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Reading Study

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Building the Will – How Can Meditation Help?

Thanks to all of you for sharing your introductions and joining as you can in our “bring a weeklong retreat home” theme. Your reflections are always inspiring because they are a testament to how Easwaran speaks to each of us differently and in just the way we need. This week, we’ll revisit Easwaran’s teachings about how our meditation practice helps build our will.

Also, you might like to meditate with others this week as another way to bring the retreat home. Perhaps you have an in-person satsang to facilitate this, or another place to meditate with others.

As an optional alternative, you might try joining us for a virtual meditation next Saturday morning at 6:30 a.m. San Francisco time. This is the same time of day that you would meditate in the morning if you were in Tomales, at the retreat house.

This week, we’ll continue our reading study in which Easwaran discusses the role that our practice of passage meditation plays in building the will. Please feel free to share particular lines or sections from the reading that stand out to you, and tell us how they might apply to your own life. We’d love to hear from you!

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Bring a BMCM Weeklong Retreat Home

We are thrilled to invite you to explore the idea of how you might “bring a retreat” to wherever you are in the world. We know that some of you have recently attended a BMCM retreat in Tomales, California, others may have come to a Tomales retreat long ago, and many of you may not yet have had the opportunity to attend a retreat in person.

Easwaran felt that our BMCM retreats here in Tomales are essential to his students and to the world. Here are his words when he inaugurated our retreat house in 1994:

“Come here often, as often as you can. Renew your commitment. Come together to support each other and rededicate your lives to this supreme ambition. This is a waystation on your pilgrimage. This is your second home.”

With this in mind, over the next two months we’ll offer a taste of the retreat experience by focusing on this year’s weeklong retreat theme and providing suggestions so you can experience elements of this retreat from wherever you are.

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Join Us for a Live Online Workshop!

We’d like to share one last reminder with you about our online workshop tomorrow: Saturday, June 23 at 2:00p.m. –3:15p.m. San Francisco time. We look forward to enjoying the satsang with you! Even if you’re not able to watch the workshop live, if you register now we’ll send you the recording afterwards.

Can you identify some ways in which you currently enjoy fellowship with other spiritual aspirants? Is there another time during your week that might offer an opportunity for satsang? Think of a small experiment you’d like to try for this purpose.

We’d really love to hear your ideas for cultivating satsang opportunities this coming week! Next week, we’ll ask you to share any results you experienced. Your comments will inspire others, so consider sharing as a way of putting your eSatsang friends first!

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Sharing Your Life With Everyone Around You

We warmly invite you to join us for an online workshop on Saturday, June 23 at 2:00p.m. – 3:15 p.m. San Francisco time. This is a 75-minute workshop on the theme of Spiritual Fellowship. Many members of our eSatsang will be taking part, so it’s a chance for some real-time satsang! n the excerpt below, Easwaran looks at how all eight points can come into play when we are with other people – both passage meditators, and also family and friends who may not practice passage meditation.

What are some of the ways that Easwaran applies the eight points to satsang, which you find surprising? Is there anything in the reading that resonates with your personal experience? We’d love to hear your comments and reflections about how interacting with others impacts your spiritual practice in positive ways.

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One of the Great Blessings of This Earth

Would you like to meditate with others this month? If so, get an extra boost with this month’s theme of Spiritual Fellowship, and join our passage meditation community for a virtual meditation on Saturday mornings at 6:30 a.m. San Francisco time. We use Zoom software which allows us to videoconference with each other. In the reading that follows, Easwaran shares how important rich personal relationships are for everyone – and in fact they “constitute one of the great blessings of this earth.” He also reminds us of the important role that relationships have in helping us train ourselves to become more selfless in daily life. Do you have examples of how you can see this blessing in your daily life? We’d love to hear about how your relationships are helping you whittle away your self-will.

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Satsang According to Easwaran

A little over a year ago, we launched the current interactive format for the eSatsang. It’s enabled us to communicate with each other more directly and in a timely manner on Easwaran’s teachings. As a one-year celebration, we’d like to re-visit the seventh point in the eight-point program: Spiritual Fellowship!

Throughout this month, we’ll look at how Easwaran encourages us to seek spiritual fellowship, or satsang, in different ways in our daily lives. We’ll explore this topic through a reading study of Chapter Seven in Easwaran’s book, Passage Meditation.

This month’s theme will culminate with the next Returnee Online Workshop on Saturday, June 23, at 2:00p.m. – 3:15 p.m. San Francisco Time. Many members of the eSatsang will be taking part, so it’s a chance for some real-time satsang and to extend our discussions. Please join us!

