In the Buddhist cultures of Southeast Asia, the faithful
traditionally mark the days of the full moon, half moon, and new moon by
visiting temples, meditating, making offerings, and observing the
precepts. In the Jewish, Christian, and Muslim traditions, observing the
Sabbath can be a profound weekly practice of letting go of work and
ordinary concerns and turning hearts and minds toward spiritual matters.
In a kind of extended Sabbath or “holy day,” retreats are times for
dedicating oneself to spiritual life, and their roots are ancient. Some
Christians look for inspiration to Jesus’ desert retreat in enacting
their own retreat of prayer, contemplation, and renewal. Each year, the
monks of Southeast Asia remain in retreat for the rainy season, as
monastics have traditionally done, going back to the time of the Buddha.
Retreat is not only for the professionals, though. Anyone can
undertake a retreat and reap its healing and transforming benefits.
Think of it as a learning, growthful experience, or as a service to your
highest, deepest, wise spiritual self. It is a gift to yourself and a
gift to your loved ones, your colleagues, and all whom you encounter,
who will benefit from your increase in focus, energy, physical and
spiritual health, and productivity.
I went on my first retreat one weekend in 1968, while a freshman
at the University of Buffalo. I had read some books about meditation,
and I had heard about the teacher, Philip Kapleau Roshi, and about Zen
in some Gestalt workshops I had attended that year, and was favorably
impressed by the depth and clarity of the teachings, and by Kapleau
Roshi’s wisdom and serene presence. But after the weekend was over, I
was not able to keep up the practice on my own.
I only learned how to meditate on a daily basis a few years
later, by going to several ten-day Vipassana (insight) meditation
courses in India during the early Seventies. The master U Goenka was the
teacher, and he stressed the continuity and simplicity of practice. At
the beginning, it was tough going. The retreats were silent, austere,
and physically and psychologically demanding. We slept on mats, and
there were no flush toilets, no hot water, no diversions, no news from
the outside world, no meals after noon in accordance with the tradition
of monastics at the time of the Buddha. The day began at 4 am, and we
meditated for twelve one-hour periods, in which we determined to sit
without movement and follow the breath. This was interrupted only
occasionally with some chanting or an interview or a dharma talk or a
meal.
For the first five or six days, I struggled with the discomfort and pain
of trying to sit still and relax in the midst of mosquitoes and extreme
heat, but then something mysteriously happened, and I began to
experience peace, relaxation and even bliss. My mind was sharply focused
as a laser beam, and my awareness seemed incandescent, as never before.
When I later told my teacher that, he laughed and said, "Beginner's
luck! Don't get too excited, just keep meditating."
Without this valuable experience of actually doing meditation in a
protected environment under the guidance of an experienced teacher, I
doubt I would have been able to continue with daily practice and month
in and month out, through whatever doubts, difficulties, challenges and
distractions came along the way. Going to occasional refresher
retreats with Goenka-ji and other Vipassana teachers during that decade
kept me going. Joseph Goldstein, Sharon Salzberg and Jack Kornfield were
very helpful in leading retreats in America in the late Seventies that I
could really enjoy.
I recommend spiritual retreat both to enter a particular practice path,
and also as a way to recharge the inner battery, remain motivated, and
overcome the inevitable hindrances and obstacles to going deeper on your
spiritual path. Undertaking a personal retreat can benefit one on
so many levels. If you want to experience an authentic Buddhist
meditation retreat, try one of the Vipassana retreats, Zen sesshins, or
Dzogchen retreats that you can participate in at a low cost throughout
the country, for a period of time of between a weekend and three months
in duration. There are also excellent hermitages where one can practice
spiritually in solitude and nature, but I recommend that you experience
group retreat and learn from a teacher before going off for too long on
your own.
In Tibetan Buddhism, there is a tradition for committed
practitioners to make a three-year, three-month, three-day "Great
Retreat" once in a lifetime. In the Eighties, I twice completed
this Great Retreat at the Dzogchen monastery and hermitage of my teacher
Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche. The group of dharma students retreating there,
most of whom were Westerners, did nothing but meditate, pray, chant,
study, and practice Tibetan yoga and "noble silence," which
includes periods with no eye-contact, no reading, no writing. The beauty
of "noble silence" is that it greatly deepens one's sense of
solitude and facility for contemplation. We were ordained as monks or
nuns for that period, during which time we took vows of celibacy,
poverty, and obedience to our teachers, shaved our heads, and wore
maroon and yellow Tibetan Buddhist monastic robes. We lived under the
direct guidance of Khyentse Rinpoche and his colleague, the beloved
teacher Dudjom Rinpoche.
Our lives were ordered by a precise schedule, which broke the typical
day into two- or three-hour periods, beginning with our 4 am wake-up
gong, during which I, along with the other students, meditated and
practiced alone in our five-by-nine foot cells sparsely furnished with
only a bed, an altar, and a storage trunk. Some years our bed was
actually a meditation seat -- historically known in Tibet as "the
Box” -- in which we sat up all night doing Tibetan dream yoga and
clear light practice. For some periods of time, we concentrated on
Tibetan tantric yoga exercises to awaken the energy body, develop inner
heat (so-called "mystic incandescence"), and purify karma.
During this time, we sat outside in the garden daily for two hours
before dawn, dressed only in shorts, even in the winter. There was also
a short work period every day after the lunch hour, during which some of
us gardened, cleaned, and did household chores in the cloister, while
others worked on translations, and copied scriptures and study
materials.
