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Guided Meditation on Beauty

10/6/2024

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Following on from my recent explorations on what it means to have 'a practice of beauty', (On Beauty and How to Find Beauty) here is a short (under 15 minutes) guided meditative reflection on connecting to the beautiful. I hope you enjoy it! xx
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How To Find Beauty

4/6/2024

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I recently reflected on and described myself as having a 'practice of beauty'. Further to that, I began planning to share a short guided meditation but it seems I accidentally wrote a poem instead. Of course, you could use it as a meditation, just like any poem, really. I still plan to record and share a short guided meditation on beauty, but I haven't done it yet.

​Here's the poem in the meantime...

​How To Find Beauty

​
If you would seek beauty,
First, you must
If at all possible
Take yourself to a place
Where you can see
The natural world
Unfolding.
A park would do,
At a push.
A woodland
Maybe better.
Or if you are in a city street
Simply become aware of weeds.
A crack in any pavement,
Often lets life try.
Then, become embodied
(As much as you can)
Noticing the rise and fall
Of breath.
The rhythm of your steps,
Perhaps.
Sensations in your feet.
Or maybe just inhabit
For a time
The point at which
Your edges
Feel less true.
Open your eyes.
(the inner ones will do.)
And see what you can see
Even with your eyelids folded.
A flush of colour.
A play of light.
Fresh, new growth
Or a sparkle drop of rain.
The way a sun beam
Kisses you with warmth
And asks for nothing back.
Whatever it is,
Let it flood through you,
Wash you away
And forget everything
That is not beautiful.
This is how to seek for beauty.

But
When a passing car,
Unpleasant noise,
Unwelcome thought
Or rotten smell
Threatens to pillage
All that you have built
In your experience;
Rejoice.
It is really there you find her.
The spirit of beauty.
In taking her leave,
Oft betrays her presence.
Now you must
Attend to your grief
As if it were your only child.
And know you know
She still resides in you.

Pistyll Rhaeadr Waterfall
Rock Cranes Bill
Violets
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On Beauty

19/5/2024

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A little over six weeks ago, I shared a piece about my current meditation practice (or lack there of!) and some reflective rambles around the topic, asking questions about the nature of my meditation and Buddhist practice, though it would have been pretty foolish to try and answer those questions definitively. I've often thought you can really ruin a good question by trying to answer it. Thankfully, although I did reach some sort of transient conclusion for the sake of the post, the questions didn't stop once I'd published the page, so I thought it might be time for an update.
Having accepted that I was in a phase where I would "trust my meditation practice to my intuition", cultivating a relationship with awareness that is free, wild, honest and authentic, "a live news reel of paying attention in both painful and in pleasurable moments of daily life", I began to actively look for those moments and ask myself, what is my current daily practice? Where is my relationship with the Dharma, with the Divine? How and where do I meet and communicate with Ultimate Reality, this vast, miraculously evolving conciousness that is the Universe? And in terms of freedom and intuition, what am I inspired to do every day if its not engage with formal yoga or sitting meditation?

