A Taste of Oneness – A Weekend In Togetherness on Lopez Island
By Bev Byrnes
[Dear friend and a natural Artist, Bev Byrnes is soft spoken and pleasant to be with. She wears an infectious smile ever on her lips. She was born in Ohio and had a typical American upbringing, including Sunday school. She was still at that innocent age of 14, when an accident took away her elder brother. A shock it was to the young mind. Grieving apart, the unexpected event led her to a deep search for truth. She even undertook several philosophy courses during her Collegiate studies and investigated into all manner of religious and spiritual ideologies. She felt an inner sense of connection to a certain ‘knowingness.’ As she grew older the inner knowing gained strength and she came to rely more on a sense of resonance and less on intellectual pursuit. Spiritual searching took a back seat for a time while she raised a family and took to the study of various artistic avocations. Once her children were grown, her hunger for deep truth returned. This time it landed her with a Sufi teacher who introduced her to Non-duality. Eventually her searching ended. She and her family now live in Seattle where she maintains a studio for the study and practice of painting and tea. Her website is here.
As it happened (and unbeknownst to us until later), our
chosen retreat dates coincided with the auspicious
Vesak or Buddha Day, the holy Full Moon day commemorating
the birth, enlightenment and death of Gautama Buddha, but (perhaps fittingly)
this fact was nowhere in mind when we gathered outside one night to marvel at
the beauty of the full moon. I was requested
to make a record of our weekend together, but how to describe what went on?
Description can be a tricky matter, the topic of which we debated on at
one point during our stay. What are we trying to describe, ultimately? And who is
it that’s doing the describing? If you’ve been schooled that The Absolute (to
use a few descriptive words) is absolutely indescribable, then it follows that
any description of it is Not It.
Once the rabbit chasing was over the business of spending time together, diving, exploring and steeping in the stillness of Presence-Awareness flowed once again, quenching that most ultimate of thirsts. It’s a blessing—truly—to do this sort of thing in a group. Spending time with others, sinking deeply in the true nature of reality, somehow opens the floodgates, and doing it with a group of friends, particularly this group of friends, amplified it even more.
And what did we ‘do’ exactly? Well, after beginning the retreat with some welcome laughter from this video on exactly that topic, the day’s activities unfolded with little effort. Lately the group has been digging into Rupert Spira’s teachings, so we spent considerable time watching videos and listening to audio recordings, stopping often to share and discuss the implications and findings. There were guided meditations, too (a’la Spira), which served to further solidify and embody the teachings. But while the videos, audios and discussions were all an important part of the unfolding, there was something deeper going on, and here is where descriptive words will surely fail. A little help from Longchenpa might be useful:
By Bev Byrnes
[Dear friend and a natural Artist, Bev Byrnes is soft spoken and pleasant to be with. She wears an infectious smile ever on her lips. She was born in Ohio and had a typical American upbringing, including Sunday school. She was still at that innocent age of 14, when an accident took away her elder brother. A shock it was to the young mind. Grieving apart, the unexpected event led her to a deep search for truth. She even undertook several philosophy courses during her Collegiate studies and investigated into all manner of religious and spiritual ideologies. She felt an inner sense of connection to a certain ‘knowingness.’ As she grew older the inner knowing gained strength and she came to rely more on a sense of resonance and less on intellectual pursuit. Spiritual searching took a back seat for a time while she raised a family and took to the study of various artistic avocations. Once her children were grown, her hunger for deep truth returned. This time it landed her with a Sufi teacher who introduced her to Non-duality. Eventually her searching ended. She and her family now live in Seattle where she maintains a studio for the study and practice of painting and tea. Her website is here.
I am deeply indebted to Bev for readily
agreeing to prepare this write up for posting at our Blog -- ramesam.]
A Taste of Oneness – A Weekend In Togetherness on Lopez Island
By Bev Byrnes
A Taste of Oneness – A Weekend In Togetherness on Lopez Island
By Bev Byrnes
*** Take 7 friends, all well-ripened in Non-duality.
Place in a quiet home by the sea for three days. Add perfect weather and good
food. Mix in liberal amounts of video and audio clips by a favorite teacher along
with lively discussion, spontaneous periods of silence and a few outdoor nature
walks (spice it up with a handful of deer and one tenacious mink). Warm for a
time under a full moon while stirring in good conversation, great music and a
hefty dose of tear-filled laughter. Steep extensively in the deep, knowing
stillness of Presence-Awareness. ***
There were few expectations when I left for our little group
retreat. Though we’d managed to cobble together a loose agenda it was really
just a back-up plan, in case the hope that things would unfold in the moment
backfired and we all ended up staring at each other, wondering what to do. But
as we departed the ferry, SFAITH, and made our way to the house, the reality of “island
time” made its presence known; a place where going-with-the-flow is a palpable side
effect, it seems, of just breathing the air.
