years since my tiny son had died so unexpectedly. The voice gathered strength from all my defeats. "You're not going to make it," I heard. "You're no good. You'll never be able to write about this." What a weirdly confident demon. I felt myself lending energy to this voice, pushing it to be louder and stronger, to see where it would go. A dangerous game to play in a dark room in the foothills of the Himalayas. The next morning I woke, dazed and ruined, washed my face, drank tea, and opened my eyes wide. They say a man lying at the bottom of a well can see the stars even in broad daylight. I saw something brilliant those days in Dharamsala. I never considered myself a spiritu- al seeker. So I was stirred and con- fused by this unprecedented dialogue between two major world religions. I bounded between the serene and pen- etrating presence of His Holiness the Dalai Lama and the frenetic and exu- berant debates and teachings of the rabbis. Over the net to the Buddhist side, where calm meditation- brings peace and clarity; over the net to the Jewish side, where, as we prayed out- doors overlooking Dharamsala's Kangra Valley, I heard the beauty of all creation sing with one voice. Buddhism? Judaism? Buddha- Judaism? Jewish Buddhism? Is there a God or is there nothing? Or, as the Jewish mystics seem to whisper, is God nothing? The match was called early on account of darkness. The score: God, one; Nothing, nothing. Wisdom To Change I sought Reb Zalman [SChachter- Shalomi] out for advice. We walked along the winding cutbacks that pass for roads in Dharamsala. Reb Zalman comes from the Lubavitch tradition of rabbinic counseling, and his advice had range, from body to mind to soul. He peered into my psyche and also asked after my sex life. In Chasidic thought, joy in everyday life is meat for the spirit. Then he moved on to my Jewish soul, my neshamah. He said, using Native American lan- guage, that I ought to go on a spirit quest. For a moment I pictured myself in the New Mexico desert, tied to a pole in the hot sun and pierced by arrows. But he meant a retreat, to think about one question: What do I want, what do I really want? They say a man lying at the bottom of a well can see the stars even in broad daylight. I saw something brilliant those days in Dharamsala. To ask this question for a day deepens the sense of an interior life and strengthens inner listening. Later I met a teacher in Jerusalem, Susie Schneider, who explained that even seemingly trivial physical needs and wants are not to be dismissed out of hand. In Jewish thought, the prompting of the heart, even for a bagel with cream cheese, is a serious message. Because only by listening carefully to what we want can we begin to hear what is wanted of us. Reb Zalman gave me a second way of approaching the question: "Find your risk." That is good advice. But how much risk? Buddha left his family and palace behind to become a wan- dering contemplative; Abram obeyed the startling command lekh lekha — go and leave your father's house, and the land of your birth. What sort of voice was he hearing? Did it come from within or without? Should I too quit my job, leave my home, start over? Reb Zalman stopped walking, smiled, and looked serious. "No," he said quietly. "Have the hokhmah to change your life from where you are." Hokhmah is wisdom. Out Of Sight When I got to Joshua Tree I felt very refreshed. I stopped off at a shop in one of the small towns for a soda. The storekeeper said, "There won't be much light left," then gave me direc- tions: "You can go through the gates, the gates are open." In my state of mind, every phrase sounded like spir- itual advice, every direction was for the heart as well. The Joshua trees are delicate can- delabras with bent arms holding sprays of green in their fists; they dot the landscape of the park, among large hollowed rocks like pelvic bones or chunks of ankle, broken femur, white and bare, smooth, with lots of reds and the preliminary green of sunset. It was cool after I entered the park, and I pulled over at a roadside marker. I wanted my feet on the ground. I hiked out in the sand, past clumps of plants here and there, large rocks ahead, like piles of rubble, stone on stone, some old disaster, and all the life bare and clinging: small purple flowers amid sprays of dark green plants like weeds in clumps and wisps of witch's hair and the Joshua trees everywhere like sentinels and sounds of birds calling back and forth. - I heard a bird calling and stopped. On top of the highest arm of a Joshua tree, calling out. A small bird with an orange crest, orange going to salmon. I called back and he answered. We called back and forth. I stood very still. A group of these birds ran past, upright — quail. They moved just out of sight behind scraggly weed hair, a spray of green to hide them. I edged slightly a few feet and saw them again. They detected me and ran on just out of sight. Then I played the calling game with another one in a tree. Calling out. Calling out. The heart of the world and the spring of the world. I felt delighted to have such contact, such calling out again. My heart was open, but with no human creature in sight, heart open to them and the land around me. `I Heard My Heart' I left Los Angeles the next day. For a connecting flight out of Houston, we boarded a small bus. I noticed a woman traveling with her grand- mother. The old woman had difficul- ty getting up the stairs, and her granddaughter carrying her bags could not.aid her. Dozens of us watched and did nothing, thinking the usual — not my problem. Then I heard my heart. We rode the bus to the airplane, waiting on the tarmac. I eyed them the whole time: this old lady and her tiny granddaughter. I stood at the bottom of the steps of the bus and waited. When she came, I climbed up and took this old woman in my arms. "My leg doesn't work," she said. I lifted her. She was so light to lift off this earth and to hold and to help her down step by step as I backed down. It felt good somehow. Like I was sup- posed to be there. El 1/2 1998 67