Summer 2008

Greetings for the summer season, slowly but surely approaching! As the warm breezes become more prevalent, warming us up inside as well as outside, we think of summer plans as well as the lazy, hazy days, non-planning and non-doing that this season generates in us.

Coming out of my 6 months sabbitical, I offer to you the following schedule for the summer. As well, in July I will be resuming my counselling practice and will be making appointments in June.

RETREAT DAY @ SOURCE POINT – SUNDAY JULY 13TH, 12 – 5 PM.
Source Point Studio is located @ 3263 Heather between W 16th & 17th. Investment: Sliding scale: $60-$80.

MOVING FROM DEPRIVATION TO ABUNDANCE – Summer is a time of fullness, an expansion of the composting time of winter which has moved into the seeding, the budding of new visions and beginnings of the spring. In this retreat day we will ask what helps to lead you to a fuller sense of yourself in your life and what stops you from coming to a realization and expression of your true essence.

Through Continuum’s intricate sound sequences accompanied by movement explorations, we connect to our inner, dynamic fluid selves. We inculcate environments designed to elicit new creative responses, like a “movement tour,” expanding our range of interaction and encourage new “plays” within our bodies and with the environment. We will interweave this creative sourcing into the play of our dreams and dreamtime images, ritual and expressive arts.

CONTINUUM MOVEMENT CLASS SERIES – 4 Thursdays 9:30-11:30AM – July 24-August 14
@ Source Point Studio. Investment for series: $110. Drop in $30 (with Continuum experience).
I have never held classes in the summer but am eager to resume my teaching again & pass on some of the latest innovations from Emilie Conrad & Susan Harper, as well as some of the elements I have been exploring in this sabbitical/retreat time. I am hoping you will join me and we shall see what emerges from our individual expressions and the field we create together.

REMINDER – Moving Medicine with Emilie Conrad @ Hollyhock, August 24-29.
Contact: registration@hollyhock.ca or 1-800-933-6339.

With love & blessings, Doris

 

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NEWSLETTER SPRING 2008

Today is Mother’s Day – May 11, 2008, an auspicious time to be sending out this newsletter. Since returning from Emilie Conrad’s wonderful 4 day Continuum workshop, “Moving Medicine” in Seattle, I have been immersed in house hunting, a daunting task and quite a challenge to retain some of the incredible dropped down and aware state I reached through the time with Emilie and my two weeks in April at Cortes. So much of what I’m learning is how to modulate and balance the “doings” that a busy active life in Vancouver demands, with the processes that drop me in that rich inner life which we all long for.

Since embarking on my six month sabbatical, I have wanted to write an update and let you all know how my experiment was progressing. However I haven’t felt the impulse. Then towards the end of my two week stay at our cabin on Cortes, it came upon me and I wrote and wrote. Following is what emerged. I will be returning to my counseling practice at the beginning of July and also sending out another message with my Summer Continuum schedule.

Cortes Cabin, Cortes Island —- April 24, 2008 —– LET IT BE

Running through so many of my thoughts and those of the authors I have been reading, comes the theme of being fully in the present moment. Think back to Ram Das’ first book in the “60’s, “Be Here Now” and of course, Eckhardt Tolle’s “The Power of Now” (made famous by the power of Oprah Winfrey). I’m sure each of you could think of many who speak to this. Then why is it so difficult? Deepak Choprah states that 97% of our thoughts are in the past (even thoughts of the future anticipate what will happen based on the past).

When we are fully in the present moment, it’s amazingly rich and peaceful. I have been reading Oriah Mountain Dreamer’s, “The Call” and she points out that the difficulty lies in our resistance to the reality of impermanence. Everything is always moving and changing – the basic tenant of Continuum being “We do not move, we are movement.”

So to be in the fluid, present moment, we look at the nature of water – always moving, shape shifting and changing depending upon the context – from solid, to fluid to vapour. As I watch the view from the windows of our cabin, I note that while everything I see is changing, it is the water in the ocean that changes and moves rapidly from moment to moment, combined with the air and the wind. I look away and back – it’s different. The other elements – the trees, the rocks, the earth are also changing but albeit so slowly, we can’t capture it with the eye. The creatures I see – the birds, the ducks and the squirrels, are also in constant motion. They fly in, swim in, run into my view and then they’re gone. They, like us, are composed mainly of water – dynamic, alive & moving.

