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A GREAT PILGRIMAGE


I felt in need of a great pilgrimage


so I sat still for three days


and God came to me.


(Kabir)

 
Pir Shabda and Darvesha approach the Dargah of Murshid SAM
at Lama Foundation during the Sufi Seshin, August 2011

 
October, 2020 - Letting Go/This Present Moment (click image to view video):

Letting Go

 
 
In meditation our mind finds a resting place.
When awareness and direct experience synchronize we feel complete, fulfilled and satisfied.
 

Darvesha MacDonald - The New Story:

 

 
Darvesha On What Is Enlightenment (2019 audio - 4 min.)
 
 
Turning Poison Into Medicine, dharma talk on meditation, Sufi Sesshin at Lama 2016 (audio)
 
Embodiment, dharma talk on meditation, Sufi Sesshin at Lama 2011 (audio)
 
Maitri, dharma talk on meditation, Sufi Sesshin at Lama 2012 (audio)
 
Last night I begged the wise one to
tell me the secret of the world.
Gently, gently he whispered.
"Be quiet, the secret cannot be spoken,
it is wrapped in silence''.

 

- Rumi -

 

"To be aware is to watch your bodily activity, the way you walk, the way you sit, the movements of your hands: it is to hear the words you use, to observe all your thoughts, all your emotions, all your reactions. It includes awareness of the unconscious, with its traditions, its instinctual knowledge, and the immense sorrow it has accumulated—not only personal sorrow, but the sorrow of man. You have to be aware of all that; and you cannot be aware of it if you are merely judging, evaluating, saying, "This is good and that is bad, this I will keep and that I will reject," all of which only makes the mind dull, insensitive.

From awareness comes attention. Attention flows from awareness when in that awareness there is no choice, no personal choosing, no experiencing... but merely observing. And, to observe, you must have in the mind a great deal of space. A mind that is caught in ambition, greed, envy, in the pursuit of pleasure and self-fulfillment, with its inevitable sorrow, pain, despair, and anguish—such a mind has no space in which to observe, to attend. It is crowded with its own desires, going round and round in its own backwaters of reaction. You cannot attend if your mind is not highly sensitive, sharp, reasonable, logical, sane, and healthy, without the slightest shadow of neuroticism. The mind has to explore every corner of itself, leaving no spot uncovered, because if there is a single dark corner of one's mind which one is afraid to explore, from that springs illusion...

It is only in the state of attention that you can be a light unto yourself, and then every action of your daily life springs from that light—every action—whether you are doing your job, cooking, going for a walk, mending clothes, or what you will. This whole process is meditation." J. Krishnamurti

 

“Real spirituality is not just a matter of cultivating wholesome traits and positive thoughts and emotions; it is about learning to distinguish between things as they are and our present confusion about them, and thus gaining insight into the nature of our own minds.”

P 41 The Practice of Lojong, Cultivating compassion through Training the Mind by Traleg Kyabgon