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Technology with a Human Face

We’ve come to the final week of our month-long look at our use of technology, and how we can apply the eight-point program to it. It’s been interesting hearing all of your successes and challenges, and inspiring to hear about the creative ways you’ve been experimenting.

In the tenth of Easwaran’s technology aphorisms, he asks for “technology with a human face.” Have you seen creative examples in action of “technology with a human face”? To conclude this month’s topic, we’ll leave Easwaran with the last word in the reading excerpt below. In the following article, he reminds us of our ultimate goal and responsibilities. He encourages us to take “discriminating action”, and to learn how to choose freely the things that will make us the most compassionate and kind person we can be. We look forward to your comments!

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Enjoying Alternative Forms of Entertainment

Thank you again for all of your thoughtful comments regarding technology use and how it relates to our spiritual practice. Have you noticed benefits to an additional focus on your use of technology as seen through a spiritual lens over the past few weeks?

In the next section of our ongoing reading study, Easwaran suggests that we cultivate discrimination by trying alternative forms of entertainment, particularly in the company of children. Is there a substitution you’ve made in the past that you’ve found enjoyable? Is there a technology-free entertainment you’d like to try this week? Please feel free to share your reflections on this week’s reading study or on your experience with alternative entertainment. We look forward to hearing your ideas!

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Transform Your Use of Technology with the Eight Points

Thanks to all of you for your insightful comments and engagement with our current theme of technology. It’s a rich topic, and it’s great you’re taking the time to consider it as a satsang. Were you motivated to look more deeply at your technology use or to try something new this week?

Have a look at the three aphorisms below from Easwaran. Is there something tangible and specific you can try in your regular life at home, inspired by one of these? Or is there an idea here that you’ll think about and be more aware of this week? For example, you might do your spiritual reading this week while being more attuned to the sages’ understanding of the “indivisible, the full.” Or perhaps you can create a small sense-training experiment around technology for the week – you decide!

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Applying the Eight-Point Program to Technology

This month we’re shifting to considering the relationship between our use of technology and our practice of the eight-point program. We’ll be using the latest Blue Mountain Journal to lead us.

This is a special opportunity to share as a satsang about technology. It’s a topic that touches us all, so this is a chance to slow down, and reflect on our own technology use – with the eight points at the forefront. It’s a chance to speak openly about experiments you’ve tried or ask for tips with a specific challenge.

In each week of May, we’ll focus on three different aphorisms from Easwaran (about his relationship to) on technology. We invite you to reflect on his statements (one or all three) as they relate to your life. We’d love to hear your technology triumphs and trials. In addition to the three aphorisms, we’ll share a longer reading excerpt for inspiration.

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The Art of Living Simply

Thanks to everyone for your enthusiasm and engagement during our study of Easwaran’s book, The Compassionate Universe over these past two months. It’s been a dynamic and inspiring closer look at the connections that Easwaran makes between our practice of the eight-point program and the Earth we all inhabit together.

We’d like to leave Easwaran with the last word as we conclude this theme. In the excerpt below from The Compassionate Universe, Easwaran reminds us about the need to change our conditioning in order to find satisfaction in a more selfless lifestyle.

What part of this reading resonates with you? Please share your thoughts and ideas regarding the art of living in simplicity. We’d love to hear about any small or big changes you’ve been making to live a more efficient and selfless life.

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The Compassionate Universe: Small Ways We Can Make a Big Impact

Thank you for participating in our contemplative Compassionate Universe activities last month! We're happy to be continuing our environmental theme for the month of April also. Join the “Mantram Relay for Earth” on Sunday April 22, 2018 in honor of Earth Day. As a community, we’ll take turns to fill as much of this 24-hour period with mantrams.

Easwaran often shared about the balance between needing to go inward in meditation, in order to gather resources to do good out in the world. This week, we’ll look at how we can make small contributions to the natural environment in practical and subtle ways.

As you read the excerpt below from Easwaran’s book, The Compassionate Universe, are there lines or paragraphs that are inspiring to you, or that strike you?

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Immersing Ourselves in the Compassionate Universe

Thank you for sharing your reflections on our compassionate universe experiments over the last few weeks. It’s been an inspiration to hear from each of you. If you haven’t had a chance to try one of our previous activities, this week is another opportunity!

We encourage you to continue your contemplation in nature by choosing one of the following activities:

  • Experience the mantram in nature for 15 minutes, again!
  • Reflect on the passage “Let Me Walk in Beauty” and/or begin memorizing it.
  • Read and comment on the excerpt from Easwaran’s The Compassionate Universe below.