In Continuum, we speak of the influence of our breath on the waters inside of us. Why do we resist these organic, biological rhythms and movements of change and cling so tenaciously to what is familiar, even if it is something we hate, are bored with, or cause us incredible pain??

When I first came to our island cabin for two weeks in April, I realized quite soon that my experience this time was quite different from the month I spent here in January. For one obvious reason, I had a whole month compared to two weeks. For another, there were many “to-dos” at the cabin this time – carpenter ants to be dealt with, hydro poles needing replacement, details to be attended to with the subdivision we are planning and so on and so forth it goes.

And Yes, it is spring and January was in winter, in the composting, hibernating time, while spring is beginnings, what was hibernating coming awake, alive and needing to be tended to.

The difference – in January, I became more immersed in and attentive to the spiritual and creative parts of myself, culminating in the deep, dropped down, slowed down and aware state, where, for example, my compulsive eating habits disappeared. I was aware of being hungry, enjoying what I ate and then completely stopping because I was full, no matter what was left on my plate. I even could have a half of a square of chocolate and put the rest back because I didn’t want it. For someone who’s been a compulsive eater since 13 years of age, this was an amazing, freeing and empowering example of how I was in touch with my needs.

During the month of January, I rested a lot, I read a lot, I meditated through Continuum & sitting for 20 minutes a day, I watched my beautiful ocean view with the diving winter ducks on the water, I had periods of days Continuum silence, I exercised every day, went for short walks, I played with painting & collage & photograph and some writing. I attended to the fire (a constant in January) and so on. But mainly, I practiced following impulse and watching my response both physically and emotionally without judgment but with love and compassion and curiosity. I practiced a loving, curious attentiveness towards myself and the situation I was in.

The overall result was totally amazing! I have never felt so peaceful, so rested, so alive, so connected to myself and other. The difference was obvious to myself as well as to others. A side benefit was that I also began to feel stronger physically and more energized.

Returning home in February after a horrendous snow storm where my neighbour had to tow my car out of the driveway, I realized that the intensity of this period would diminish but not disappear as I reentered my life (but not my work) in the city. I needed to put into practice (and still do) all the things I’ve learned over the years of exploration and to trust what I know. I am so grateful for the gifts and the resources that I have accumulated from various teachers and processes and to my community of friends, family and colleagues who support me and I them.

Even though I was alone most of the time in January, I never felt alone. When we drop down and surrender deeply into silent awareness, under the emptiness, we find the fullness of being connected to self (body, soul and spirit), to our community and to our planet and universe. So I feel at all times (well, mostly) that my loved ones are with me, like microtubules supporting the skeleton of my being.

These are the main practices that I carry with me:
(1)the loving & curious attentiveness while following impulse. It is important to learn to be still enough to really feel the impulse and to move & follow it while staying attentive to self and other (context), rather than moving from habit. However, if it is a habitual impulse to move (so much is) it is important to still follow it with loving, curious attention. Soon, you will begin to learn the difference from your response, physically, energetically and emotionally.

(2)to trust myself and practice what I know now, rather than searching the next “goodie” – method, book, workshop, job, relationship, etc.

(3)to never feel alone (I never am anyway – I am intrinsically interconnected and held by my larger “Self”) and to make use of my community of friends and family—to reach out when I’m needy (having the health problems I’ve had in the last few years, especially during my surgeries has helped me to learn the benefits of receiving as well as giving).

So here I am, in a good place at the end of these two weeks of retreat and reflection, and in a different place from the end of my retreat in January. “It’s all good.” And so it is much about knowing when and for how long one needs to withdraw from our busy lives, to tap into those inner resources, to that rich inner life that we have denied ourselves so much of our life. It’s taken me over 70 years to find the place I’m in now and then to keep finding it anew in each moment which involves letting go, making space for another possibility to come in. Combining this with holding myself as part of the greater whole, the community of beings —-

More letting go – I have sold my condo and will be moving at the end of June. I finally made the decision after many back & forths, finding it difficult to let go of my home that I love. However, once I was able to say, if it is meant to be, it will sell, and if I’m not meant to move it won’t, it sold to the first person who came to see it – we didn’t even have an open house!

