Passionate love gets most of the screen time. It is exciting. I have appreciated passionate artistic expressions of artists, musicians, dancers, actors, poets, and film makers. Teachers with a passion for educating and a passion for their subject have altered my life path. I, too, have participated in passionate teaching, painting, musical performances, and touch, each an expression of love. I have spoken passionately to individuals and before large groups of people, written passionately about creativity, education, and healing. I have searched for answers to the question, "What is my passion?" One of my favorite quotes is the one about finding what makes you come alive and then going and doing that because what the world needs is people who have come alive. (I included that in a passionate convocation speech.)
In a world where following the tribe has been the norm it is useful for an individual to explore what moves one deeply and what might make life better–that might not be within tribal tradition. Passion can assist in propelling a person's actions in a different direction, give turgor to break new ground, support the lead goose flying into the wind for others to follow. Changing the status quo can involve courage and sustained motivation. Passionate conviction that change is necessary and possible is part of what galvanizes a new vision of possibility to make it more than a passing thought.
Life plays the strong warm fiery energy of passion through all of us at some time, whether we express it or not. Some people, more than others, get "all fired up" about some issue or project or belief. Passionate energy is part of the symphony of life. Passion can transport you into an altered state of consciousness. This is something we like about it. It is exciting compared to the ordinary way things are.
"The ordinary way that things are" may seem suffocating if you can't get to your particular passion. When my first child was very young I chomped at the bit to write and paint and was frequently plagued with the notion that I was not living up to my full potential. Now this child is out in the world, intelligently and creatively making it a better place, supported by passion in all that she does–and I'm so proud of her.
But passion can be over rated, or over emphasized, or not the most useful quality to focus on. Contrary to what is profiled in so many magazine articles and movies, passion is not the ultimate expression of caring and love. It is simply a part of a spectrum. Passion that is ungrounded may be more of a bull in a china shop. A person worked up in a passionate rant may feel a lot of energy in their head, even a ringing in the ears from all the blood pumping. Looking about for where there is passion in your life, as if it is a critical nutrient, like vitamin C, can make one worry that something is wrong if it isn't there. A lack of passion, these days, might be taken as a significant deficiency in some New Age spiritual contexts.
For a while now, life has not been playing this frequency through me. When I ask, "What is my passion?" the old answers don't compute. Painting, writing, playing music, teaching, even listening to music I used to get a buzz from, no longer convey a buzz. Nothing from the outside or that I do "makes" me happy or excited anymore. There is no passionate drive to write or paint–things I used to defend my right to take the time to do. I used to feel as if I could not fully live or breath right if I wasn't doing these activities enough. Now, sometimes months pass without. It feels good not to feel driven. There was love behind some of what I used to do, but there was also a lot of fear. For example, I entered education intent on saving students from a system of education I felt was damaging. I often feared a beautiful scene would pass and an urgency to capture it in paint or film, and would feel all clenched up with tension if I had to delay making art. I felt inspired to write, and cherished the ideas and inspiration that came to me, but felt angry and grudging toward any conditions that limited "my" writing time. I discovered that for me, anyway, passion could have a frenetic side that was not comfortable. It was a condition of being a perpetual seeker, seeking something to fix the tension and fear. Doing the things I was passionate about could be said to be "good" but they amounted to being "fixes"–temporary, at best–for my fear of not being in control of life.
This phase of life is distinctly dispassionate. Yet this is not the same as apathetic. There is caring. There is love. But the tone of it is more mellow, cool, serene, and quiet. Expression of this kind of loving is often overlooked in this fast paced activity driven world. There is nothing to film if there is no searcher searching for something. There is no drama if there is no tension of anticipation, no struggle for achievement. What is there to excite us about someone just being present in what is happening, accepting it as it is, and being moved to speak and act from quietness?
This quietness does not demand or fire me up. It invites without pushing. Not having passion pushing and roiling through my veins, neither is there any energy to invest in trying to get anyone else to join me in any project, ideal, or belief. As I interact with someone, there is awareness of what each one believes in that moment, a kind of empathetic recognition. There is, sometimes, insight into why they might believe what they do, an awareness of the wounding or inspiration motivating them. Somehow, even though I don't feel all bubbly and warm and fuzzy inside, I know that taking this in without judging it is an expression of love.