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09 April 2010

I've been kicked out of better places than this



OK, I really wasn't kicked out. I just wasn't let in.

In 2006 I did my first 10 day silent vipassana retreat here that is in the strict Goenka tradition. A requirement of the Mindfulness Yoga and Meditation Training that I did at Spirit Rock Meditation Center in California was that one had to sit a 5 day or longer vipassana retreat.

The vipassana retreat was my first long silent retreat and it was the hardest thing I have ever done but the most transformative. I went through 6 days of hell, but on the 7th was reborn, so to speak. I ended up loving my experience. In fact, if I had my own yoga teacher training program a vipassana retreat would be one of the requirements for certification, that's how important I think it is. If you want my piece of paper you would have to sit in silence 10 hours a day for 10 days, no excuses.

I've always wanted to return. When I came back from India I felt the need to sit intensely like that and desired the structure of the retreat, don't ask me why. I wanted to do a three day retreat instead of a 10 day so I applied for a sit in August. If you go to the Illinois website you can see what the lengthy application is all about. They ask you lots of questions about your practice, if you have done any other meditation styles, if you teach any other meditation styles, plus the usual questions about your mental health since strict vipassana is a very intense practice. After writing the application you are then called for a telephone interview.

So being the good yogini that I am I was honest. You know, that whole satya thing. I wrote about my retreats and training at Spirit Rock, who the teachers were, that I am a yoga teacher, that I incorporate meditation in my classes, and that I teach mindfulness meditation.

A very nice woman called to interview me and she was very impressed with my application commenting on everything I have done. She said I could do the retreat as long as I understood not to "mix" my mindfulness meditation with the vipassana practice. I said that I totally understood that and she said I could go on the retreat.

She called me yesterday with the bad news: I could not attend the retreat. Instead of becoming angry or disappointed, feelings of amusement arose. I REALLY wanted to do this retreat (and some of you might think I'm nuts for REALLY wanting to sit 10 hours a day), but for some reason I thought it was hilarious. Maybe it was the woman's voice. Ginger had the stereotypical voice of a grandmother that you might hear in cartoons. It was classic and precious. How could I get angry at her and besides, what would be the point? She was just following Goenka's rules. Don't kill the messenger.

She told me that she looked at my website and was very impressed with my "accomplishments" in yoga teaching and that I trained at Spirit Rock and go to India to study yoga. But I don't consider myself "special", I just do what I do. I thought, so just because I've done the training that I've done, that means I can't do a 3 day vipassana retreat, something that I really want to do? I mean, I don't know very many people who would subject themselves to a strict vipassana retreat. In fact, most yogis I know would probably prefer to hang upside down over a fire. WHAT DO YOU MEAN I CAN'T GO?!?

I tried not to chuckle. Ginger sounded so sincere in her compliments about my yoga and meditation practices, how could I dare laugh? She said it was BECAUSE I teach mindfulness meditation that I can't go. She said that Goenka was very strict about the mixing of any other practice with vipassana (which I already knew) and her supervisor was afraid that I would mix everything up and get "confused" (and go nuts -- the teachers are afraid people will freak out because vipassana is an intense practice.) Please stay home she told me.

The bottom line is that one has to make a choice. It's either a strict vipassana practice or the highway. None of this take one from column A and one from column B. I told Ginger, yeah, but the roots of mindfulness meditation are in vipassana. "Yes, dear, we know," she said, "but unless you make a choice of what practice you want to do, you can never come back here. Go to Barre instead." Goenka, via Ginger, banished me to the Insight Meditation Society in Massachusetts. I hung my head. Oh, the shame of it all.

Damn it. I'm banned from every vipassana center in the known and unknown Universe! Sigh. I was really looking forward to all those kriya nightmares ridding me of my samskaras. Mara won't be visiting me in my dreams now.

So much for honesty is the best policy. If I had said nothing about everything I have done since my first retreat, I would have gotten in. I should have kept my mouth shut.

Well, you know what, Goenka? According to your rules, one is not supposed to do any yoga on a vipassana retreat. But listen up, dude -- you know that 4 AM wake up call to sit? I blew that off every day and DID MY YOGA IN MY ROOM!! Yeah, that's right, I broke the rules!