So too with my beloved companion of seven years, my cat Emily, I went back and forth with finding a loving home for her, and finally again surrendered – if it was meant to be, it will be. Then a wonderful couple answered my ad on Cortes. They have a lovely 5 acre waterfront property, next to a park – sort of cat heaven! She’s most happy and settled in quickly. “Que sera, sera. Whatever will be, will be.”

We do what we can to invoke, invite the inner wisdom, then let go of expectations and be open to whatever, give it over to the Greater Being, to the Mystery.

With love and blessings, Doris

 

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Spring 2008

Greetings to All! Wonderful to see the buddings on the trees and plants and the warming temperatures to herald the coming of Spring to our part of the earth/planet: hibernation time opening to new seedings, new visions & dreams!

Wanted to let you know about two opportunities in our area, to work with the amazing “Miss Em” (as she is affectionately known to those of us who love her & revere her visionary teaching) – Emilie Conrad, Continuum’s founder. Please contact Doris Mosler (not me) for further information and registration: dhmosler@aol.com or 206-782-0120.

She will also be at Hollyhock this summer for those of you yearning to attend a residential retreat with Emilie at this very well-run centre on Cortes Island. Dates: August 24-29, 2008, Moving Medicine with Emilie Conrad. For further information & registration: registration@hollyhock.ca or 1-800-933-6339, www.hollyhock.ca.

With love & blessings, Doris

____________________________________________________________________________________________________

NEWSLETTER WINTER/SPRING 2008

Once again, it is the darkest time of the year and we are on the verge of the returning light at Solstice. I sit here with an ever settling feeling in my solar plexus, anticipating and planning for the six months personal retreat I will be beginning on New Year’s Eve as I travel up to our cabin on Cortes Island. I will spend the month of January there hopefully learning to quiet even more the noise in my system and listen to the rhythm and music and dance going on within.

For some time now, especially since my 70th birthday, I have been drawn to making some space for myself with no scheduling – wiping the slate as clear as possible to see what else may emerge. This feels like a hugh experiment, a major letting go of the work that has sustained me. Sharing and collaborating with each soul’s journey with my clients and with the participants in my Continuum classes & workshops has given me much joy and fulfillment over the past years. It is scary to let go of all of that for this period and it is also scary to have no income except for my pension!

What will the outcome be? I have no idea and no expectations. I enter into the mystery of not knowing what will emerge. Maybe nothing, or at least nothing new or earth-shattering. And then again, I may uncover some new piece of how to process my own personal health issues and some shifting in how or what I am focusing on in my work, in what I have to contribute to the world. We shall see.

In this endeavour, I ask for you to keep me in your thoughts & prayers as I will also hold you, the movement community in Vancouver.

When I return to Vancouver, on the second weekend in February, I will be attending, with much appreciation, the workshop of one of my most beloved and revered mentors & colleagues, Susan Harper. I hope to see some of you there.

Some of us in the Continuum community have also talked of perhaps holding a Continuum practice group in Vancouver. Let me know in February if you are interested. I will be out of email contact for the month of January.

Penny Allport, Continuum teacher in Steveston and the Sunshine Coast, will also be teaching during this time. You can check her newsletter @ www.swarainspiritations.ca.

In closing, I want to share with you a poem by Dawna Markova,

“The Gift”
I will not die an unlived life.
I will not live in fear
of falling or catching fire.
I choose to inhabit my days,
to allow my living to open me,
to make me less afraid,
more accessible,
to loosen my heart
until it becomes a wing,
a torch, a promise.
I choose to risk my significance;
to live so that which came to me as seed
goes to the next as blossom,
and that which came to be as blossom,
goes on as fruit.

December 17, 2007 With love & blessings,

Doris

 

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Newsletter Fall 2007

Such a strange juxtaposition! So much of what I am learning is how to be in the present moment with its sensate richness and yet here I am planning and sending out my fall schedule. Such a dance, such a balancing act and both are necessary in order to be in this world.

