it is. People who
have been practicing inquiry for a while often say, The
Work is no longer something I do. It is doing me.
They describe how, without any conscious intention, the
mind notices each stressful thought and undoes it before
it can cause any suffering. Their internal argument with
reality has disappeared, and they find that what remains
is love love for themselves, for other people, and
for whatever life brings. The title of this book describes
their experience: Loving what is becomes as easy and natural
as breathing.
III
| |
Considering
that, all hatred driven hence,
The [mind] recovers radical innocence
And learns at last that it is self-delighting,
Self-appeasing, self-affrighting,
And that its own sweet will is Heavens will.
William Butler Yeats |
I have waited until now to introduce the four questions
to you, because they dont make much sense out of context.
The best way to meet them is to see how they function in
an actual example of The Work. Youll also meet what
Katie calls the turnaround, which is a way of
experiencing the opposite of what you believe is true.
The following dialogue
with Katie took place before an audience of about two hundred
people. Mary, the woman who is sitting opposite Katie on
the stage, has filled out a one-page Worksheet that asked
her to write down her thoughts about someone who upsets
her. The instructions are: Allow yourself to be as
judgmental and petty as you really feel. Dont try
to be spiritual or kind. The pettier we
can be when writing, the more likely it is that well
benefit from The Work. Youll see that Mary hasnt
held back at all. She is a forceful woman, perhaps forty
years old, slim, attractive, and dressed in expensive-looking
exercise clothes. At the beginning of the dialogue, her
anger and impatience are palpable.
A first experience
of The Work, as a reader or onlooker, can be uncomfortable.
It helps to remember that all the participants Mary,
Katie, and the audience are on the same side here;
all of them are looking for the truth. If Katie ever seems
to be mocking or derisive, youll realize, upon closer
examination, that shes making fun of the thought that
is causing Marys suffering, never of Mary herself.
Toward the middle of
the dialogue, when Katie asks, Do you really want
to know the truth? she doesnt mean her truth,
or any abstract, predetermined truth, but Marys truth,
the truth that is hidden behind her troubling thoughts.
Mary has entered the dialogue in the first place because
she trusts that Katie can help her discover where she is
lying to herself. She welcomes Katies persistence.
Youll also notice
right away that Katie is very free in her use of terms of
endearment. One CEO, before a workshop that Katie gave to
his top executives, felt that he had to issue a warning:
If she holds your hand and calls you sweetheart
or honey, please dont get excited. She
does this with everyone.
Mary, reading the statements from her Worksheet: I hate
my husband because he drives me crazy everything
about him, including the way he breathes. What disappoints
me is that I dont love him anymore and our relationship
is a charade. I want him to be more successful, to not want
to have sex with me, to get in shape, to get a life outside
of me and the children, to not touch me anymore, and to
be powerful. My husband shouldnt fool himself that
hes good at our business. He should create more success.
My husband is a wimp. Hes needy, and lazy. Hes
fooling himself. I refuse to keep living a lie. I refuse
to keep living my relationship as an imposter.
Katie: Does that pretty well sum it up? [The audience bursts
into laughter, and Mary laughs along with them.] By the
sound of the laughter, it seems as though you speak for
a lot of people in this room. So, lets start at the
top and see if we can begin to understand what going on.
Mary: I hate my husband because he drives me crazy
everything about him, including the way he breathes.
Katie: "Your husband drives you crazy"
is it true? [This is the first of the four questions: Is
it true?]
Mary: Yes.
Katie: Okay. Whats an example of that, sweetheart?
He breathes?
Mary: He breathes. When were doing conference calls
for our business, I can hear his breath on the other end
of the telephone, and I want to scream.
Katie: So his breath drives you crazy is that true?
Mary: Yes.
Katie: Can you absolutely know that thats true? [The
second question: Can you absolutely know that its
true?]
Mary: Yes!
Katie: We can all relate to that. I hear that it really
is true for you. In my experience, it cant be your
husbands breath thats driving you crazy; it
has to be your thoughts about his breath thats driving
you crazy. So lets take a closer look and see if thats
true. What are your thoughts about his breath on the phone?
