"When you see ordinary situations with extraordinary insight,
it is like discovering a jewel in rubbish."
-- Chogyam Trungpa,
"Work", The Myth of Freedom and the Way of Meditation
“So if you do something, you should be observant, and careful, and alert.”
―Shunryu Suzuki, Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind
I have been involved with Community Yoga and Wellness Center here in Greenfield, a small town in western Massachusetts, for about four years now.
I had decided that I wanted to reclaim a hatha yoga practice as part of my rehab from a cardiac procedure back then, and was attending my first class at a series offered by the local food coop when the teacher that day, Jenny Chapin, announced at the end of class that she was looking for a someone to exchange custodial duties for yoga classes at the studio she owned and directed.
―Shunryu Suzuki, Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind
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The Studio at Community Yoga |
I had decided that I wanted to reclaim a hatha yoga practice as part of my rehab from a cardiac procedure back then, and was attending my first class at a series offered by the local food coop when the teacher that day, Jenny Chapin, announced at the end of class that she was looking for a someone to exchange custodial duties for yoga classes at the studio she owned and directed.
"Wow!", I thought. Now retired, with much more time than money, looking to regain a serious practice, I was on my feet and headed in her direction immediately. The brief discussion with Jenny was quite positive. I started the next day.
Although a lot of changes have occurred, (I now coordinate a team of barter students to cover the rent for Monday Morning Mindfulness there), today I found myself again dancing with a mop, observing an entryway landing marred with mud, melted snow, sand and salt steadily disappear, to then return to view reincarnated as a gleaming hardwood floor. Due to transitions in the Caretaking Crew and a particularly snowy winter, it was the third time this week that I had the opportunity to personally participate in this form of ritual magic.
I'm not chomping at the bit to find a replacement.
Gold Is Not All That Glitters
I'm not chomping at the bit to find a replacement.
Gold Is Not All That Glitters
Years ago, I was quite struck by a suggestion in Ram Dass's classic, Be Here Now. In the final section of the book, "Cookbook for a Sacred Life", he suggested that you take a regular mundane activity that you really disliked and turn it into a form of active meditation. I chose washing the dishes -- and immediately headed out to the kitchen to face the unsightly stack that had emerged over the course of the past few days. (I really hated washing dishes. LOL)
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