Spontaneity and spontaneous moments – dropping down, letting go, emptying out, clearing the slate and waiting for the true impulse to arise from deep in the organism, a place that isn’t from an habitual learned mode, that isn’t coerced by a need to please or appease another – that’s the magic.

In the summer retreat day, as people were expressing how beneficial it is to move and be in this way with others, the question arose, “How does one keep this going, how to access this in our world that doesn’t recognize slowing down, organic responses and how to express ourselves from that place. In fact, our world seems to act in so many ways that are opposed to this – speeded up, disconnected from our bodies and from the somatic world. We are influenced by the field and the context in which we live. In fact, we are in relationship, self to other all the time.

In the book I’ve just read by Victor Chan about his journeys with the Dalai Lama, “The Wisdom of Forgiveness,” he speaks to the Dalai Lama’s interpretation of emptiness and in my understanding, it has to do with being in relationship and interconnected, so that there is no “I”, no centre – it’s empty!. This also resonates with Hubert Goddard’s vision. There is no centre, no “Who I am” – there is only “Where I am” – the relationship with other. The polarities, the orientation to ground and space and how we perceive creates and fills in what’s between, again an emptiness, always moving and changing.

Back to our question of how to maintain and access our deeper, inner organic connection to our outer world, I would suggest the following. As one practices and spends time in this realm, it gets more attractive than the habitual, cultural modes, so we begin to prefer it. In this way of being and expressing one is much more connected to and resonating with the organic levels of movement in the field, in the universe. So not only does our world affect us, we affect it!

In the words of Marianne Williamson, from Nelson Mandala’s inaugural speech, “ It is our light not our darkness that most frightens us…You’re playing small does not serve the world….We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us…and as we let our light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others.”

Except for a few beings, there is no such thing as being enlightened all the time. You lose it, you find it and with practice your ability to find it gets sharper and quicker. It is cumulative and in the resonating we tune into the micro-tubules of others who are moving/sensing in these ways. The field becomes enhanced and richer. As Jesus said, “When two or more are gathered—-“

With love & blessings, Doris

 

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Summer 2007

SUMMER GREETINGS! Summertime! When the living is easy!!! This time it really feels like summer. so amazing to feel the heat from the hot sun and the wonderful warm evenings that these hot days bring about, with the still long days of light extending the evening bliss. Sloooowing down even more as people who live in hot climates realize. Moving fast when it’s hot is just not comfortable! Time to spend outdoors, swimming in the ocean, walking the beaches and paths in the woods, taking in the full blooming of the summer plants and trees, sitting in the evening with a good book and a cool drink by your side.

Offering for the summer season: RETREAT DAY @ SOURCE POINT STUDIO, 3263 Heather St., between W16 & W17. SUNDAY JULY 29, 12-5pm. Investment: Sliding scale: $55-$75. Through Continuum’s intricate sound sequences accompanied by movement explorations, we connect to our inner, dynamic fluid selves. We inculcate environments designed to elicit new creative responses, like a “movement tour,” expanding our range of interaction and encouage new “plays” within our bodies and with the environment. We will interweave this creative sourcing into the play of our dreams and dreamtime images, ritual and expressive arts. THEME – Exploring the elements from within and connecting to “other” – how does the eros of water, fire, air and earth interact in the space, in the ordinary space of our lives and in the extraordinary spaces in our dreamtime world and in our creative expressions. Is there a carryover, a leaning and a gleaning from one to the other or do they remain fragmented, separate? We will explore how to bring them together and enrich our souls and our lives.

Emilie Conrad’s book, Life on Land, The Story of Continuum, is here at last! I am almost through my copy and am so moved by Emilie’s heart and gut wrenching telling of her life, her visions and how Continuum Movement came about through all of this. It’s an amazing story. She even has included in one of the Appendices, a Continuum practicuum for those of you who have been hungering for a written exposition of some of the Continuum processes. For more information and reviews: www.continuummovement.com/LifeonLand. Also just released by Bonnie Gintis, DO,Engaging the Movement of Life, Exploring Health and Embodiment Through Osteopathy and Continuum. Both books are being carried by Banyen Books in Vancouver.

