Teachings of the Tree

Sometimes Just Be

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Estimated reading time: 2 minutes

Adam Lobel offered this talk to participants in our November 2024 EcoDharma Exploration. Visit the program page for the full recorded gathering: Deep Roots, Strong Branches: Cultivating a Steady and Loving Presence as We Approach the US Election.

Highlights

It’s very challenging to be within all of this and to stay with an open heart. What is a contemplative or spiritual or Buddhist or mindful response to the US elections? If we’re not simply talking about how do we get by the next few weeks feeling okay, if that’s not the limit of our curiosity, what does it really mean to be truly spiritual and responsive in these times over this next month?

… creating a gap and a distance between the speed and the crisis mentality and sinking into something more profound, even over these next two weeks. These deep roots are really how the tree is able to stay alive, how the tree is able to maintain its being. So I encourage you to practice.

There’s ways that many of our Buddhist communities have this kind of aesthetic or culture where we’re supposed to be calm, we’re supposed to be peaceful, and that can really suppress the pain, the rage, the fear, and lead to a false kind of modern Buddhist mask where we’re trying to live up to an ideal. And I don’t think that’s helpful to anyone.

One of the things that I think would be most amazing was if our meditation teachings helped support us in expanding our anger, making it bigger, making it stronger, making that blaze hotter, more intense, more potent, so that we actually have something powerful, that the strength of anger starts to show through. It’s courageousness. And it’s fierceness. This is a flower, fruit of the tree.

Cultivating the capacity to tolerate that openness and uncertainty, to stay with that quivering heart, is part of the swaying teaching of the tree. So the tree teaches us with roots, but also an openness, a swaying, going beyond our hopes, fears, and expectations.

The full transcript can be found here.

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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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