Thoughts on Retreats

I have just returned from a twenty-four hour retreat. I went to Willow Pond Retreat House in Oakland City, Indiana. It is a small “kuti” ; however, small is not really needed to describe kuti. Kuti is the Pali word for meditation hut. This house is much more that a hut. Bathroom with a shower, kitchen facilities and bed/couch. The kuti is located on the pond with the sound of a waterfall outside the door. Breakfast food is included for the daily rent of $45. I love this place. (1-812-782-3775)

This is not an advertisement for Willow Pond. It is encouragement to do retreat. It can be 24 hours or five days or fourteen days or six hours. The purpose is to have an environment that supports your meditation practice. Monastics have such an environment which is one reason they choose to become a monastic. Our minds respond to stimuli of the senses. A quiet place removes that first layer of mental noise.

Nature, like the arts, points to the spiritual. So if you are doing a retreat day at home (with the phone off) take time to walk outside. Similarly if you come Sunday for the monthly extended sitting choose to do walking meditation out-of-doors.

I have been discussing personal retreats but group retreats are important too. They provide a teacher and the strength and power of a group. We learn from each other which is why the sangha is one of the Three Jewels. At a group retreat the agenda for each day is planned. On a personal retreat you can be lead by your own mental and physical needs. Our sangha is sponsoring a group retreat this June.

—– Mary MacGregor   Evansville IN

Vipassana defined

    Many in our
sangha follow the Theravada tradition which practices vipassana (or insight
meditation
.)  I recently read a helpful article by Buddhist scholar Reginald Ray in which he
defines the word vipassana.


Ray states that the word has two parts:  Passana, which indicates seeing and Vi, which when used as a prefex adds the meaning of extraordinary. Thus vipassana
means “seeing in an extraordinary way.”  It means to see things as they
truly are – without making things/life the way we want them to be. Just clear
awareness of Reality.

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History of the Sangha

The Sangha was established by Mary MacGregor. She began to have an interest in Buddhism after reading a book by Jack Kornfield in 1994. Mary then attended a retreat at the Insight Mediation Center in Barre, Mass., which led her to return to Evansville and begin offering silent meditation days once a month. Feeling that this was not enough practice, Mary began inviting people with similar interest to mediate weekly at her office. Later she traveled to France to attend a three-week retreat at Thich Nhat Hanh’s center in Plum Village and embarked on extensive individual study.

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History

The Sangha was established by Mary MacGregor. She began to have an interest
in Buddhism after reading a book by
Jack Kornfield in
1994. Mary then attended a retreat at the
Insight Mediation Center
in Barre, Mass., which led her to return to
Evansville and begin offering silent meditation days once a month. Feeling that
this was not enough practice, Mary began inviting people with similar interest
to mediate weekly at her office. Later she traveled to France to attend a
three-week retreat at
Thich Nhat Hanh
‘s center in Plum
Village
and embarked on extensive individual study.

Continue reading »