With the lack of a weekly class schedule, I intend on luxurating in more free and easy time this summer. However, I am looking forward to attending a week long workshop on basics of “Portals of Perception” in July at Edenvale with Hubert Goddard and Susan Harper and the one-day workshop with Caryn McHose, author of “How Life Moves” and assistant to Hubert in his workshops. We have been exploring some of the exciting sequences from that book in my classes this year. And another state of bliss, in August I have booked our waterfront cabin on Cortes Island for a week. I was there for 5 days in June following my 70th birthday celebration and was once again carried so quickly into the deep peace that that heavenly place engenders in my psyche and soul.

Re fall classes and workshop: I am once again on the hunt for appropriate and reasonable rental spaces especially for evenings and weekends. I would really appreciate your letting me know if you have any ideas of spaces for me to check out.

Closing with excerpts of a birthday poem sent to me by Susan Harper, I extend these prayers to you:

May you work well and nest in the earth’s lap of belonging
May there always be a coin or two in your pocket.
May you dance wildly and know courage in the face of fear.
May you find your root voice and may your unique song
fill the air as clouds stream through the mountains.
May you rest in the vastness of spce and the depths of silence.

…may gentle spring and summer winds ripen what grows in your fields.

With love & blessings, Doris

 

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Spring 2007

Greetings to All!

Enjoy the budding of new life, the exquisitely rich colours of our blossoming trees and participate with your own budding of yearnings and desires within.     It is time to dream new visions, new possibilities, new buds from the pruning and letting go of the branches that were leaking out old energies and stifling the new growth which is pressing to come into being.

The schedule page now has the spring schedule of Continuum classes and workshops in Vancouver and also Emilie Conrad’s workshop in Seattle in June.      Please note the opportunities to get a free introduction to Continuum:    May 3 through Banyen on the occasion of the publication of Emilie Conrad’s book and two free introductory classes the morning & evening of April 25th.    The Summer Newsletter will be coming out later.   Usually I do not have ongoing classes in the summer but last year because of requests, held a small class in the morning.     Please let me know if you are interested in an ongoing summer class and if you are, what time of day or day of the week would work for you.     In addition, I will schedule one or two Retreat Days in the summer.    The last two retreat days have been well attended and received and I find them creative, stimulating and rewarding both for myself and for the participants.

With love & blessings, Doris

 

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Continuum Vancouver – Newsletter Winter/Spring 2007

For many years, I have attended a retreat at the beginning of a new year, usually a Continuum depth retreat in California with Emilie Conrad & Susan Harper.    It is auspicious to begin the new year, dropping down in a community, attending to sensation, following impulse moment to moment, to move, to sound, to explore, to dream, to reflect, to play and to pray.   This year, I decided to take the opportunity to spend a week over new year’s at our waterfront cabin on Cortes Island.  I wanted to give myself an opportunity to attend in my own way to the silence and quiet that is so persuasive in that incredibly beautiful place, to explore and tune into other sentient beings and to follow my own impulses and dreams.    During the week, although there were difficult times, I ended up feeling quiet, restored, lightened and so very sloooowed down.    I offer you this piece, my Ode to Slowness.

Slowing down is not just an outward, physical event, but also an internal one, to a point of the most minimal breath I can take.    To be truly resonant and participate with the biological rhythms around us, one has to slow way down.   “The Earth and the human body have a resonance that links us in a biological field that is different than the technological world.”

The view of separateness prevalent in our culture, possibly creates all the problems in the world.  It leads to a fragmented world view and destructive behaviour.   Children are our canaries and the age at which violent behaviour is emerging is getting younger and younger.    Damasio, a prominent neuro  scientist,  states that research shows the brains of children are changing, specifically the disconnection between the neo cortex and the emotional and sensory areas.  In reality, everything in the universe is interconnected, as quantum physics so clearly articulates.  To restore that sense of interconnectedness, we also need to slow down so we can enter into a state of mutual resonance.

The process of slowing down, attuning to the silence and natural rhythms was enhanced by my being on Cortes Island.  Seeing the old year out and the new year in, the setting of the sun and the rising of the full moon, the birds flying over the water, their shadow reflected on the ocean, the ducks in their V-formation gliding along, the ever-changing patterns of the wind on the lakelike ocean that is Gorge Harbour, the amazing changes in the weather from sunny, peaceful and still to gales of wind and rain pouring out of the heavens.