Gee...ya think they found out about that?



10 comments:

Claudia said...

oh dear, what a disappointment!, I am sorry to hear that, thanks for sharing this with us!

Rui Umezawa said...

Wow, that is too bad....

I've been wanting to try the 10-day retreat for some time, as my teacher recommends it.

I don't know enough to comment on whether they are being reasonable or not. I am just very sorry you were turned away from something to which you were clearly looking forward.

Brenda P. said...

Oh for Pete's Sake (dramatic eye roll)...!

YogaforCynics said...

Vipassana fundamentalists...whatever....

Anonymous said...

That is highly amusing.

Either they can't think their instruction is very good, OR they don't really think that much of your experience.

Because to assume you'd mix things up suggests a lack of discipline - either on their behalf or yours, right?

And if it's their lack of discipline, they can't have a lot of confidence in how well they instruct people.

But if it's a lack of confidence in your skills, then I guess they don't believe you've really been doing all the things you put on your application? Because surely if they did, you'd be a little more capable, steady of mind and disciplined than they're suggesting... ;)

Nan Sheppard said...

Oh no! That is pretty funny...

Maybe you could create your own, similar, retreat? Alone or with a few friends or students? I know that it wouldn't be the same, but you never know, it might be great!

Anahita said...

I love that your initial reaction was amusement. This is not at all the same situation - but when my bike was stolen last year (and it was brand new) ... more than anything, I was just amused.

And I was surprised by the reaction. I figured I should be more angry, frustrated, etc.. but I realized (as your post also reflects) that in some situations there is either nothing you can do or that you've simply done all you can. Some things fall outside our realm of control.

I wonder why this awareness gives birth to a reaction such as amusement, though :) [Doesn't mean I was happy my bike was stolen... but I didn't want to waste energy getting upset]

Still. Sorry about the retreat. Disappointments, though they may be great teachers, are not fun!

Art Trip said...

Buddhists are a barrel of laughs... Almost wish they let you do the retreat and that in fact you did "go nuts". Somehow that image is cracking me up right now...:)

Unknown said...

I have to say that it is their loss. The greatest part of being a Western Yogi is that we get to pull from Columns A and B (and C, D, E, etc.). We get to find what works for us in the modern world, in our own hearts. There is no one path to Samadhi - we each create our own, and those who fail to recognize that are losing out.

Judith Rosen said...

Hi Linda. I was sorry to read about your experience with the Vipassana Center near you. I am an "old student" of Goenka's too (just means we both finished at least one ten day course) and have had my share of tussles with the restrictive rules, etc. What I have found is that because the "organization" is so decentralized, run by volunteers, and the volunteers are all "old students" themselves, the interpretations of what Goenka says are extremely variable. Don't accept this as the final statement. The people willing to devote ten days of their life to a meditation course that represents something I affectionately call "Goenka's Boot Camp for the Mind" are all seekers. Some are flat out lost souls. But all are at some stage of sorting themselves/ourselves out. I have met some truly remarkable, balanced people through the Centers but I have met far more of the lost souls and some of them are really not balanced very well. Some of them are even in positions of power, able to say yes or no about a prospective course application from someone like you.

When I had a run in with one of those kind, who is actually an A.T., it upset me a lot. I talked with a lot of other old students about it and the comment that helped me the most was "Sometimes we just have to forgive people for having their own issues." Given that "the rules" are really the rules AS INTERPRETED BY someone who is not enlightened, my advice is to reapply and treat it like you are going through customs. You don't volunteer information and you don't tell them stuff that is none of their business (even though they're asking). If you are not at risk for a psychotic episode during a course, then you know you won't be endangering anyone.

Look at it this way: If, going through customs, you have seeds from your grandmothers morning glories, and seeds are on the prohibited list, but you also know fully well that they aren't carrying pathogens or bugs and they are not invasive exotic species... then, you don't tell them you have seeds. It's that simple, really. There is no such thing as "absolute" honesty. Honesty is a relational thing, like justice or truth or reality. There are times and places for full disclosure and times when it really is not appropriate. Goenka says, "Do your own thinking". I think that rule trumps all others.

Good luck! I hope to bump into you at a course.
Judith