Images of the November YA Retreat

This past weekend, the retreat house at the BMCM headquarters in Northern California was full of YAs gathered together to practice and learn about passage meditation. This retreat was especially remarkable with over half of the participants being newcomers to passage meditation!

The weekend was full of both light-hearted and deep conversations, and with a schedule intentionally set to put meditation at the forefront of everyone's mind – in short, it was a great time.

We had beautiful weather as well! California sunshine graced us on our beach walk, and much-needed rain fell on Sunday leading some YAs to cozy up under blankets during the workshops.

We hope you enjoy these photos from the November YA Retreat!

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A Passage for November

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This month we chose a passage by Seng Ts’an, who is honored as the Third Patriarch of Ch’an Buddhism, a doctrine which focuses on the practice of meditation as a means to attaining enlightenment. Many of the high ideals we strive for by practicing passage meditation are reflected in this passage, particularly sense training as a means of overcoming selfish desire.

This passage also incorporates both Buddhist and Taoist concepts, making it an early example of Zen writings. Two Taoist phrases appear in this passage, the “great Way” and the “ten thousand things.” The former expresses the eternal order of the universe and the latter, the fleeting material world.

We invite you to add to your passage repertoire this month by memorizing or refreshing Believing in Mind. And as always, we love to hear from you, so please share in the comments which high ideals you feel this passage inspires.


Believing in Mind – Seng Ts’an

The great Way has no impediments;
It does not pick and choose.
When you abandon attachment and aversion
You see it plainly.
Make a thousandth of an inch distinction,
Heaven and earth swing apart.
If you want it to appear before your eyes,
Cherish neither for nor against.

To compare what you like with what you dislike,
That is the disease of the mind.
You pass over hidden meaning;
Peace of mind is needlessly troubled.

It is round and perfect like vast space,
Lacks nothing, never overflows.
Only because we take and reject
Do we lose the means to know its Suchness.

Don’t get tangled in outward desire
Or get caught within yourself.
Once you plant deep the long for peace
Confusion leaves of itself.

Return to the root and find meaning;
Follow sense objects, you lose the goal.
Just one instant of inner enlightenment
Will take you far beyond the emptiness of the world.

Selfish attachment forgets all limits;
It always leads down evil roads.
When you let go of it, things happen of themselves;
The substance neither goes nor abides.

If the eye does not sleep
All dreams will naturally stop.
If the mind does not differentiate
All things are of one Suchness.

When you fathom the realm of Suchness
You instantly forget all selfish desire.
Having seen ten thousand things as one
You return to your natural state.

Without meditation
Consciousness and feeling are hard to grasp.
In the realm of Suchness

There is neither self nor other.

In the one, there is the all.
In the all, there is the one.
If you know this,
You will never worry about being incomplete.

If belief and mind are made the same
And there is no division between belief and mind
The road of words comes to an end,
Beyond the present and future.

Easwaran on the Benefits of Meditation

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At the end of this month, on Saturday, October 31st, the BMCM will be holding a free one-hour webinar, “Learn to meditate.” This is the first BMCM webinar which will be held at a time which works for our friends in the Pacific region (as well as any YAs who don’t wake up early) so we hope you’ll sign up: www.easwaran.org/webinar.

In honor of the “Learn to meditate” theme of the upcoming webinar, we’re sharing two audio clips from a published collection of talks by Eknath Easwaran titled “Meditation: A Complete Audio Guide.” What we like about this collection is Easwaran’s practical approach to the basics of meditation, covering everything from the lofty reasons that can draw a person to meditation, to the everyday concerns of time, place, and posture.

Today we’re sharing two excerpts that focus on the benefits of meditation. In the first excerpt, “Introduction,” Easwaran talks about one of our favorite topics – meditation as the greatest and most compelling adventure of our lives. Next, in the aptly named second excerpt, “The Benefits of Meditation,” Easwaran details how meditation positively impacts our daily lives.

We’d love to hear your thoughts on these excerpts – share them in the comments below. We hope you’ll join us for the webinar!