It was actually very easy to answer that last question; firstly, walking. It's a rare day when I don't get out for at least one walk. And it's unusual for me not to start the day by lighting the candles on my shrine, taking a moment to absorb the images, make an offering of incense, remind myself of my commitment to living a life of love and compassion. Keeping my shrine clean and cared for, with fresh flowers, is also important, an act of mindful devotion. And though both these things have an element of physical engagement, actually, on reflection I find they have a deeper commonality, which is in their capacity to gift me a connection to beauty.
Pennywort Flower
Pennywort Flower
Candied Violets on Cake
Candied Violets on Cupcakes
When my mind lit upon the word beauty, a deep, visceral gut and heart felt YES resonated through my being. That's my current practice. There it is. There, I have a practice. I have a practice of connecting with beauty. And it's not actually a new thing, I didn't learn it in a class or from a library book or a video on YouTube, it's been with me my whole life, as long as I can remember. When I'm walking, I'm connecting with beauty. Natural beauty in the micro and the macro; plants, animals, birds, rocks, water, breezes, the kiss of sunshine, songs of the stream, views of the wider landscape, the sight of a vista of clouds. Then there's time spent connecting to beauty in the garden. When I'm decorating and spending time with my shrine, I'm connecting with beauty. Chanting, for me, is an expression of beauty. When I'm reading or writing poems, I'm connecting with or expressing a vision of beauty. When I'm painting or crafting, I'm inspired by experiences of beauty. Even when I'm making and serving food, it's an act of love, what's that if it's not a connection with beauty?
I think it's important to be clear that when I use the term 'beauty' that's not to be confused with aesthetics. Sure, many of the things I've described have a clear and important aesthetic dimension, but in my experience, an aesthetic encounter, even at its fullest, is no more than a means to an end. It's a gateway, a portal to a more refined way of being in the world. Perhaps, I might even go so far as to render that aspect of my world view into a simple equation. Beauty = Love. And no, just as I don't mean 'aesthetics' when I say 'beauty', I don't mean 'romantic feelings of desire' when I say 'love'. I mean that place in the human psyche where the edges of 'self and other' begin to feel less solid and more diaphanous, the place in which empathy, generosity and humanity dig their roots. The condition where an act of kindness to a stranger, human or otherwise, is instinctive and unquestioned. I mean 'metta' as in the Pali word for loving kindness without self interest, not a sticky, clinging wish to own or possess. That, to me, equates to beauty.
Painted Glass
Painted Glass
Now, I've never been very good at remembering sources, which can make citation a bit tricky and therefore I can't really call this a quote, but these reflections put me in mind of a comment I once read by Sangharakshita, where he asserted that seeing something as beautiful requires you to be in a mettaful (or skilful) mental state. I then rembered someone once telling me a story that upon seeing a dead dog in the road, the Buddha had simply commented on what beautiful teeth it had. Research on finding the Sangharakshita quote turned a blank and it transpires that in trying to find the reference to the Buddha and the dead dog, the original story is actually about Jesus, but never mind, I think I've made my point.

​So, a daily practice of connecting with beauty might be seen as a daily practice of cultivating love. Well, that sounds great doesn't it, but what about the days when it doesn't look like that? What about the days when I don't get up and light the candles, when I don't go out for a walk because I'm actually feeling quite low, sad and bleak? Or what about the less extreme days when I'm walking, but when I see the dead pheasant in the road, I don't notice how beautiful her feathers are?


I don't think I'm the first person to suggest that our individual capacity to experience light and beauty proportionally matches our propensity to occasionally lose ourselves in experiences of dark and ugliness. The classic archetype of the troubled artist pretty much illustrates that point for me without dwelling on it too much. But I feel these experiences to be two sides of the same coin and it is precisely in my sometime disconnection from light and beauty that I am most pained by my darkest and ugliest hours. Thankfully, I can finally muster a reliable quote by referencing Christoper Marlowe in The Tragical History of Dr. Faustus (that's a version of the story about the guy who sells his soul to the devil) where Faustus (the guy) is asking a pertinent question about damnation of Mephistopholes (the devil):
Leylandii in the Sun
Leylandii in Sunlight
Flames
The Flames of Transformation
FAUSTUS. Where are you damn’d?
MEPHIST. In hell.
FAUSTUS. How comes it, then, that thou art out of hell?
MEPHIST. Why, this is hell, nor am I out of it:
Think’st thou that I, who saw the face of God,
And tasted the eternal joys of heaven,
Am not tormented with ten thousand hells,
In being depriv’d of everlasting bliss?

​I couldn't put it better. When you've had a meaningful experience of connection to beauty (and I don't believe theres anyone alive who doesn't have that capacity) then the failure or absence of that connection can be deeply distressing. So those days are the exceptions that prove my rule. My spiritual practice is rooted in my conscious connection with beauty. 

