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December 13, 2011 at 9:30 pm #38221
Here is an article on hermit retreats that
was passed on to me by my friend Charlie
(who sometimes posts here).———————
Getting Far, Far Away From It All
By HILARY STOUT
Published: December 2, 2011ON a Friday morning in October Oct. 21, to be exact Mark Trippetti, an advertising consultant from Williamsburg, Brooklyn, surrendered his laptop and iPhone to storage at a remote mountainside center in southern Colorado and prepared to drop out of human contact for a month.
Mark Trippetti of Brooklyn recently was on a 29-day retreat in Colorado.
The previous week he had begun the withdrawal process, leaving word with clients, cutting back his use of technology and giving up caffeine. Before checking out completely, he made one final call to his girlfriend, Jee Chang.
By careful design, Mr. Trippetti would not see or communicate with anyone until Nov. 20. At his spartan cabin he would rise each day at 3 a.m., sip from a thermos of tea that he had made the night before and move straight from his mattress to a cushion for three and a half hours of meditation and mantra recitation.
His days would be built around that, plus chores, repeated reading of some 200 pages of sadhana text and his own thoughts. Worldly necessities like food would be dropped periodically by the retreat centers staff at the end of a path, 75 yards away, to avoid his glimpsing another human being. Bedtime was 10 p.m.
The silent, solo retreat, known as a lerung, is part of the practice of Tibetan Buddhism, a path that Mr. Trippetti, 54, a former advertising executive at J. Walter Thompson and Young & Rubicam, has been following for six years. He says that the effect on him has been profound.
Going into a retreat is really about breaking down the constructs of you, he said. The whole idea is for you to take a very close look at the you you have become in your mind. The you you are in your real mind isnt necessarily the real you.
The idea of going for more than an hour or two without checking some sort of device for a text or e-mail, never mind face-to-face interaction, is unfathomable to many people in the professional world Mr. Trippetti inhabits. But there are overworked, overcommitted professionals in big cities like New York who periodically do just that.
Meditation and retreat centers around the country offer isolated cabins for solitary retreats, often for $25 to $35 a night. At the Karme Choling Shambhala Meditation Center in Barnet, Vt., we have lots of people from New York, busy professionals, said Dorothy Shostak, the retreat master, as well as people from many other walks of life.
Tai Pimputkar, a 33-year-old with a BlackBerry (for work), an iPhone, a consuming job at an investment bank in Stamford, Conn., and work in her off-hours as a psychologist at a community counseling center, went on an eight-day solo retreat at Karme Choling last June. Her 65-hour work weeks gave way to spacious days of meditating, walking and cooking, she said. She found it so worthwhile that she is going back for another eight days starting Dec. 30.
You learn whats healthy for you and what you want to accept into your life and learn what you want to leave behind, she said. I very strongly identified who I wanted in my life and who I didnt want. I came back and took some action.
Extreme retreats, in which participants must cut themselves off from their entire professional and personal worlds for weeks or months (or longer), can cause some friction in marriages and other relationships. One may become a calmer, more sensitive person, but what about the spouse left behind with bickering children and domestic to-do lists?
And there are financial considerations. You either have to be well-off enough to be able to bow out of work for an extended period or be willing to devote vacation time to the pursuit.
But those who have gone on solitary retreats say they feel a draw similar to that felt by a marathoner who has to run, or a writer who has to write: they have to return.
They have to go back when that time of year comes, said Thupten Phuntsok, an ordained Buddhist monk from Staten Island. I call it the calling back.
Still, earthly obligations do intrude. Michael Gordon, the former owner of the Bumble and bumble hair salons, says it was his dream to go on a long retreat, ideally a year, but he has never been able to manage more than a week at a time. I have family and life obligations, he said.
Some retreats are even more extreme. In the mountains of Arizona, 39 people are in the early stages of a three-year silent retreat at a center called Diamond Mountain. Participants (who, for obvious reasons, cannot be interviewed) include a college professor from New York and a former American Airlines pilot.
