I’m Over All That (14 page)

Read I’m Over All That Online

Authors: Shirley MacLaine

BOOK: I’m Over All That
6Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

We were middle-class people, living a middle-class life in a neighborhood with a slight variation of architecture in each house. (Very slight.) We lived a “don’t rock the boat” emotional life, which I believe ultimately made me into an eccentric because I felt I had to rebel. I attended school and dancing class every day of my life and babysat for extra money. I didn’t learn much in school (except how to be a fast typist), but I did devote myself to becoming popular. Hence my football captain boyfriend and my time served as a cheerleader. I was a straight A student (so why didn’t I learn anything?) and was a member of a sorority called the Sub Deb Club.

My favorite subject was geometry. (I felt I somehow knew about pyramids and the inherent brilliance of the mathematics of shapes and forms.) I rode in cars with boys, smoked only where I wouldn’t get caught, and stayed a virgin even though the petting got hot and heavy. My favorite book was called
Heroes of Civilization
(I still have it on my bookshelf), and my favorite piece of music was the “Pas de Deux” from
The Nutcracker Suite.

I was not particularly religious, even though it said Baptist on my birth certificate, and until I read
Cosmic Memory
by Rudolf Steiner, I hadn’t contemplated such things as reincarnation and soul searching, but I always did love to think and discuss. At our Sunday dinners, which consisted of meatloaf, scalloped potatoes, scalloped tomatoes, and chocolate cake with hot chocolate sauce, Daddy used to ask me deep questions. I loved lingering over the food and discussing philosophy. Once I asked him why everything one did had so much trouble attached to it. I was twelve. He was delighted because he had written a doctorate of philosophy and psychology at Johns Hopkins. He and my mother were teachers, even though I think they loved drama more (they were like vaudevillians together). Daddy and I talked philosophy for hours. He was comfortable with abstract thinking and stimulated me to come up with my own conclusions.

He was a contradiction. He was a bigoted southerner, yet sobbed in admiration at
Raisin in the Sun
. He loved Sidney Poitier and Sammy Davis Jr., but wouldn’t let me bring either home because of what the neighbors might say. Black people weren’t the only ones. I had a Jewish boyfriend of whom he inquired once, “Where are your horns?”

He cried at “The Star Spangled Banner” and fervently believed in the freedom of political dissent. He didn’t like the
communists because “They’ll take all our money and take us over too.” One of his most advanced accomplishments at Johns Hopkins was a paper proving that color and music had a vibrational frequency that was healing, and that these vibrations corresponded equally to vibrations in the human body. I later learned he was talking about the color and energy centers of the body the ancient Hindus called
chakras,
but he didn’t know that. He never finished his paper. In fact, he didn’t finish much of anything. He was a brilliant and loving man, but he had no “stick-to-it-ivity.” Hence I became an overachiever. He used to call me “a do-gooder,” always for the underdog. Maybe to me
he
was the underdog and I wanted to do good for him.

Everything we do and are starts with family and ends with family.

I Am Over Getting Over Family

W
hat gives each of us more grief, and more love, than family? But grief and love produce guilt. So family = guilt.

If someone tells me they had a happy childhood, I tell them they haven’t really looked at it. I believe we choose the mother, father, sisters, and brothers according to what we need to learn for our own soul’s growth.

I have learned that each of us belongs to a “soul group”—that is, a conglomeration of souls we know who have known us over eons of time. So each member of that group can be a brother or sister, mother or father, and so on. Each member of the group has varied and intimate knowledge of every other member. Therefore, when an incarnation takes place and we make a choice on a cosmic higher level to be part of a family, each member starts out knowing what he or she is doing within the family. But as we grow from birth we forget why we chose to be members of that family, and because the family
lessons are the most difficult of all in life, we play a blame game or we don’t get the lessons at all, kidding ourselves into believing everything is happy and perfect.

Life on Earth is not meant to be easy. It is meant to be a learning experience. Of course in the final analysis our soul’s goal is peace and happiness, but to get there can be difficult. Each member of the family,
on a soul level,
understands the baggage of karma each other member has. In other words, a cruel mother is understood on some level to have been treated cruelly at some time on her soul’s journey. A victim has probably victimized another. These past karmic dramas need not always have occurred within the present family. It’s the experience that matters, not the individual driving it.

The family is the preparation for life. But after the preparation (at age
21
or so), we are on our own. When we look back and blame a family member, it’s a waste of energy and time. We should get over it.

Of course, psychotherapy helps, but I would recommend some past life therapy so we can pinpoint
why
such dramas occurred. I have been through many past life sessions where members of my family were involved. They were remarkable. I knew I wasn’t making it up because of the emotion involved. I cried, laughed, screamed, and finally nodded with understanding in my soul as to why certain people and events occurred like they did.

Past life regression sessions come in very handy while going through a divorce too. And it saves each party anguish
and
money when they understand the past life karma of it all. There’s no point in my going into detail regarding who did what to whom in my own life. The understanding of the karmic emotion of it all is what is important. The laws of cause and effect are in play all the time, in every moment of our lives. I wish that this law was part of our education. As my father said once, “It’s too bad we have to get close to dying before we understand what it was all about in the first place.”

As he lay dying, he would visit his mother and father in his sleep every night. The doctors and nurses at Johns Hopkins Hospital crowded around his bed every morning to hear what he told them. They had heard it from many dying patients before. My dad was not on medication that would have produced delusions. The dying process was the “knowing the truth” process.

