Showing posts with label sex drugs and meditation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sex drugs and meditation. Show all posts

Wednesday, 1 May 2013

The Art of Forgiveness



I was ready to sit cross-legged for an hour or two. I was ready to feel the aches and pains of extended stillness gradually permeate every part of my body. I was ready to experience any of the symptoms or strange thoughts described by Mary-Lou Stephens in her memoir, Sex, Drugs and Meditation.

Instead, sitting upright in a chair with my feet flat on the floor, I experienced no more than 30 minutes of guided meditation over two separate sessions. That's less than I'm able to do at the gym after a yoga class. I'd failed and it wasn't even my fault! I knew I had to LET GO of my expectations and this feeling of disappointment and JUST BE. I probably shouldn't have expected anything more but the schedule online had looked differently to me. The forty-five minutes that were down for Guided Meditation in fact included teaching and discussion time. First hurdle to inner peace: acceptance. I'd gotten it wrong. Second hurdle to inner peace: forgiveness. It's okay. I'm okay.

I think of the tapping affirmation that I tried once (I try everything once), which went something like


Despite (insert negative thing here) I deeply and completely accept myself.



I tried to make the affirmation work without doing the tapping, which would have looked weird to people who were new to meditation, let alone tapping healing.

Forgiveness, kindness, compassion, and the path to enlightenment have come up so often in my life, particularly during my thirties, that it seemed time to seek extra guidance. I'd picked up a postcard somewhere for a day's meditation course in Tewantin and thought, "I can do this or the blogger meetup in Brisbane...this."

The morning starts slowly, as a Sunday morning should, and appropriately in this case, on my own, after being dropped off at Noosa Marina in Tewantin where there are market stalls starting to come to life and a random gift store offering hot beverages about to open its doors. Sam and Poppy take off to Noosa Arts Theatre, for Sam's West Side Story auditions. He's directing. Poppy is meeting and greeting artists, and offering feedback, whether she is asked for it or not!

I sample a lovely, locally made sugar scrub and essential oil collection ("Just the thing for Mother's Day!") and consider buying a beautifully polished heart-shaped stone (for abundance) from a woman whose little boy is busy rearranging the shiny wares she'd just spent the last ten minutes setting up. The gift store behind her stall opens and I opt for their decadent dark chocolate because the Chai Latte is to be made with powder. I'd forgotten to ask so I'm glad the girl mentions it. It's hard to get good chai. My hot chocolate is served with a chocolate-coated spoon. The chocolate melts and I stir it through the hot milk. Delicious. I sit with it because I can, taking the time to watch the activity around me, observing the sleepy scene still unfolding in a place that I'd never stopped to see before.

With an hour to spare, I take my time to walk across the bridge and over to the river bank, where I sit down and Instagram a house boat, imagining the quiet, contented lives of the inhabitants. I read another chapter of Sex, Drugs and Meditation and then I stroll down Ernest Street, with my yoga mat and wrap, to United Synergies. Nestled in bushland behind a main road, this is the home of a not for profit group that provides services and support to families and communities to help them reach their potential. It's a happy, peaceful place. I'm glad we're able to use this space.









Thirty people turn up, register, make themselves a coffee or a cup of green tea, and settle into the chairs that are set up in the Meeting Room. Wait. Meeting Room? Chairs? I slide my red LOVE yoga mat discreetly under my seat. Oh well.

There is some discussion and a few introductions here and there, but it's clear that everyone has arrived and committed to the day for their own reasons and most, as I am, are content to dwell in their own head space for a bit longer. I stand by the merch table and speed read as many introductions to Tharpa publications as possible, and four delightful children's books in their entirety. I'm tempted to buy these on the spot, especially after the teacher's quick, smiling story, which she tells me between trips to the kitchen, about a nun who produced from her bag, a copy of The Story of Angulimala to read to a group of feuding grown-ups in the car during a long road trip. During the lunch break, to avoid the lure of so much fascinating literature available for purchase, I return to my sunny spot by the river. There is too much to think about and the pile of books beside my bed reached toppling height three weeks ago.

The teachings, shared by Diana Waterhouse from Sydney Kadampa Meditation Centre, and based upon the lessons within Geshe's book, How to Solve Our Human Problems, centre around acceptance leading to forgiveness. By the end of the day I give in and buy the book. The paperback edition is only $20 and it makes me happy to have my own copy. See? It's working! I feel happy! I'm already on the path to enlightenment! We'll deal with the attachment issues another day...




