Search
Close this search box.

Session Three

Compassionate Reflection

This page is restricted to registered participants of the EcoSattva Training. If you’re not yet registered, you may register here.

If you are registered, please log in:

You are not yet registered for the current series of the EcoSattva Training. You may register here.

Our ultimate goal is transformation at depth but we can’t get there unless we recognize ourselves with compassion. We need to understand how it is we found ourselves in this astonishing situation. In a process that involves not just mind, but heart and body, we are looking back, remembering both for ourselves and our people the causes and conditions that led us here. With great care and attention, we begin to untangle the tangle.

Session Resources

Session Leaders

Kritee Kanko

Kritee (dharma name Kanko), is a Buddhist Zen teacher, climate scientist, grief ritual leader, and social permaculture designer. She is cofounder of Boundless in Motion Sangha, a meditation community in the Buddhist lineage of Cold Mountain Zen. She is also a founding board member of Rocky Mountain Ecodharma Retreat Center, a center that brings meditation in nature together with dharma teachings for ecological action as well Frontline Farming, an advocacy group that lifts up people of color and women farmers and focuses on food cultivation, education, policy change and justice. As a senior scientist in the Climate Smart Agriculture Program at Environmental Defense Fund, she is helping to implement environment and climate-friendly methods of small farming at large scales in Asia with a three-fold goal of poverty alleviation, food security and climate mitigation / adaptation.

[Back to Contents]

Opening the Space

We invite you to open your engagement with each session (or group gathering, if applicable) by practicing a Living Earth Acknowledgment. A Living Earth Acknowledgement can nourish our relatedness and avail us to truths beyond domination. Incorporating our ecological nature as well as the calls of justice, it is an exploration, not a formula, to recognize and remember. Through practices like this, we are setting the conditions for shifting minds that are conditioned by domination into more skillful ways of seeing, speaking and acting.

Living Earth Acknowledgment and Prayer

Meditation is an integral part of the EcoSattva journey. If you do not have a meditation practice, now is the perfect time to start. We invite beginners and seasoned practitioners alike to view this guided meditation grounded in our relationship with Earth, created especially for EcoSattva Training participants by our guiding teacher Catherine McGee.

Guided Meditation

[Back to Contents]

Dharma Offerings

To view the video in full screen, click the expand button on the lower right.

Core Offering 1

Kritee Kanko, in conversation with Kristin, presents the first core Dharma offering for this session.

Core Offering 2

Invoking the teachings of Dr. Renée Lertzman (see the supplementary resources below), Kristin invites us to question our projections and build our understanding of how trauma informs our response to ecological crises.

[Back to Contents]

Inquiries

We offer here a set of inquiries and group practices that support this step in our journey. Consider these suggestions and feel free to customize, replace and augment. But we strongly suggest that you explore at least one inquiry with each session.

Below are this session’s inquiry questions in bold, followed by a short commentary. We invite you to gently hold these questions. If this form of exploration is new to you or you would like a refresher, you can learn more about inquiry practice here.

  • How am I experiencing ecological distress?
    With as much gentleness as possible, can you be curious about where and how you hold the impacts of ecological harm? What issues feel most alive to you? What happens when your distress gets triggered or activated? What resources do you find helpful in metabolizing or composting your ecological distress?
  • What are some of the stories I tell about what’s going on for others in regard to ecological crises?
    When you think of the ways that friends, strangers, or public figures respond (or fail to respond) to our ecological situation, what do you think is going on for them? Be mindful of these opinions. What impact do they have on your mind, heart and body? What purpose might they serve for you? What’s it like to bring some spaciousness to them and allow for other possibilities?
  • What’s it like to relax my strongly held opinions about this crisis?
    At this point in the training, it can be helpful to purposely make space for uncertainty. What happens in your body, heart, and mind when you loosen your sense of certainty about where we’re headed, what we’re doing or not doing, what it should all look like?

Format for group inquiry: Liberating Structures is an excellent resource and we especially like 1-2-4-all and Conversation Café.

[Back to Contents]

Supplemental Resources (Optional)

Seeing How We See

In this video, David Loy explores the role meditation can play in helping us see the world as it is, instead of through the lens of objectification.

The Unprocessed Mourning of Ecological Loss

Dr. Renée Lertzman speaks with Kristin on the unique psychological challenge of our ecological situation and offers us tools to bring compassion to ourselves and others.

Additional Resources

[Back to Contents]

Dedication of Merit

At the close of each session, we encourage you to dedicate the merit. Core to our path is the practice of release, not holding tight to the material, emotional, or even spiritual. Instead we offer whatever we may have gained to benefit others. You can do so in any way that feels right; you are welcome to use One Earth Sangha’s dedication, found below.

Dedication of Merit

[Back to Contents]