Attuning to Wild Uncertainty

A Guided Meditation with Adam Lobel

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Adam Lobel offered this guided meditation as part of One Earth Sangha’s EcoSattva Training: At Home with the Trouble, Together. Watch for the launch of the newest version of the EcoSattva Training on October 12th: Becoming a Force for Nature.

From the Practice

Here some heart advice is, less is more. You don’t have to do anything here. Letting go of the controlling ego, shifting from the driver’s seat to the passenger’s seat, letting be, beyond effort, hope and fear. And if there is some resistance to this much vastness and uncertainty, if there’s a controlling part of us that wants security, then we meet that with real kindness and care.

And we feel this as the quivering heart. Yes, we don’t know. There is this vast boundless uncertainty, but at the same time, there is this love, this deep care for our planet, for a tree, for a red tail hawk, for our fellow human animals, for the pain that we have caused and the pain that is coming.

From here without any formal break between practice and not practice, between meditation and action, we can arise from our seat and go forward into our life with this quivering heart, with this luminosity and the openness, the rest and the profound ease of the groundless, open ultimate truth, pervading our being. So that action, compassion, and space are inseparable.

The transcript of this practice can be found here.

Adam Lobel, PhD, practices at the intersections of ecodharma, meditation, and psycho-social political transformation. He is a scholar-practitioner of philosophy and religion, a Guiding Teacher for One Earth Sangha, an environmental justice activist working to resist the petrochemical buildout in his region, and a professor of Ecopsychology. Adam served as a teacher (acharya) in the Shambhala tradition from 2005 until resigning in 2018. A speaker on ecology and spirituality at the United Nations, he leads ecodharma workshops called “Silent Transformations,” has taught in the Ecosattva Training, and is a Greenfaith fellow. Adam’s teachings focus on Great Perfection Tibetan Buddhism, modern phenomenology, and inoperative studies (Heidegger, Foucault, Agamben). He has a longstanding interest in progressive contemplative education and transformative pedagogy. Adam teaches a critical style of contemplative training that seeks to avoid enclosure in neoliberal mindfulness while still disclosing effortless awareness. He is currently developing what he calls “four fields” of contemplative practices for potential worlds. For more on his teachings see his website: Releasement.

     Pieces on One Earth Sangha
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