Road-Testing Crazy Wisdom
Learn how to harness own crazy wisdom
May/June 2002
Jon Spayde Utne Reader
Crazy wisdom is more than a tradition-it's something you can taste
and try. A good place to begin is with
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The Essential Crazy
Wisdom, by Wes 'Scoop' Nisker (Ten Speed Press, 2001). It's a
somewhat sketchy history of the crazy wisdom tradition around the
world-but its strength lies in its wonderful assemblage of
life-changing quotes and stories. Tidbits like 'Reality is a wave
function traveling backward and forward in time' (physicist John L.
Castri), 'Only the shallow know themselves' (Oscar Wilde), and 'God
has no religion' (Mahatma Gandhi) keep your brain nicely
off-balance, and Nisker's Buddhist-tinged skepticism about ultimate
issues like God is bracing, even though it gives somewhat short
shrift to the devotional side of crazy wisdom.
For things you can actually do to hone your crazy-wisdom
consciousness, look into
Shaving the Inside of Your Skull,
by Mel Ash (Tarcher/Putnam, 1996), which is jammed with offbeat
exercises. Cover your own eyes, shout 'Guess who!' and see what you
say. Write a story in first person, switching your gender. Invent a
new superstition ('Wearing red socks on Wednesday will attract
wealth). To humorously dislodge yourself from habitual routines,
spend half an hour referring to yourself as 'the robot.' ('The
robot is a little bored. The robot has to go to the bathroom.') Ash
even shows you how to invent your own religion-quoting the advice
of LSD guru Timothy Leary, who should know. Begin with Goals,
Roles, Rituals, Space-time Locales, Mythic Context. Move on to
rituals and costumes. 'You will eventually find yourself engaged in
a series of sacred moments which feel right to you,' writes
Leary.
Like Nisker, Ash pushes the reader to revolt against all fixed
ideas-particularly frozen self-images and deadened and deadening
religious concepts. His spirit is anarchic, bohemian, and joyously
insubordinate. If you're of a more devotional, more God-hungry
frame of mind, you might try Stephen Levine's beautiful new book,