My mother, on the other hand, in her last days didn’t visit her relatives as greeters to heaven. She went back in time to when she was a very young girl. She talked to her mother and sisters in the past, working out problems that had occurred. She also was living what had been her dreams and fantasies when she was young. She created the reality of living what she had dreamed of. It was fascinating for me to hear and observe. I was on location with
Guarding Tess
when she passed away. We were shooting in Baltimore, where she had met and married my father and had conceived me. I believe she chose to cross over while I was there because she knew it was familiar territory to both of us.

I got a call from her nurse telling me she had taken her last breath, but I already knew it because a few minutes before the call, the alarm spontaneously went off in the house I was renting. Mother’s voice came into my head and told me exactly where to locate the alarm in the house. I went straight to it (on a high shelf in a hall closet) and turned it off. Mother then instructed me to drive to my childhood home in Arlington, Virginia. I called the set, explained what had happened and told them I wouldn’t be able to come in that day. They said, “Go, no problem.”

I drove to the house in Virginia. In my head, mother’s voice instructed me to go to a drawer that I hadn’t known existed in a cupboard. Inside the drawer, I found an envelope. I opened it and read the letter inside. It was about some unflattering things involving my ex-husband. She then said she hadn’t wanted to tell me because I needed to learn it all for myself.

Then she directed me to my father’s underwear drawer in his bedroom. She said there would be a valentine under the clothes. There was. She instructed me to keep it. She directed me to another desk where she kept some poems. I never knew the location of any of these things. I found the poems and keep them to this day.

When I returned to Baltimore and the house I was renting, I opened the front door and the lights flicked on and off by themselves. Then the TV in the living room went on and off. I knew it was Mother saying she was with me. She then
said, “Look out at the swans on the lake. I will be with them, watching you till you finish your picture.”

As I looked out the window, a pair of swans glided into view on the lake.

I never broke down over either of my parents’ passing, because I knew that was just what had happened—they had passed. They didn’t die. Their souls are with me when I need some advice or have a good laugh at the absurdity of what we believe is the “truth” here on Earth.

Once on my trek across Spain doing the Santiago de Compostela pilgrimage, I got lost. I ended up in some military installation, which was a real breach of security. Mom and Dad came into my head and showed me the path back to the Camino. Then I could feel each of them say goodbye to each other and go back to their own school of learning where they were.

Family is important because they are our first teachers. We are known to each other. That is why it is so hard to grow away from them. Twins always recognize each other for life. Mothers sometimes remember they were fathers before, and vice versa. The family tree of relatives, of aunts and uncles, etc., is made up of members of the soul group we each belong to.

When this spiritual knowledge is applied to the problems we have with our families, the psychodramas that we are all a part of become easier to bear and certainly educational. Forgive and forget becomes possible because we remember.

It’s good to clear up the problems with family because, if not, we’ll go around again at a future date.

I Am Over Going to Funerals

I
never liked funerals. I remember the funeral of a despised Hollywood mogul. So many people attended that someone quipped, “Gee, give the people what they want and they really will show up!”

I like paying respects to a life well lived, but I know the person we are mourning is not dead. And the idea of getting closure? Why say that? The departed one has just gone on to another level of understanding.

When someone I love passes on, I go immediately to a place where I spent time with them. I sit there and call them to me, just to know they’re still around. Usually, I can feel them and they feel better that I don’t feel sad. I feel people don’t want to “die” because they know that those left behind will feel sad and bereft. Maybe more of us would go sooner if we knew it would be all right with those who are left behind.

I appreciate what Dr. Kevorkian does because he respects the desires of those who want to move on and are not afraid to die. But I have one caveat to my agreement with him. Spiritually
speaking, I wonder if a life is meant to be lived out to its complete finish because of the soul lessons to be learned, not only by the person passing on, but also those close to him or her. Dying is as important as birth. The way we die is as important as anything we will ever do.

I personally remember having committed a cosmic suicide by cutting the silver cord attaching my soul to my body. I did it because I couldn’t bear to see what was happening to the Atlantean civilization around me. It was crumbling, sinking, and full of sorrow. I remember soaring above what was occurring in an out-of-body experience and deciding to cut the silver cord. I feel that that was a cowardly decision when I meditate on it now. I should have experienced what everyone else was going through.

I get very depressed over the way things are going in the world today. If I feel I am experiencing too painful a transition when my time comes, I will make my decision then as to what I will do . . . how I will go. Maybe I’ll even get some help from those I know I will meet on the other side.

I Can’t Remember if I’m Over Memory Loss

I
have given up being concerned about my short-term memory loss. I never remember where I put my car keys, and then when I finally find them I can’t remember what they’re for!

I have decided that what I can’t remember is still in there somewhere and can be retrieved in time if I give up trying. Perhaps what I can’t remember is not all that important anyway. What’s in a name? What’s in the memory of an event that didn’t mean all that much? Perhaps memory loss happens in order that we live more in the Now.

I have come to be more relaxed with my memory loss because I feel I’ve gained more of the totality of Now. I wouldn’t like to have amnesia, but perhaps my brain doesn’t want to be filled with facts and figures that have nothing to do with what lies ahead.

I’m learning more to let go and let God, as they say. I do write down schedules and appointments and I’m training myself to always put my car keys in the same place. Anyway, the secret to happiness is good health and a bad memory.

Never Get Over a Dog—Get Another One

Other books

Alexander by Kathi S. Barton
Gunpowder Alchemy by Jeannie Lin
Liberty Bar by Georges Simenon
The Shamrock & the Rose by Regan Walker
Grow Up by Ben Brooks
Killing Pilgrim by Alen Mattich
The Devil You Need by Sam Cheever
Jade Palace Vendetta by Dale Furutani