Mary: That he should be more aware that hes breathing
loudly during a conference call.
Katie: How do you react when you think that thought? [The
third question: How do you react when you think that thought?]
Mary: I feel like I want to kill him.
Katie: So whats more painful the thought you
attach to about his breathing or his breathing?
Mary: The breathing is more painful. Im comfortable
with the thought that I want to kill him. [Mary laughs,
and so does the audience.]
Katie: You can keep that thought. Thats the beautiful
thing about The Work. You can keep all your thoughts.
Mary: Ive never done The Work before, so I dont
know any of the right answers.
Katie: Your answers are perfect, sweetheart. Dont
rehearse. So hes breathing on the phone and you have
the thought that he should be more aware, and hes
not. Whats the next thought?
Mary: It brings up every terrible thought I have about
him.
Katie: Okay, and hes still breathing. He should
stop breathing into the phone on the conference call
whats the reality of it? Does he?
Mary: No. Ive told him to stop.
Katie: And he still does it. Thats reality. Whats
true is always whats happening, not the story about
what should be happening. He should stop breathing
on the phone is it true?
Mary, after a pause: No. Its not true. Hes
doing it. Thats whats true. Thats reality.
Katie: So how do you react when you think the thought that
he should stop breathing on the phone, and he doesnt?
Mary: How do I react? I want out. It feels uncomfortable
because I know I want out and I know Im not going
anywhere.
Katie: Lets move back to inquiry, honey, rather than
moving further into your story, your interpretation of whats
happening. Do you really want to know the truth?
Mary: Yes.
Katie: Okay. It helps if we stick to one written statement
at a time. Can you see a reason to drop the thought that
he should stop breathing on the phone? [This is an additional
question that Katie sometimes asks.] For those of you new
to The Work, if you hear that Im asking Mary to drop
her story, let me make it very clear: Im not. This
is not about getting rid of thoughts or about overcoming,
improving, or surrendering them. None of that. This is about
realizing for yourself internal cause and effect. The question
is simply Can you see a reason to drop this thought?
Mary: Yes, I can. It would be a lot more enjoyable to do
conference calls without this thought.
Katie: Thats a good reason. Can you find a stress-free
reason to keep this thought, this lie, that he should stop
breathing on the phone? [A second additional question]
Mary: No.
Katie: Who would you be without that thought? [The fourth
question: Who would you be without the thought?] Who would
you be, while youre on a conference call with your
husband, if you didnt have the ability to think that
thought?
Mary: Id be much happier. Id be more powerful.
I wouldnt be distracted.
Katie: Yes, sweetheart. Thats it. Its not his
breathing that is causing your problem. Its your thoughts
about his breathing, because you havent investigated
them to see that they oppose reality in the moment. Lets
look at your next statement.
Mary: I dont love him anymore.
Katie: Is that true?
Mary: Yes.
Katie: Okay. Good. I hear that, and do you really want
to know the truth?
Mary: Yes.
Katie: Okay. Be still. Theres no right or wrong answer.
"You dont love him" is that true?
[Mary is silent.] If you had to answer honestly either yes
or no, right now, and you had to live forever
with your answer your truth or your lie what
would your answer be? "You dont love him"
is that true? [There is a long pause. Then Mary begins
to cry.]
Mary: No. Its not true.
Katie: Thats a very courageous answer. If we answer
it that way, with whats really true for ourselves,
we think that there may be no way out. Is it true?
is just a question! Were terrified to answer the simplest
question honestly, because we project what that may mean
in the imagined future. We think we have to do something
about it. How do you react when you believe the thought
that you dont love him?
Mary: It makes my whole life a stupid charade.
Katie: Can you see a reason to drop this thought that you
dont love him? And Im not asking you to drop
the thought.
Mary: Yes, I can see a reason to drop it.
Katie: Can you think of one stress-free reason to keep
the thought?
Mary, after a long pause: I think if I keep my story, then
I can keep him from wanting to have sex all the time.
