This program will be hosted both in-person and online (hybrid). This is the registration page to join Narayan Helen Liebenson in person at our Center in Cambridge. (Register here if you prefer to attend online.)
In-person space is limited. Registration will close at 12:00 pm on Friday, March 8. Walk-in registrations will not be available. A vegetarian lunch will be provided. Masks will be optional.
Grief and all of the expressions of grief – sorrow, despair, anguish, distress, etc. – is a natural reaction to loss. Although, because of the law of impermanence, loss is inevitable in the lives of us all, we can relate to our reactions to loss in ways that ease and liberate. We do so by understanding how the teachings of the Buddha and the path of practice can ease our pain and offer a pathway to a deeper understanding of suffering and its release.
There are four skillful ways to release grief: the practice of non-dwelling, the practice of letting go of “me” and “mine”, gratitude practice, and the practice of going into the heart of the pain and experiencing it as it is. Approaching each of these practices from the perspective of compassion – caring for the heart – enlarges our capacity to release the weight of grief that has come from loss, whether current, recent, or long past.
This retreat is appropriate for both new and experienced meditators and will include sitting meditation, walking meditation, talks, and discussion. Everyone is welcome.
Full and partial scholarships are available up to 72 hours before the start of the program. This program will not be recorded.
NOTE: At check-in, participants will be asked to volunteer for a short period of mindful service during the retreat—a “yogi job.” Yogi jobs enable the smooth running of the retreat and offer an opportunity to practice alongside other retreat participants.