​It wasn't a great leap then, to begin asking myself; how do I 'sell my soul'? What stops me connecting with beauty? Where do I trade in my awareness of beauty or connection with love for a quick fix of something else? Do I sell my soul to my To Do List? Do I trade in my connection with the Divine in pandering to the devil of not believing myself worthy of it unless I carry out certain tasks? I'm back to that other equation I outlined in my last post on why I don't meditate; "If I carry out (X) behaviour then (Y) = I'm an acceptable human being." Do I barter my soul with the demon of believing the whole edifice of life might collapse if I don't work so hard I never even take time to appreciate the life I'm trying to make space for? 


I also stated in my last ramble on meditation that "it's a radical thing to sit and do nothing (no, not even meditate) in our current social context of constant productivity and exponential economic growth. It's quite a thing to say 'I'm not doing', to sit and just be." Rest is Radical. Doing Nothing is a revolutionary act. 

Avalokiteshvara Shrine
Shrine to Avalokiteshvara with Hellebore
Wabi Sabi
Wabi Sabi Rusty

But actually, how I spend my time isn't as important as how I bring my mind to whatever I'm doing. If I clean my house as if its a chore on my to do list that I must complete before I can rest and connect with beauty; well that's selling the soul of my happiness in an impossible transaction. But if I clean my house as an act of love and gratitude for the space and for the other beings I share it with, if I clean my house as if I'm dressing a great, big, live in shrine to beauty of every kind; well, that's a practice of connection. And in the connection, the sharing is such an important part of appreciating beauty. I can enjoy it alone, but stopping on a walk to communicate my observations of beauty takes it to another level of joy. 

Now, I dont want to give the impression that one side of the coin I've described is 'good' and one side is 'bad'. One side is enjoyable and connecting and pleasurable and progressive and the other side requires a little more work, for sure, but I belive they both have their place. The Japanese concept of wabi sabi is a good example of this by promoting a world view, often turned to design principle, which values and sees as beautiful the truth of imperfection and impermanance. 
​


​So my direct experience of beauty is a delight but it is transient, my capacity to stay in a mettaful state is imperfect, but there's something equally as beautiful about that if I choose to see it as such. Something bittersweet about loss and sadness that underpins, far from undermines the experience of beauty and love in the first instance. 

This whole, vast, beautiful and amazing universe is fleeting and insubstantial. My experience within it no different. Perhaps the best response I can make to that is simply in mindful appreciation, in training my strange, contradictory little chunk of mind, no less a part of it, to really witness it's beauty in as much breadth as possible, as often as possible, acknowledging my part in it but not over investing importance when my experience is of separation, noticing instead the moments of sharing and connection, living into those with every breath and learning to find wonder, beauty and love in an increasing wealth of places. 


Tulip and Dew
Tulip and Dew
And on that note, there's no better way to conclude than with two poems, one written by myself, one an anonymous but well known Navajo prayer. It is finished in beauty.

Tanat Tributary
River Tanat Tributary
A Busy Spring in the Tanat Valley

Fresh meadowsweet, 
The swallow's flight, 
Unfurling fern, 
In morning light.

First apple blossom
Though leaves are few,
Trickling stream
And drops of dew.

Gentle sun,
Through misty haze,
Then clear blue sky
To warm the days.

Forget me not,
The bluebells ring,
As stitchwort weaves, 
The feathered ones sing. 

Hawthorn froths
In bush and hedge
Great oaks bud
And blackbirds fledge.

Please let not
My To Do List
Be so obeyed
All this is missed. 

