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Arthaketu

Arthaketu has been involved in the Triratna Buddhist Community for over 30 years. During that time he has lived and practiced as an active member of the Manchester Buddhist Centre and for the last seven years has been involved with teaching Buddhism and meditation at the Berlin Buddhist Centre.

Three aspects of practice are central for him. The body, its sensations, energy and the possibility to feel grounded and relaxed. The imagination, and how we can connect to it through image, symbol, story, myth and ritual and it's capacity to help us to find a sense of meaning in difficult times. And the spacious quality of the mind, how the mind itself can be sensitive to and accommodate all things. All of this can be connected to through meditation. 

His explorations have also included - training as a Shiatsu practitioner, learning Focusing, drawing, painting and carving wood and recently qualifying as a mindfulness trainer with Breathworks. He looks forward to being on retreat with you and exploring together. 

Wild open heart: metta, movement and meditation

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Retreat Type:
Introductory

How do we consider our heart, our mind? Do we see it as a garden that needs careful trimming, cultivation and keeping in check? Or is it more like an open space with room for everything and everyone – more like a wilderness, unpredictable, fresh and full of discoveries? 

To have an open heart is a beautiful idea – but is it naïve? Can we keep our heart open, in this world
that so often seems to be hard, rough, or full of pain? With the practice of the Metta Bhavana – of loving kindness – we engage with all we meet in the world with an ever-expanding openness. The practice invites us to shed the covers of our habitual identities, and to be present and alive to the world as we meet it. Do we dare enter the thrilling wilderness that is our own heart? 

This retreat will focus on metta, and explore the stages of the Metta Bhavana in our heart, mind and bodies, in meditation, in nature and in the way we relate to one another. Practicing in- and outdoors, we will research how we can trust what is wild and surprising in ourselves, the mind-heart in its natural state. 

Easy physical improvisational exercises will help us to become more present, and open to more light and joy. This will enrich our attention within and outside of meditation with the spirit of discovery. In meditation and in movement improvisation we enter the unknown, a dance with ever new experience. Joining this dance, we can discover where stillness and engagement meet. 

For more information, read the retreat information sheet

Booking Fee:

£100

Booking Availability:
Spaces