For the past year now I’ve been meeting with a small group
of friends who share a mutual interest in Non-duality. Though I happen to be the
newest member, the group has been meeting almost weekly for many years now. We
all speak ‘fluent Non-duality’, having read innumerable books together with
countless hours of discussion on the topic. There is no designated teacher
among us, a fact that is valued and even guarded by the members. We come as we
are, speak from what we know (and don’t know) in this particular moment, and
learn and grow in a heart-centered and equanimous environment.
No ego dominates
the conversation, everyone participates from an awareness of flow that
transcends individual agenda. As Martha Stewart would say, it’s a good thing.
Once in a while the members gather for a weekend together, a chance to spend an extended time focused on contemplating
"This." A few weeks ago we gathered at a friend’s house on Lopez Island,
in the beautiful San Juan Archipelago of Washington State.
Buddha Purnima, May 2015 |
But I won’t go into that. Arguments and discussions abound
across the interwebs. It’s an exhaustive and exhausting debate. The curious
will not be stopped in their seeking. But the debate did one thing, for sure.
It revealed itself as yet more seeking, subtly (or maybe not so subtly)
disguised as key knowledge held as somehow crucial for realizing one’s true
nature.
Silly rabbit.
Once the rabbit chasing was over the business of spending time together, diving, exploring and steeping in the stillness of Presence-Awareness flowed once again, quenching that most ultimate of thirsts. It’s a blessing—truly—to do this sort of thing in a group. Spending time with others, sinking deeply in the true nature of reality, somehow opens the floodgates, and doing it with a group of friends, particularly this group of friends, amplified it even more.
And what did we ‘do’ exactly? Well, after beginning the retreat with some welcome laughter from this video on exactly that topic, the day’s activities unfolded with little effort. Lately the group has been digging into Rupert Spira’s teachings, so we spent considerable time watching videos and listening to audio recordings, stopping often to share and discuss the implications and findings. There were guided meditations, too (a’la Spira), which served to further solidify and embody the teachings. But while the videos, audios and discussions were all an important part of the unfolding, there was something deeper going on, and here is where descriptive words will surely fail. A little help from Longchenpa might be useful:
“Even if you intellectually understand what things are in
themselves, if they linger on as objects of inspection there is no benefit in
such understanding. In order to acquaint your intellect with what intrinsically
matters, you must go into the wild wood of inner calm.” – Longchenpa
It was just this wild wood of inner calm that quietly grew
and forested in between discussions and meditations, imperceptibly taking root
in the most unassuming and mundane of places and circumstances…seamlessly settling over
the dining table, stretching out across the water, padding the quiet footsteps
of early morning and late-to-bed. Even at times of laughter and fun it was
there, like the immense, imperturbable stillness of the ocean, present not just
beneath but within the lively waves and froth. There was no need, indeed not
even an attempt, to try to feel it or make oneself aware of it. But there was a
noticing of it; a precognitive, instinctual noticing. Even ‘noticing’ is too
strong a word, too doing-related. It was more simply the presence of Awareness
itself.
One morning I found myself awake in the early dawn. The
horizon was just beginning to lighten and so I made my way down to the rocky,
driftwood-strewn shore. As I sat watching the sky and water a furry, sleek brown
mink made its way toward me, ducking in and out of the pockets of driftwood.
It seems I had placed myself right in the path of its daily dawn patrol. My
presence, rather than being something fearful, was merely a bother, an obstacle
in its way. Its single-minded tenacity would not be shaken. Our meeting brought
to mind a favorite short story by Annie Dillard. In it she writes about a
chance encounter with a weasel and muses about living wild:
“I could very calmly
go wild… where the mind is single. Down is out, out of your ever-loving mind
and back to your careless senses... Time and events are merely poured,
unremarked, and ingested directly, like blood pulsed into my gut through a
jugular vein.” (excerpted from “Living
Like Weasels” in “Teaching a Stone to Talk”).
This wild wood of inner calm, the immense oceanic stillness
of awareness itself, is similarly gut-ingested and irreducibly integral. It flows
and lives as the very stuff of life itself. There is no ‘doing’ or ‘locating’
it. The mental activity of pinning it down and describing it is merely an
obstacle in the path – nothing to bother too much with and ultimately
undeterring to That Which Is. There is no space or place It is not, yet Its nowhere to be found. It’s the mink, the seer, the chilly dawn patrol, so
perfectly everywhere, in everything, It goes mostly completely unnoticed. But
there it was this weekend, in the company of dear friends... there in the midst
of seeking, in the bleary-eyed shuffle for morning coffee, in the tear-streaked
giddiness of uncontrolled laughter… the always-present, utter-allness of This,
in which all of life moves and breathes and has its very being.