A Navajo Prayer

In beauty may I walk
All day long may I walk
Through the returning seasons may I walk
Beautifully will I possess again
Beautifully birds,
Beautifully joyful birds
On the trail marked with pollen may I walk
With grasshoppers about my feet may I walk
With dew about my feet may I walk
With beauty may I walk
With beauty before me may I walk
With beauty behind me may I walk
With beauty above me may I walk
With beauty all around me may I walk
In old age, wandering on a trail of beauty, lively, may I walk
In old age, wandering on a trail of beauty, living again, may I walk
It is finished in beauty.
It is finished in beauty.
Fresh Grasses
Morning Grasses

Stones and Roots
Beach Pebbles and Washed up Roots
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Five Minute Breather

9/5/2024

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Last weekend I went along to the Shrewsbury Buddhist Centre open day to catch up with a few friends and help out with leading some beginners meditation. I always enjoy leading meditation, especially for beginners; it's amazing how focused I can actually become when I'm leading, even when I'm keeping an eye on the clock! Having the opportunity to do things for others can be so much more motivating than doing things in isolation. As you might expect, beginners meditations tend to be a bit shorter than those aimed at more experienced practitioners but they can be just as effective and still very transformational.
When I was first learning how to weave meditation and other aspects of Buddhist practice in to my daily life, I encountered the concept of taking mini meditative breaks, which can be very helpful if you're struggling to work out how to make time in your day for longer meditation practices. I've been falling back on these quite a bit through my recent move away from the structured routine of Buddhist community life (you can read more about how my practice has changed in recent months here) and as meditation is one of the things we're planning to use the Earth Heart space for, it seemed appropriate to share one here.

It is literally five minutes. you can listen to it to bring a little mindfulness to the start of your day, as a focusing or re-calibrating tool in your lunch break (I used to do them in the loo when I was working in a busy seaside pub!) or help you wind down in the evening. Find yourself a comfy spot where you're unlikely to be disturbed and join me in taking a five minute breather! I hope you find it helpful! xx
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Meditation

4/4/2024

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I once gave a talk called "Why I Meditate."  I'm tempted to title this "Why I don't Meditate". But it's not as straightforward as that. 
When I first launched this project, I very deliberately stated that amongst other things it would be a space to reflect on my meditation practice with the clear intention of holding myself accountable for actually meditating. After six years, I recently left the residential community of Taraloka Buddhist Retreat Centre, where the daily structure presupposes a 45 minute shared meditation session at seven every (OK, nearly every) morning. I'm not sure how many times during my six month leaving process I said something like "I can't wait to find out what my practice looks like when it's not dictated by the community timetable!" and I certainly never imagined that I would maintain that particular 'first thing' routine, but I never once said "Phew, I'll never have to meditate again come January!" So this article is by way of a lengthy ramble around what my meditation practice looks like when I'm not choosing to fit it into a pre-existing routine. At least, it's what it's looking like at the moment and I know very well that moments are vague, shifting benchmarks... Anyway, this is a bit more complicated than a vaguely photographic excuse for a recipe and has required significantly more consideration. It's also a longer read, grab a cuppa... 
Avalokiteshvera Shrine
First, maybe I'll catch you up on a bit of historical context. I learnt to meditate a tickle over nine years ago, in March 2015, when I was signed off sick from and about to leave arts teaching. I was anxious, unhappy and unwell. I actually went to a drop in class intending to prove to a friend that meditation wouldn't help me without looking too closed minded to try. Well, that kinda backfired and just a few weeks later, not only had I learned meditation could indeed help me, I'd found it could completely transform my life and subsequently realised I was a Buddhist. Being an 'all or nothing' kind of person with a taste for intensity, I promptly spent six months in India living in a Buddhist community and teaching some very oppressed and abused young people before returning to the UK, requesting ordination and deciding to live in the middle of nowhere (rural Shropshire) to be on a team of women running a retreat centre. Oh yeah. That's why I decided it was time for a rest. (Did the kettle boil yet!?) 