From “Red,” Terry Tempest Williams says,

“it takes time to slow down and recover a rhythm in my heart that moves my body first and my mind second.”  “There is no such thing as wasting time.”  “Time is something encountered through the senses not imposed upon the mind.”   “What we know…is translated through the body,” leaving “our minds free to wander” and to wonder, allowing new possibilities to emerge.  “Space is the twin sister of time.”  When we slow down, the shape of time and space shifts, spaciousness enters our realm and there is time “to breath, to dream, to dare, to play, to pray, to move freely, so freely, in a world our minds have forgotten, but our bodies remember.”

How do I translate this, carry this emergence back to city life?  It is in a practice, in making time for that remembering.   If you want a plant to grow, you have to attend to it and nurture it, give it what it needs.  So too this seed we plant within ourselves.   It is also very helpful to practice in a group on a regular basis, to be in the resonant field, amplifying my individual experience.   It is the reason why I keep teaching ongoing classes (for my sake as much as the participants).   And yes, take the opportunity to spend time (if you can, at least a week) in wilderness, in a natural setting.

With love and blessings for the new year,    Doris

 

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Continuum Vancouver – Newsletter Fall 2006

For the past couple of weeks, I have been pondering upon a theme for this newsletter.   Then I had some news a few days ago which I am inspired to share with you and which provide a theme!    A few days ago, I learned that the engineers’ report on our complex had come in at $41 Million dollars to repair the buildings in the apartment complex where I live.   It may also be that the land will be sold to a developer who will buy us out (at a reduced rate from market value of course) and all the buildings will be torn down.   In either case, it means losing a great deal of financial security I had by purchasing my condo plus perhaps losing my home, maybe even having to move from Vancouver.    This news has certainly rocked my security boat and left me feeling overwhelmed, particularly coming so soon after my second hip surgery.

Things happen – a friend of mine was merrily going along in her life; everything was great.    Then coming home from a walk in the country last spring, she was run over by a marathon cyclist, and is now recovering from multiple fractures in one leg and arm.

Sometimes it is so difficult to see the meaning in these situations.

In my experience, one tends to move into coping and survival strategies (which definitely have their place.)   However, the question is:  How can we move through these events in a “response able” way, keeping our hearts & minds open to possibilities, how attend to the vulnerability as well as the calm eye in the heart of the storm in our core and stay with our creative and spiritual resources that we have been cultivating in our lives.   These difficulties do provide “grist for the mill.”    (Sometimes I could use a little less “grist!” )

Let’s see how we can move from the grist into “a dance born from the ability to dream.”    (Connie May Fowler, River of Hidden Dreams)

Emilie Conrad speaks of the importance of learning “adaptability” so that our organism develops the ability to respond to external events in our lives and in the environment, that this denotes a high level of intelligence.  My first Yoga teacher, Joel Kramer, defined “responsibility” as “able to respond.”   As he said, we can’t do much about what comes to us, but we can in our response to these occurrences.

I have faith that this situation will be resolved for me and the learning and the meaning will come.   Even though I’m not looking forward to going through the process, I know I will call on my internal resources as well as my external resources, which includes my family, friends and you in the community of which I am a part.     I am grateful  for you all being in my life, sharing in the journey.

With love & blessings,                                              Doris

 

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Summer 2006

Life presents us with many challenges. Recently, I chose the quote on my email signature to convey some of my thoughts on this: “There are two ways to meet difficulties: you alter the difficulties or you alter yourself to meet them.” Phyllis Bottome. Someone once asked me what the goal of Continuum is. My response was, “If there is a goal (having difficulty with the word “goal”) it would be adaptability, enhancing your ability to respond to any situation that presents itself to you. In Somatic Experiencing, we refer to resiliency – enhancing and restoring resiliency in order for self-organization and coherence to flow throughout our body systems. In order to do this, we sometimes have to deal with what Michael Meade calls the Second Agreement, i.e., our adaptations (for survival & to fit in) to our families & culture. In his recent talk in Vancouver on Fate & Destiny, Michael stated that in order to arrive at and reclaim our First Agreement, i.e., our true destiny, the one we were born to live for, we must clear out what is getting in our way in terms of the Second Agreement, which is where therapy and growth processes can assist. Of course, there is always the danger of getting stuck there & exiting out of our lives, still clinging to issues in our families. I bring a Balinese statue of Saraswati to my teaching altars as a Balinese healer told me that she is the one who helps you find your own true path.