Katie: Is that a stress-free reason? It seems stressful
to me.
Mary: I guess it is.
Katie: Can you find one stress-free reason to keep that
thought?
Mary: Oh, I see. No. There arent any stress-free
reasons to keep the story.
Katie: Fascinating. Who would you be, standing with your
husband, without the thought that you dont love him?
Mary: It would be great. It would be fabulous. Thats
what I want.
Katie: Im hearing that with the thought, its
stressful. And without the thought, its fabulous.
So what does your husband have to do with your unhappiness?
Were just noticing here. So, I dont love
my husband turn it around. [After the four
questions comes the turnaround.]
Mary: I do love my husband.
Katie: Feel it. It has nothing to do with him, does it?
Mary: No. It really doesnt. I do love my husband,
and youre right, it doesnt have anything to
do with him.
Katie: And sometimes you think you hate him, and that doesnt
have anything to do with him, either. The mans just
breathing. You tell the story that you love him, or you
tell the story that you hate him. It doesnt take two
people to have a happy marriage. It only takes one
you! Theres another turnaround.
Mary: I dont love myself. I can relate to that one.
Katie: And you may think that if you divorce him, then
youll feel good. But if you havent investigated
your thinking, youll attach these same concepts onto
whoever comes into your life next. We dont attach
to people or to things; we attach to uninvestigated concepts
that we believe to be true in the moment. Lets look
at the next statement on your Worksheet.
Mary: I want my husband not to be needy, not to be dependent
on me, to be more successful, to not want to have sex with
me, to get in shape, to get a life outside of me and the
children, and to be more powerful. Those are just a few.
Katie: Lets turn that whole statement around.
Mary: I want me not to be needy. I want me not to be dependent
on him. I want me to be more successful. I want me to want
to have sex with him. I want me to get in shape. I want
me to get a life outside of him and the children. I want
me to be more powerful.
Katie: So, He shouldnt be needy
is it true? Whats the reality of it? Is he?
Mary: Hes needy.
Katie: He shouldnt be needy is a lie,
because the guy, is needy, according to you. So, how do
you react when you think the thought he shouldn't
be needy, and in your reality he is needy?
Mary: I just want to run away all the time.
Katie: Who would you be in his presence without the thought
He shouldnt be needy?
Mary: What I just understood is that I could be with him
in a space of love, instead of just having my defenses up.
Its like if I notice any bit of neediness, Im
out of there. Ive got to run. Thats what I do
with my life.
Katie: When hes acting needy, in your opinion, you
dont say No honestly. You run away or
want to run away instead of being honest with yourself and
him.
Mary: Thats true.
Katie: Well, it would have to be. You have to call him
needy until you can get some clarity and honest communication
going with yourself. So lets be clear. You be him
and be very needy. Ill take the role of clarity.
Mary: Mr. Needy comes in and says, I just had the
best phone call. Youve got to hear about it. It was
this guy and hes going to be fabulous in the business.
And I had another call
. You know, he just goes
on and on. Meanwhile, Im busy. Ive got a deadline.
Katie: Sweetheart, I hear that you had a wonderful
phone call. I love that, and I would also like you to leave
the room now. I have a deadline to meet.
Mary: We have to talk about our plans. When are we
going to Hawaii? We have to figure out what airlines
Katie: I hear that you want to talk about our plans
for Hawaii, so lets discuss this at dinner tonight.
I really want you to leave the room now. I have a deadline
to meet.
Mary: If one of your girlfriends called, you would
talk to her for an hour. Now you cant listen to me
for two minutes?
Katie: You could be right, and I want you to leave
the room now. It may sound cold, but its not. I just
have a deadline to meet.
Mary: I dont do it like that. Usually Im mean
to him. I just seethe.
Katie: You have to be mean, because youre afraid
to tell the truth and say no. You dont say, Sweetheart,
I would like you to leave. I have a deadline, because
you want something from him. What scam are you running on
yourself and on him? What do you want from him?
Mary: I am never straightforward with anybody.
Katie: Because you want something from us. What is it?