So, you may well wonder, how did all that happen? How did all that unfold from the simple act of walking into a drop in meditation class one grey Wednesday lunchtime in Manchester? Did I have a third-eye opening experience of transcendent bliss on the spot? Hell, no. The only thing I honestly remember about that first session is that I spent most of my time alternating between wondering why I was there and what I was going to do when the class finished. Also that my legs were aching from too much running. Actually that was almost certainly the longest I'd sat down all week. If you want a more detailed back story, I gave this aforementioned talk (Why I Meditate) a little while back but basically I realised I really needed to stop. I wasn't sure what it was exactly that I needed to stop but I knew I had to stop it and I knew I had to do something different. Slowly but surely, regular, short meditation helped me create a small but significant window of time between one thought and the next where I could notice the constant inner monologue of anxiety but choose not to be defined by it. I learned that from these spaces I could choose to open more to others. I started to feel more connected to the world around me, less fearful and less alienated. I even began to heal my very fractured relationship with my own body by finally consenting to investigate what it really felt like to have one. For the first time in my adult life I bothered to explore what it feels like to have toes.
Green Tara Shrine

​So yes, the results of meditation were undeniably extremely valuable to me and though it was slow work in some respects, I very quickly began to enjoy the fruits of my labour. That is to say, it's not often that I especially enjoy the actual meditation. Sure, I've had some very pleasurable meditation experiences but mostly it's been at least fairly challenging if not down right hard work. There have been times it was all I could do to stay on my cushion for the sheer intensity of all the experience I'd spent most of my life studiously ignoring via a range of entirely socially acceptable ways of being completely and permanently distracted. And I like intensity! But this was no more enjoyable than 15 miles of marathon training on a treadmill. Yes. I have. That was one of distraction techniques. But exactly like fitness training, you don't do it for the work out, you do it for the effects of the work out. I never meditated because half an hour of trauma processing and flooding myself with years (and tears) of built up grief was pleasant. I meditated because the rest of my life around the meditation was far less unpleasant than when I didn't. 
Ah yes. Stored trauma. Body work (I'm talking yoga, Tai Chi, other somatic practices) have also played an essential part of the story to the extent that I can't easily separate my formal sitting meditation experiences from those I often meet during yoga practice anymore. And that these apparently physical practices have a therapeutic effect on the mind is no longer the sole assertion of the new age hippy or the martial artist, it's backed up by medical doctors and trauma specialist psychologists who are extremely well respected in their fields. (Gabor Maté, Bessel van der Kolk and Pete Walker are some of my favourites) 

But before we lose ourselves in the secular and psychological, let's come back to basics... What really is Meditation and have I been doing it? Simple questions often belie complex answers but I'll have a bash at the first bit. Meditation can be thought of as:
    A.) A tool for cultivating awareness,
    B.) An exercise for developing compassion, 
    C.) A method for becoming fully embodied (hmm, that might actually just be A. Or is it B? Maybe it's both, never mind…)
    D.) And, because I'm a Buddhist, I do believe it's an essential factor on the path to awakening. (Oh wait, that sounds like A as well. Or B? Hmm... This tangent might have to be explored in a separate, future post...) 
The second bit is less complex; have I been doing it? Er, no. Not really... Hang on. It's just not as straightforward as that. 

OK, well, let's unpick this and look at the first bit again. What is Meditation? Sometimes I have found it helpful to think of meditation as a kind of gym for the mind. I train my mind in meditation to focus and become aware; I get a more user friendly mind the rest of the time. And that's fine, as far as it goes in a secular, psychological kind of way. But it doesn't for a second do justice to the rich subtlety of consciousness that you can begin to access in meditative states and you may have gathered that my relationship to the gym hasn't always been healthy or helpful. Neither has it often been mindful or kindly.  

