Having lost my job last November and facing other losses if something good doesn’t happen soon, I’ve been looking for ways to ease my stress level. About five weeks ago I went to the emergency room with chest pains. The good news is my heart and lungs appear to be fine. The bad news is I still feel a lot of stress and my blood pressure is borderline — it runs anywhere from 140/90 to 130/85 or so.

While on vacation last week (paid for by my in-laws, which, trust me, defines “Faustian bargain”), I took a Tai Chi class. It was great, and it reminded me of the benefits of meditation.

I had taken a meditation class back in the ’80s and loved it. The class was held in an old church in Lexington, Mass. I remember two specific things:

1) We had to take off our shoes and put then in a coatroom adjacent to the room where we were meditating. After the first class I discovered that some unenlightened fuck had stolen money from my wallet, which I had placed in one shoe. Later I learned the other shoe had been molested by a priest.

2) After the second class, a young woman there was really hitting on me hard, which, being a relative rarity in my life, was both flattering and not quite believable. It was like I almost had to assure her I wasn’t the Dalai Lama. I didn’t take advantage of the situation because I’m a fool I had a girlfriend at the time.

I meditated on my own for a few weeks after the class ended, but sadly allowed the practice to fade from my life as I got caught up in the kinds of things that elevate one’s blood pressure to borderline levels. Plus, having an incredibly restless mind — in other words, the perfect candidate to benefit from meditation — I found it nearly impossible to sit still on my own and focus. My mistake and my loss.


Fast forward to yesterday. Over the weekend I had discovered a holistic health center in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., that offers free meditation classes twice a month at the local library. Perfect! An opportunity to get back on the path to inner peace and ease the incredible tension I feel.

Naturally I was running a little late for the 12:30 p.m. starting time and found my stress level rising as I fought midday downtown traffic. I got to the library right at 12:29, but couldn’t find a parking space — except for the very last one! A cosmic sign! I grabbed the blue sofa pillow I had brought to sit on, ran in and asked where the meditation class was being held.

Directed downstairs, I hustled to the room just in time. But there was nobody there. Maybe I was in the wrong room, I thought. No, it says right here, “Mindful Mediation — 12:30 p.m.” (Yes, it said “mediation,” not “meditation.”)

I waited for about 10 minutes, figuring professional meditators might have a looser concept of time than I do. But in the end, there was no meditation. I was crushed; at this point I would have settled for the mediation.

A woman in the library told me the same thing had happened two weeks ago. The holistic center had reserved the room, and then no one showed up.

I left, downcast but determined to return again, and comforted by the knowledge that, at least this time, no one stole my money. Just a little of my spirit.

I live in New York’s 20th Congressional District, where a special election was held on March 31 to fill the seat recently vacated by Democrat Kirsten Gillibrand. Gillibrand, of course, was named by Governor David Paterson to replace Hillary Clinton as New York’s junior senator after Hillary was tapped by President Obama to be secretary [...]

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