It's as if I've heard these lessons before (perhaps I have, in a previous life, and didn't get them right),  but this was my first introduction in this life, to the teachings of Buddha outside of my own reading. I've made a couple of visits to Chenrezig, but they've been on a Friday, with Mum, who also enjoys the calm of the place, the conversation, and the excellent vegetarian lunch at the Big Love Cafe. We usually keep talking well past the start of the lesson that follows. Last time we were out there, we wandered through the Garden of Enlightenment and Mum said she'd like to end up there, with a memorial stupa of her own. I thought of the worst possible Dad Joke ("Don't be stupa!") and instead of saying it aloud I told her I'd be happy with a membership and coming along every so often to meditate.

If you're interested in meditation and/or Buddhism, but you're not ready to stay silent at a ten-day retreat yet, or attend regular classes at Chenrezig or anywhere else, the one day Mahasiddha Kadampa Meditation Centre course is an excellent introduction to the Dharma, basic breathing meditations, and a whole new group of like-minded people if that's what you need. It's a good deal more commercial than I'd expected, in the sense that it clearly caters for the non-yogis dressed for a day at Noosa Civic. No judgement, just an observation. And interesting to note; the number of people in attendance each month is surely an indication of the viability of the application of the Dharma in contemporary life.

People want to be happy! Even if it takes a few lifetimes!





Thursday, 18 April 2013

are you seeking enlightenment?

I am. I have been for some time. Probably for some lifetimes. It's not a fruitless search but it can get a little frustrating sometimes. I need all the help I can get! For years I've gravitated towards self-help and spiritual guidance books, e-books, blogs and courses. I've vaguely committed to daily yoga or meditation, and I even re-joined the gym this year and somehow I manage to get to three classes a week! I know! I surprise myself!

On Tuesday night I went along to the launch of a local author's debut memoir at Annie's Books on Peregian. If you're a Sunshine Coast local (or just visiting us one lovely sunny day), pop in to say hello to Annie and browse at your leisure the mass of beautiful books in a brightly lit, intimate space. She's right next door to the cutest tea and furniture emporium around so be warned- you'll want to stay all day.




Mary-Lou Stephen's Sex, Drugs and Meditation is hardcore. The lady doesn't mess about. She used to though, and this book is her incredible story of getting through many, many messy stages of life. It's achingly raw, completely heartbreaking and not surprisingly if you know Mary-Lou, really funny. She also proudly notes that it has a happy ending so if you're dreading it, bake some Anzac biscuits (you'll soon realise why!), make a pot of tea and just dive right in. You'll be rewarded in the end, I promise.

Mary-Lou is an inspiration, regularly meditating, writing, speaking, singing, and living a life she loves of quiet, calm, confident, continuous creativity.

So on Tuesday night, on the pavement outside Annie's, while I was listening and smiling and chatting and catching up with the ABC folks and old friends, I became aware of that little voice inside my head (or is it my heart?) that makes itself known every so often - you know, like the same old friend or cousin tends to do every year or so, calling you out of the blue to see how your life off Facebook is going - the little voice was smiling with me and saying to me, "That meditation day you saw on a postcard somewhere? It's on next week. You didn't book it yet. Why didn't you book it yet? You have to book it! Book it! Do it! Go on! You know you want to..." The smiling, cheeky bugger would not shut up. It persisted until I actually checked out the website. It persisted while I closed the window, opened a myriad others and went about my crazy, busy life responding to emails, checking Twitter and Instagram, procrastinating on Pinterest and getting back to interview questions, theatre reviews and researching the exotic destinations that make up my bucket list (you knew I was travel blogging, didn't you?). And it hasn't let up since Tuesday. It's been at me and at me, and today - Thursday - guess what I did? I made sure that Sam was okay to have Poppy at the theatre during West Side Story auditions and I booked that one day meditation course. And you know what?

IT FEELS GOOD TO HAVE DONE THAT!

It feels good to have committed to taking the next small step in my journey of enlightenment. Because I've never managed to get very far along the path without stopping dead in my tracks and wondering, "Is this really necessary right now?" and "Can I really afford to do this right now?" Actually, I'm re-reading Eckhart Tolle right now (I read it when I was sixteen and didn't get it) and I realise that I can't afford to not keep taking these small steps forward. The time is NOW!

What's your next step towards enlightenment?