Mary: I cant stand when somebody doesnt like
me. I dont want disharmony.
Katie: So you want our approval.
Mary: Yes, and I want to maintain harmony.
Katie: Sweetheart, if your husband approves of what you
say and what you do, then there is harmony in your home
is that true? Does it work? Is there harmony in your
home?
Mary: No.
Katie: You trade your integrity for harmony in the home.
It doesnt work. Spare yourself from seeking love,
approval, or appreciation from anyone. And watch
what happens in reality, just for fun. Read your statement
again.
Mary: I want my husband not to be needy.
Katie: All right. Turn it around.
Mary: I want me not to be needy.
Katie: Yes, you need all this harmony. You need his approval.
You need his breathing to change. You need his sexuality
to change for you. Whos the needy one? Who is dependent
on whom? So lets turn the whole list around.
Mary: I need myself not to be needy, not to be dependent
Katie: On your husband, perhaps?
Mary: I want myself to be more successful. I want myself
to not want to have sex with me.
Katie: That one could be really legitimate if you sit with
it. How many times do you tell the story of how he has sex
with you and you hate it?
Mary: Constantly.
Katie: Yes. Youre having sex with him in your mind
and thinking how terrible that is. You tell the story, over
and over, of what its like having sex with your husband.
That story is whats repelling you, not your husband.
Sex without a story has never repelled anyone. It just is
what it is. Youre having sex or youre not. Its
our thoughts about sex that repel us. Write that one out
too, honey. You could write a whole Worksheet on your husband
and sexuality.
Mary: I get it.
Katie: Okay, turn the next statement around.
Mary: I want me to get in shape. But I am in shape.
Katie: Oh, really? How about mentally?
Mary: Oh. I could work on that.
Katie: Are you doing the best you can?
Mary: Yes.
Katie: Well, maybe he is, too. Hes supposed
to be in shape is that true?
Mary: No. Hes not in shape.
Katie: How do you react when you believe the thought that
he should be in shape, and hes not? How do you treat
him? What do you say? What do you do?
Mary: Everything is subtle. I show him my muscles. I dont
ever look at him with approval. I dont ever admire
him. I dont ever do anything kind in that direction.
Katie: Okay, close your eyes. Look at yourself looking
at him that way. Now look at his face. [There is a pause.
Mary sighs.] Keep your eyes closed. Look at him again. Who
would you be, standing there with him, without the thought
that he should be in shape?
Mary: I would look at him and see how handsome he is.
Katie: Yes, angel. And youd see how much you love
him. Isnt that fascinating? This is very exciting.
So lets just be there a moment. Look at how you treat
him, and he still wants to go to Hawaii with you. Thats
amazing!
Mary: Whats amazing about this guy is that I am so
horrible and mean, and he loves me without conditions. It
drives me nuts.
Katie: He drives you nuts is that true?
Mary: No. So far, its been my thinking that drives
me nuts.
Katie: So lets go back. He should get in shape
turn it around.
Mary: I should get in shape. I should get my thinking in
shape.
Katie: Yes. Every time you look at him and are repulsed,
get your thinking in shape. Judge your husband, write it
down, ask four questions, and turn it around. But only if
you are tired of the pain. Okay, honey, I think youve
got it. Just continue through the rest of the statements
on your Worksheet in the same manner. I love sitting with
you. And welcome to inquiry. Welcome to The Work.
IV
| |
Step
aside from all thinking,
and there is nowhere you cant go.
Seng-tsan (the Third Founding
Teacher of Zen) |
In Loving What Is, Katie has given you everything you need
in order to do The Work by yourself or with others. The
book will guide you, step by step, through the whole process,
and along the way it will show you many people doing The
Work directly with Katie. These one-on-one dialogues, in
which Katie brings her clarity to the most complicated human
problems, are examples dramatic examples, some of
them of how ordinary people can find their own freedom
through inquiry.
Loving What Is is available for purchase in
our store in hardcover and audiobook editions. The audiobook
allows you to hear Katie demonstrating The Work live with
participants in her workshops.