Tuesday 6 November 2007

Under the bell



Last night was the last in a short course of Buddhist meditation classes I've been taking. Ten years now that I've had a meditation practice, on and off, more on than off, and fairly seriously. Still, I appreciate meeting new (and old) teachers and sitting in a room with others, new and old to the practice, many experiencing something that will change them as it has changed and continues to change me... oh those tiny, gradual changes in perception and response that make a huge, huge difference to everything.

This course was excellent, a strong impetus to fresh approaches and recommitment. I was drawn to it by the name of one of the teachers, John Teasdale. Now a teacher in the Insight meditation tradition, as a research psychologist in Oxford, London and Cambridge, he has been one of the UK pioneers of Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy.

MBCT, which takes the precious philosophy and techniques of Buddhist mindfulness training, in secular form, into the mainstream health service, has recently been hitting the headlines with the publication of a wonderful book, The Mindful Way Through Depression, of which John is a co-author with Zindel Segal, Mark Williams
and Jon Kabat-Zinn, but was already the subject of respected research studies (many cited here) and beginning to find a place in the National Health Service. There is far, far to go, but this seems like a real, small hope for our sick minds and sick society. Little of late has made me happier.

We split into small groups last night to discuss our practice. "I think I know you! Aren't you Jean?": a woman I met 12 or 13 years ago, perhaps the very first to speak of me of Buddhist practice, a good while before I tried it for myself. Long lost sight of, she had moved away and has only recently returned to live near me. We will meet, perhaps try to start a local sitting group! In the great amorphous city, the crossing and re-crossing of paths with like-minded people feels very precious.


Before leaving, we sat for one last time. The power of silence and forty intent minds in this beautiful space. The exquisite medieval church of St Ethelburga was destroyed by an IRA bomb in 1993 and rebuilt as an interfaith centre for peace and reconciliation.


At 9 pm, in the middle of London, the bell chimes right above our heads.

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Oh Jean. xoxoxoxo

A sitting group! How superb.

I love that picture. There you are in the corner, your golden hair unmistakable next to the damask of the flower.

Jean said...

Hmm. Your eyes are too sharp!

Anonymous said...

No they're not! It's what makes the picture. I so wish I could go to both the classes at St Ethelburga's and a regular sitting group. It really energises my practice to sit with others. But I'm sure the house-tetheredness will be a passing phase. Patience isn't my strong suit :-)

Beth said...

Jean, this is wonderful news. I love your picture too. And I was very moved and drawn by the beautiful church space and its story - and the programs listed in the sidebar, especially the ones about Islam. Clearly those behind this Center are a group of people with their heads and hearts in the right place - what a wonderful space to meditate and talk about practice and life.

Jean said...

Beth, yes, it's a really wonderful place. Outside they have a peaceful, enclosed, geometric garden - down an alley way from a main street in the frantic City financial district, and suddenly you are in another world; and a beautiful permanent tent structure, where they also do a lot of small-group meditation with Buddhist, Sufi and Hindu teachers, though the large class I attended was in the main building. I'll definitely be going to more stuff there, now I have the programme. I see they're showing the 'Doing Time, Doing Vipassana' film about meditation in an Indian prison later this month... And the conflict resolution courses - and that they are teaching this stuff to everyone from politicians to refugees from conflict to city business people - are really wonderful, of course.

Lucy said...

Riche.
When I read here, I often envy you 'great amorphous city,'.
RR's eyes are sharp, I'enlarged that lovely picture but still couldn't see you!

Jean said...

Lucy, top r-h corner. And, yes, I'm trying really hard and with some success to appreciate and enjoy the city's riches while I'm here. I do not want, if I ever make it to the country, to find myself regretting what I didn't see and do while I was still here...

Ernesto said...

Nice post. Yesterday I took my first hatta yoga class around the same time you were meditating...

Jean said...

Hey, Ernesto, that's great! Less chance of the Hermanito C types in a yoga class :-)