Walking the Buddha’s path to freedom: five-day study and practice retreat 2022
Event description
The seven factors for Awakening on the Buddha’s Path to Freedom
The Seven Factors for Awakening provide a pathway to the goal of spiritual practice: complete enlightenment. The Seven Factors are: Mindfulness, Investigation of States, Energy, Joy, Tranquility, Concentration and Equanimity.
The cultivation of these Factors also gives a way of discerning in the here-and-now what is needed in response to our moment-to-moment experience. The Factors enable us to upright our hearts in the present moment and establish a conducive relationship to whatever is arising.
Mindfulness is the primary Faculty, practised throughout. From this foundation of mindfulness we learn how to balance the restless, anxious mind (cultivating the factors of Tranquility, Concentration and Equanimity) and the flat, dull mind (cultivating the factors of Investigation of States, Energy and Joy).
When these Seven Factors are all present the mind settles into its natural state of pure unalloyed awareness, free of suffering.
This five-day dharma study and practice retreat offers an opportunity to explore and develop this primary framework in the Buddha’s teaching.
The retreat will be grounded in noble silence, to support your deepening understanding and integration.
The schedule includes:
- shared enquiry into core texts and teachings;
- guided and silent sitting and walking meditation;
- relational practice, contemplating together in pairs and small groups;
- optional individual meetings with the teachers; and
- a period of optional, gentle mindful movement.
This retreat is best suited to people with an established insight meditation or mindfulness practice.
Teachers:
Willa Thaniya Reid trained in the Thai Forest Tradition of Ajahn Chah, which harmonises with her affinity for the natural world and for reflective practice grounded in the Buddha’s suttas. She was a monastic for 18 years, eight years as senior nun of Cittaviveka. She teaches internationally and is based in New Zealand, where she co-founded with Elizabeth a center for Dhamma enquiry in Kihikihi. She has a Masters of Counselling, and clinical pastoral training.
Dr Elizabeth Day trained as a buddhist monastic within the lineage of the Thai Forest Sangha. She is committed to presenting the clarity of the core Buddhist teachings, and bringing these alive for minds shaped by contemporary democratic paradigms. Elizabeth co-founded a centre for Dhamma practice in Kihikihi, New Zealand with Willa, and teaches retreats in NZ and the USA. She has a PhD in phenomenology and inter-subjectivity; practices relational Gestalt psychotherapy; and is a senior academic in universities in New Zealand and Australia.
Jill Shepherd began practicing insight meditation in Thailand in 1999, and since that time has lived and worked at several meditation centres and monasteries in the US, Australia, England, and Thailand. She recently spent seven years on staff at the Insight Meditation Society (IMS) in Barre, Massachusetts, and is a graduate of the IMS / Spirit Rock teacher training program in the US, under the guidance of Joseph Goldstein and Gil Fronsdal.
Retreat practicalities
Ethical Conduct: A core aspect of the Buddha’s teaching is the importance of living by ethical guidelines known as the Five Training Precepts. While on retreat, all participants are expected to undertake these extended guidelines:
1. To refrain from harming any living beings – not to kill or intentionally hurt any person or creature.
2. To refrain from taking what is not freely given – not to steal or 'borrow' without the consent of the giver, and to accept what is offered.
3. To abstain from sexual activity during the retreat.
4. To practice Noble Silence and to refrain from harming by one's speech – not to lie, gossip or use harsh or hurtful language, and not to use mobile phones, laptops and other electronic devices during the retreat.
5. To abstain from using alcohol, recreational drugs and other intoxicants that cloud the mind and harm the body. (This does not apply to prescription medicines.)
Accommodation: Rooms are all single rooms
Food: The centre will provide simple vegetarian meals for the retreat. Please indicate on the registration form if you have any food allergies or medical dietary needs.
Mobile phones: In support of your own and others' meditation practice, please don’t use mobile phones or any other electronic devices during the retreat.
In the event of an emergency, family members or friends can call the St Francis retreat centre on 09 625 6651
Covid policy: All staff and guests at the St Francis Retreat Centre are required be fully vaccinated. You will need to provide a copy of your My Vaccine Pass to the group organiser prior to coming to St Francis and your registration is not confirmed until this has been received.
Retreat fees: sliding scale $850-$650 + dāna*
Supporter rate $850 - Slightly more than actual-cost ticket: covers cost of food and accommodation, a contribution to the teacher's travel costs, and a contribution to scholarships for low-income attendees
Actual cost $750 - Actual-cost ticket covers cost of food and accommodation, and a small contribution to the teacher's travel costs
Subsidised $650 - Below cost ticket: covers a contribution towards cost of food and accommodation only
The retreat fee covers only the cost of food and accommodation, plus a small contribution to the teachers' travel costs. The teaching is freely offered, and there will be an opportunity to give dāna* to the teachers at the end of the retreat.
To reserve a place on the retreat, you will need to pay a deposit of $100 through Humanitix. The balance of the retreat payment is due one week after registering with Humanitix. Account details for balance payments will be included on your Humanitix confirmation email.
Cancellation policy:
The retreat fee is refundable - minus an administration fee - up to one month before the retreat begins.
If you cancel after that time, the retreat cost will be forfeited and used to help subsidise low-income tickets.
If we have to cancel the retreat because of Covid-19, you will get a full refund.
*Dāna: In most Buddhist traditions the teachers are not paid to teach. Instead, the teachings are given on a dāna basis – dāna being the Pali word for generosity or giving freely – so there will be an opportunity to offer a donation for the teaching at the end of the event.
Tickets for good, not greed Humanitix dedicates 100% of profits from booking fees to charity