This was Mr. Trippettis third monthlong retreat, and he said he planned to do seven over all, in accordance with a plan drawn up for him by his Buddhist teacher. The first, in February 2010, was life changing, he said.
It was so powerful that I came out of that retreat knowing it was time to shut down the brick-and-mortar aspect of my business, he said. He was referring to Turf, the advertising agency he founded in 2000. Emerging from the retreat, he closed it and started a less-intensive virtual company, MT Inc., working from home or visiting clients onsite. He also moved out of Manhattan to Williamsburg, and started teaching yoga and meditation.
The solitary retreat is a rigorous, disciplined endeavor. The day revolves around four separate sessions of meditation, during which Mr. Trippetti chanted over and over a sentence of 24 words that had been assigned to him. (By the end of the month he had said it the required 110,000 times; he counted them using beads.)
Some people cannot take it.
Ive known people who start and leave after a day, Mr. Gordon said. They just flip.
Mr. Trippetti explained that strange things can happen to the mind when you are stuck with yourself. You can begin to get very flighty and forgetful, a little shaky, he said.
You can get very giddy, he continued, where youre laughing to yourself. No matter how focused you are, crazy thoughts about life back home can intrude. In his latest retreat, Mr. Trippetti found himself worrying that his dog had died.
During his first retreat, Mr. Trippetti said, he battled insomnia and at one point started having difficulty breathing.
I realized what was happening, he said, and began to follow instructions relayed to him by his teachers before he began. I exercised, went for a walk, started eating grilled cheese sandwiches. (Fat- and protein-heavy grounding foods are important, he said.)
Many people go to retreat centers in beautiful places, where carefully placed cabins help enforce the see-no-human rule. But Thupten Phuntsok, a technology consultant to small businesses as well as a Buddhist monk, usually borrows friends homes.
Several years ago he spent three months in solitary retreat at a house lent to him, on a residential street in Howell, N.J. Since worldly distractions like automobiles and neighbors voices could be heard from inside, he laid down a rule for himself: no venturing outside for the entire three months.
If I wanted fresh air, I opened the windows, he said.
Susie Almgren, 55, an actress, and her husband, François-Guy Doré, 58, a doctor, did a weeklong solo retreat at Karme Choling in separate cabins. The couple, who live outside Montreal, spotted each other once, accidentally, while taking midday walks.
I smiled at him and gave him a wide berth, Ms. Almgren said, so intent was she on not breaking the feeling, or the rules. When they first encountered each other again after it was over, she said, we just looked at each other for a long time.
We smiled at each other and nodded, she continued. I think I shed a few tears. Then he said, Its really something, huh? I think he said that three times and I finally answered, Yup. I just didnt want to start chatting about it.
Mr. Trippetti is back in New York now, having emerged from his 29 days in solitude. He said that, in a way, this retreat was the most profound of them all.
Each retreat, I go deeper, he said. The first one made clear to me that I needed to make gross shifts in my life. These last two have become more and more subtle in terms of seeing the issues that I face, as do all beings, in order to separate the true nature of reality from the habituations of my mind.
December 27, 2011 at 5:53 am #38222Very cool article and i agree these retreats are very profound. But it is easier on family life if you can just have a steady meditation reigiem every day, eat supportive food and not drink alcohol/smoke. Easier on your body too… but it is soooo hard!!!
Can’t wait for my next retreat to kickstart another slow n steady daily increment reigiem. But i’m sure once again i can only stay stricly on it for a couple of weeks or so. I still have my slow n steady which finds profoundness expanding into every aspect of my life but those hermit retreats really are fantastic in that when you come back you feel so pure and wonderful.
December 28, 2011 at 9:20 pm #38224While a hermit retreat can and does
oftentimes help to augment a daily regimen,
the real value in one is the isolation.After a period of time in isolation, dark parts
of yourself that have been pushed down and
suppressed come bubbling up. Without your
usual day-to-day living “escape routes”, you
are forced into facing them . . . in full detox.It is about the isolation, the no-communication,
and the silence . . . practices are just what you
do keep you from going crazy and help flush out
the dark parts that rise up.S
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