Also, a reminder that if you already have this passage memorized, have you been using it in your meditation this month? Have you noticed an impact?

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Learning to Love Those Around Us

We warmly invite you to join us for an online workshop on Saturday, February 24 at 9–10:15 a.m. San Francisco time. This is a 75-minute workshop on the theme of Putting Others First. Many members of our eSatsang will be taking part, so it’s a chance for some real-time satsang!

This week, we’re continuing our reading study from Passage Meditation, on Putting Others First. In the excerpt below, Easwaran shares the lofty purpose for all of our efforts to reduce self-will and put others first: “unitary consciousness.” It can be helpful to have this reminder if the situation you find yourself in is a difficult one.

How does keeping your grandest purpose in the forefront of your mind help with your practice of the eight points in your daily life? We would love to hear your comments and reflections on this topic.

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Introducing Love Month: Putting Others First

This month we’re delving into the rewarding topic of Putting Others First. Over the coming weeks, we will explore what Easwaran means by loving others, and test out his teachings on love in our daily lives.

This month’s theme will culminate with the next Returnee Online Workshop on Saturday, February 24, at 9:00–10:15 a.m. San Francisco Time. Many members of the eSatsang will be taking part, so it’s a chance for some real-time satsang and discussion on Putting Others First.

Putting Others First can be one of the more challenging of the eight points, so let’s get back to basics, and study a section from Easwaran’s book, Passage Meditation.

The examples of love Easwaran describes in the reading below are simple in their description, but daring in their application. Which of the practical examples that Easwaran suggests to show our love do you find the most daring?

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Your Creative Mantram Moment!

Thanks to each of you for sharing your striving with the mantram over these weeks. It has been wonderful to strive together. For the final week of Mantram Month, we invite you think creatively about your current mantram habits. Is there a time recently when you used the mantram in a new way? What was it? How did you remember it? Have you ever been surprised by a time that you remembered to use the mantram? Is there a way you could extend that?

Or, if you could choose any time at all during your regular daily routine that you’d like to say the mantram more, when would it be? Is there something you can do to help you remember, or work towards this time?

We’d love to hear your ideas about creating a new mantram moment, or any general reflections you have about Mantram Month.

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Falling Asleep in the Mantram

This week, we have a special mantram activity for you. It’s special because it involves falling asleep, so you will have a number of chances to practice. As you drift off to sleep this week, try to repeat the mantram. Was your sleep impacted in any way? Did you notice any results the next morning?

If you already fall asleep using the mantram, can you give extra attention to the experience and reflect on the results you notice? Or perhaps you create an opportunity this week for a mantram nap during the day. A mantram nap is a rest, but with focus on saying the mantram and keeping it at the forefront of your mind, with falling asleep as secondary.

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Moving with the Mantram

Thank you for sharing your mantram experiences this week. It’s great to hear how you are bringing your practice into everyday life. This week, identify a specific time or times during the day when you are physically active and would like to practice the mantram. Maybe you walk to work, or have a scheduled exercise time, or other active time that you already do. While moving with focus and safety, try to consciously apply the mantram. If you already have a “mantram movement” time during the week, can you expand it a bit more ?

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Introducing Mantram Month

Happy New Year eSatsang friends and families! Thank you to everyone who contributed to the Mantram Relay for Peace on January 1, created by one of our eSatsang members. It was wonderful to see all 24 hours filled up – sometimes with five of us repeating the mantram at any one time. Such an inspiration!

To build on the momentum from the Mantram Relay, we invite you to make January Mantram Month. Each week, we’ll have a new practical mantram exercise including guidance from Easwaran. Join us in solidifying a new year’s resolution, or for more mantram repetition as a resolution in itself. Here’s this week’s mantram exercise...(click the title to read more!)

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Slowing Down: Give the Precious Gift of Time

This week, we are continuing to apply Slowing Down to our daily lives and are eager to hear how your Slowing Down experiment is going as you’ve had some time to try it out. Were you able to recall it at the time you wanted to? Was there a change in the situation, or interaction? Do you need an extra boost of support to help you slow down? Try joining us for a “virtual meditation” on a Saturday, through our private Facebook Group. Details for the meditation each week are posted in the group. If you don’t have an account, no problem!

 Finally, we are sharing an excerpt from Easwaran on the importance of human relationships, which he says “are often the first casualties in a speeded-up way of life.” Are there any practical tips from the reading that you’d like to try for the rest of this month?

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