So, some of my work of late has been in cultivating awareness of the all those same old subconscious yet unhelpful behaviour patterns trying to crystallise around my reasons to meditate and turn it into a bargaining chip in a transactional equation. If I carry out (X) behaviour then (Y) = I'm an acceptable human being. Y is pretty constant. X has variously manifested as academic success, fulfilment of socially normal activities, demonstration of creative skill, physical fitness, a particular sort of body shape, etc. The list is practically endless. To break that loop, I'm back to making the space to notice (awareness) that story telling itself somewhere in the depths of my mind but refusing to fuel it (I think that's the compassion bit kicking in). To me, meditation is about being creative, experimenting, doing something differently. It's about taking responsibility for myself, looking at the actual effect certain acts of body, speech and mind have on myself and those around me and making choices. What habits am I reinforcing? Are those habits helping me awaken? Are they even helping me live a happy, healthy life? And if the answer is 'no', then what? We all know old habits run deep and stubborn. 

​One of my friends and teachers sometimes uses the wonderful analogy of the bendy drinking straw; it's pretty tricky to straighten a drinking straw from being bent in one direction without bending it into the opposite direction first. It's like a pendulum. To stop engaging in a behaviour, sometimes it's helpful to tactically take the opposite approach for a time. Having noticed my relationship with formal, disciplined sitting meditation leaning towards the formulaic and transactional. I'm now experimenting with letting it be totally OK to not meditate at all. Full stop. Ever again. I'm not meditating. And having completely identified over the last nine years with Being a Meditator, that's a scary business, especially now I've stated it publicly. But I've got to move away from the tick-box-to-do-list approach to meditation, because I think if that's how I'm approaching it, it might not really even be meditation anyway. Maybe that's a sweeping statement. Maybe it's just not being the meditation it has the potential to be. 


Shrine Space
When I was in the process of leaving Taraloka, I could feel that my relationship with meditation had become pretty routine, that I was often sitting because 'I should', because I didn't want to appear to have checked out of community life too soon. But I was, and still am determined to allow a new, dynamic, potentially unstructured, living, breathing relationship to evolve. It's often been my experience that one must totally let go of one thing before a new one can arise. Of course, I'm still hugely benefitting from my years of formal practice and I have no intention of allowing myself to lose that or to back-slide but I've learned that meditation is cyclical and just like I know in my bones I'm a poet without having had to write a poem before breakfast, I am beginning to believe that I can trust my meditation practice to my intuition. I can work with my mind. It doesn't have to look a certain way. 

If working with my mind doesn't currently look like meditation, what does it look like? I'm not sure that any meditative experience can be easily described, defined or pinned down but it's certainly not transactional and my sense of being an acceptable human being definitely doesn't depend on it. It's 
much more subtle than that. It's free, it's wild, it's remembering to notice my experience in any moment, not 'doing my 45 minutes' then checking out. It's dropping into my body, my raw, current, felt what-is-actually-going-on-ness, in mundane moments. It's an honesty, an authenticity, a live news reel of paying attention in both painful and in pleasurable moments of daily life and holding myself responsible for some of that. It's requesting a conversation with the fullest breadth of this human experience I can manage and choosing to listen more than I speak. It's weaving with aspects of disciplined practice such as breath and compassion but not being limited by count-to-ten structure. It's suddenly realising at three o'clock in the afternoon that I really, really want to light the candles on my shrine now and rushing off to do so. Sometimes it's yoga and often it's chanting and maybe it's just sitting with my shrine, being slightly more in relationship with the OK-ness of not knowing. Content to simply be in this vast mystery of the universe. 

Years ago in the ‘Why I Meditate’ talk, I stated and still believe that it's a radical thing to sit and do nothing (no, not even meditate) in our current social context of constant productivity and exponential economic growth. It's quite a thing to say 'I'm not doing', to sit (or stand, or lie, or walk, or dance, etc.) and just be. 

So, whatever my current meditation practice is, or isn't, it's not regular, formal or disciplined. It would hugely undermine nearly a decade (eek!) of meditation experience to say despite saying all that I think I'm the closest I've ever got to actually meditating, but if I stop listening to all the little voices that like to tell me 'I'm not doing it right' I know full well it's a very significant and powerful development in my relationship with a consciousness that doesn't start with, end in or limit itself to what we normally call meditation. And I'm pretty happy with that. 
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