During my 12 days of a Continuum retreat in January, I finally got that even though difficulties present themselves both to myself and to others in my community of family & friends, no matter how challenging, it is still possible to maintain a hibernative state within oneself. Yes, at times, I flip out, get hooked into associative memories from the past, yet I return to that place within of peace and calm. It feels like I am pregnant with that inner hibernative state and the more I attend to and nuture it, the more it grows and I carry it with me. Cultivating this state within, I am about to undergo surgery for my other hip replacement this coming Monday. I have been advised to allow one year for the soft tissue & nerves to heal. So, I am planning to have a 70th Birthday celebration in June 2007. We will rent a hall & DANCE! I am so looking forward to that. I ask for your prayers and heartfelt thoughts to be with me on Monday. Practically speaking, this means that there will not be any Continuum teaching in

Vancouver this summer (possibly a retreat day in August if all goes well with my healing). Penny Allport has Continuum classes & workshops in the summer (www.swarainspiritations.ca) so please check into her offerings . I look forward to moving with you again in the fall.

With love & blessings for a glorious summer,   Doris May 14th, 2006

 

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Newsletter – Winter/Spring 2006

While preparing for my Retreat Day in December, I listened to a tape I had recorded of a talk by Michael Meade in 1994, entitled “Standing at the Threshold.” Michael was speaking of the upcoming millennium. It led me to consider the relationship of beginnings and endings and how the ending contains the seeds of the new beginning.

We are now approaching the ending of 2005 and the beginning of 2006. We are also entering into the beginning of the returning of the light from the time of darkness. Each moment we are saying farewell to one aspect and greeting another. Our lives are full of events and relationships going and coming, coming and going. At the extreme of this, we are born and we die, the two major bookcases of our lives.

Every organism in the universe is constantly in this dance of renewal, of dissolving and reforming into something new.And yet, for some obscure reason, we are so often reluctant to enter into this contantly changing milieu. We resist change, even when we desparately want to rid ourselves of some quality in our personality, a job or relationship that is no longer nuturing or enabling us to grow creatively, in fact, is downright toxic.

I have constantly puzzled upon this seemingly incongruous dichotomy. It was only when I was in my Somatic Experiencing training, that this began to make sense. We cling to these aspects because in some way they are incomplete in our psyche and our bodies (nervous system especially.) They are not resolved and so they keep us “stuck,” like a child who keeps calling out “Pay attention to me.” I find it amazing that in the simple act of “paying attention,” without judgment or demands, with love and attention, things began to shift and change and flow again.This is the process of “open attention” in Continuum. Shift does happen and in the shifting sands, we move “from fixidity to flow.”

It was with pleasure and awe, that I facilitated the rituals of the endings of my classes this fall and the retreat day in December. For many of us, the simple act of attending is much enhanced by enacting out a ritual in a community setting.

Upon reading Deena Metzger’s book, Entering the Ghost River, I was struck by her definition of “ritual.” For Deena, a “ritual” is the act of preparing oneself, in order to come to the doorway (or threshold). The ritual itself does not enact the change or the transformation. Once at the doorway, we surrender to what Deena calls “the Spirits” and what I would call the “Larger Self,” the innate, organic wisdom and intelligence.

We prepare ourselves, we invite and invoke this innate, organic intelligence of the fluid system in the processes of Continuum. Then we surrender and let this larger beingness take us over, letting go of personality and identity. In this sense, so much of what we enter into in the Continuum processes and in therapy, is really ritual.

And so, I invite you to consider as you stand on the threshold of this coming year, what is passing in your life and out of that seeding from the composting of the dark time just ending, what is emerging in your life right now.What would your life be like for this new seed to emerge and what does it need to grow and prosper? What do you need to let go of for this to happen? How do you want this enacted and witnessed?

With love and blessings for many fruitful endings and beginnings,

Doris

 

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