We had no weekends, days off, or vacations. But we did celebrate
Buddhist holidays, visits by grand lamas, initiations and empowerments,
and auspicious full moon days, with various and extensive rituals,
tantric feasts, round-the-clock chanting, and elaborate offering
ceremonies.
As severe as all the regulation and structure may sound,
retreats are set up this way for a reason, and offer great benefit to
the retreatant: life becomes much simpler when pared down to the most
basic routines, such as waking up to a gong, living according to a
schedule marked by bells throughout the day, and wearing the same
clothes and hairdo year in and year out -- not to mention remaining
entirely cloistered and focused solely on one's spiritual life.
While such retreats are logistically difficult for most people
to manage, there are many opportunities at Buddhist centers today to
enter deeply into the same practices I learned while on retreat.
American practice centers offer an abundance of weekend, weeklong, and
ten-day meditation retreats. Even one-day "retreats" are
available. I myself lead two dozen retreats each year,
through my Dzogchen Center. And I continue to spend at least two or
three weeks every year in personal meditation retreat. The seclusion
helps me reconnect more deeply with myself, my prayer life, and
spiritual practice, and keeps me in touch with my teachers and lineage.
And just as important, it integrates my spirituality into the path of
everyday life throughout the rest of the year.
There are many kinds of retreat. There are meditation retreats, yoga
retreats, wilderness and travel retreats; prayer retreats, writing
retreats; solitary retreats and group retreats, men’s retreats and
women’s retreats and young people’s retreats; activists’ retreats,
business people’s retreats, artists’ retreats, parents’ retreats,
and family retreats; there are silent retreats, there are seminar-like
studious retreats; there are prayer vigil retreats and healing retreats
and vision quest retreats; there are fasting retreats, there are
special-diet retreats (vegetarian, kosher, fruitarian, etc.); there are
retreats centered on specific subjects or practices.
Retreats can be undertaken according to different kinds of guidelines.
They can be done by time, such as a one-day or weekend retreat, a
weeklong retreat, a month retreat, a 100-day retreat, a one year or
three year retreat, etc. They can be undertaken according to place,
limits, subject matter, activity, etc. Some retreats provide tightly
structured schedules, while others leave retreatants with a lot of free
time.
In order to choose a retreat, you could ask your spiritual friends for
suggestions and recommendations, or your spiritual director if you have
one. Or ask yourself questions like: What are my aspirations for doing
retreat, what are my spiritual interests and experience, and what
environment would best facilitate their actualization? What are my
limitations, physical, mental, financial, time-wise, etc.? Do I want to
be silent and solitary, or am I looking for new like-minded friends?
Some retreats are silent, with minimal (overt) interaction with other
retreatants, while others facilitate group sharing through discussions,
group practices, evening activities, etc.
For how long should I retreat? This will depend a lot upon your prior
retreat experience. For some people, it may be best to start small with
a half-day, daylong, or weekend retreat rather than jumping into a week
or ten days of silence and/or solitude. What kind of structure would
suit me: many scheduled activities, or lots of open time for my own
established practices and interests? What kind of surroundings would be
most conducive? (Workshop center or retreat center? Urban or rural?
Basic or luxurious accommodations?) Do I need to conduct other
activities while on retreat, or can I sequester myself entirely from the
world during that period of time? What specific practices might I like
to engage in? Do I want and need lots or little teaching? How much
personal guidance or time with teachers and mentors?
There are various kinds of Buddhist retreats; each stress different
kinds of practices, different schedules and practices. In our quarterly
Dzogchen Center intensive retreats, we structure our time, place and
activity and attitude according to the what I call the Ten S’s.
The Ten S’s:
1.
Silence
2.
Solitude, seclusion
3.
Self-discipline, morality
4.
Slowing down/stillness
5.
Softness, gentleness
6.
Sati (mindfulness)
7. Self-inquiry
8. Satya
(truth)
9. Selflessness,
unselfishness
10. Sacred Outlook
The first three are mostly outer; the second four internal; and the last
three are innermost guidelines. Using this structure, you can really do
a retreat almost anytime you choose, and structure it according to what
is most conducive to accomplishing your goals during the period of time
you can set aside for this worthwhile pursuit. One could even do this at
home, by freeing oneself from all obligations, commitments, and
responsibilities; turning off the phone, email, radio, and doing a news
fast; and simply turning inwards for some period of time.
Solitude and loneliness are not necessarily synonymous. The great
Tibetan master of old Marpa sang: “When I am alone in the mountains, I
am never alone. All the Buddha and gurus accompany me. I feel blessed
and delighted!”
I love to go on retreat. I think it is one of the greatest spurs to
spiritual growth and realization. The secret of spiritual life is
actually doing it; this means practice, not mere theory, belief, or
membership. Take the opportunity to try it for yourself. I think
you’ll love it.
*********
Resources:
1.
“Retreat: Time Apart for Silence and Solitude”, by Roger Housden (may
be out of print - available used or in libraries)
2.
“Transformative Getaways, for Spiritual Growth, Self-Discovery, and
Holistic Healing” by John Benson (may be out of
print - available used or in libraries)
3.
“Sanctuaries:
A Guide to Monasteries, Abbeys and Retreats”, by Jack and Marcia
Kelly
4.
“Inquiring Mind, the Journal of the Vipassana Community” for Insight
Meditation retreats