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The Nature Summit
Biophilic Design: Natural Beauty and the Impact of Green Spaces
Jennifer Walsh
In 2017, Jennifer began creating Back to Nature programs and mindful wellness walks to educate people on the impact and importance of green spaces in our offices, homes, hospitals, schools and cities. Her new walking journal Walk Your Way Calm is a wellness handbook on how to use walking in nature as a potent tool for tackling stress and anxiety. Her website is WalkWithWalsh.com.
NEW 6-WEEK COURSE:
Resilience and Nature
Cultivating Resilience, Joy, and Wonder
through Meditation in Nature
with Mark Coleman
NEW 6-WEEK COURSE:
Resilience and Nature
Cultivating Resilience, Joy, and Wonder
through Meditation in Nature
with Mark Coleman
I developed Awake in the Wild Meditation in Nature practices over decades of leading wilderness meditation retreats and observing the deep peace that people feel when immersed in nature. This Resilience and Nature course reveals how mindfulness in nature supports you to live with a steady presence and peaceful heart in the midst of turbulence conditions.
But these practices are not limited to the “great outdoors”. You can practice meditation in nature anywhere: in your garden, on your balcony, or while simply looking out a window or gazing at a plant in your home. Each practice allows you to connect to the power of nature’s stillness and wisdom.
Throughout this course, you will develop a variety of mindfulness-based nature meditation practices, influenced by ancient wisdom teachings, that train you to be present to your inner and outer experience with clarity and receptivity. They will fortify you with resilience.
Through the program you will explore potent sitting and walking mindfulness practices and techniques that open the mind to insight, open the heart to beauty, and open the sensory body to an interconnection with all life.
Through cultivating awareness outdoors, we learn from nature’s wisdom about the truth of change, inter-connection, and letting go. We will experience how nature evokes beautiful qualities of delight, peace, and open-hearted love – qualities so essential in these times.
This program provides you with daily guidance and inspiration to support you throughout the entirety of the course.
- Two video teachings on nature meditation and resilience
- Two guided sensory-based nature audio meditations
- Two readings and/or reflections from Mark designed to support your practice
Plus, during the course, you will have two opportunities to join Mark on Zoom where he will give teachings, guide meditations, and respond to your questions and reflections.
Course Details
Join Mark on Zoom for two guided meditations, talks, and Q&A sessions to ask questions about relevant aspects of your nature practice. The sessions will be June 20 and June 27 at 6 pm PT | 9 pm ET, and will be recorded for those who are not available to join on Zoom.
Each week you will receive two videos on the week’s theme in nature practice to support you in integrating the teachings into your own practice. Videos will be released on Mondays and Thursdays.
Two audio nature meditations per week, with the exception of one week where three meditations are offered, for you to practice in nature in your own time. Released each Tuesday and Friday during the course.
Mark offers two readings and/or reflections every week, except one week where he offers an extra audio meditation, to support and help deepen your practice. Released Wednesdays and Saturdays.
Schedule: May 30 – July 9, 2023
Live/Zoom Session Dates
Times
Each session with Mark will be held on Zoom.
Both Zoom sessions will be recorded and made available for viewing if you cannot make it live.
Access to All Course Materials through October 31, 2023
Summit
More Details About the Course
Week 1: Grounding & Stabilizing in Breath & Body
The first module we will explore foundational nature-based, sensory awareness meditations. These grounding practices connect us to our bodies, to the body of the earth and to our senses, which link us to life all around us.
The first practice is a Mountain Meditation, which supports you to sense a grounded connection to the earth and can help you find ballast and a rooted steadiness in these changing and challenging times. Sensing the earth in this Mountain Meditation practice is one way to access that wherever you are.
The second practice we will explore is a Stabilizing Breath Practice. The breath connects us with all living breathing life and with all photosynthesizing plants, trees and grasses. It is a practice of receiving life giving oxygen and realizing our connected-ness with all life. The breath gives us both grounding and stability present moment awareness.
Mark will be teaching about the body as a support for presence, embodiment and for keeping us rooted in the living present, rather than being lost in our swirling thoughts and feelings. He will point to how the body is a conduit for accessing calm, stability of presence and peace.
Drawing on the Buddha’s teaching of the Foundations of Mindfulness where he emphasized the primary role of the body in developing mindfulness, Mark will guide you in developing this sense-based orientation, that uses our sensory connection to the natural world through our body and breath.
This begins the exploration of the inter-relationship between our bodies and the body of the earth.
Week 2: Sensory Awareness & Listening Practice
The more we ground in the sensory present the less we are caught up in our thoughts and worries. Nature is by nature restful, calming and not mentally caught up as humans are in anxiety about the future.
By attuning to the senses we wake up to the vitality of the living present. In the first meditation we cultivate Mindful Listening. We open to sounds of birds, rain, wind and animals calling us into the present. The symphony of sounds can be a source of delight, connecting us viscerally to the life around us.
And the sounds of silence, of the night, of crickets and frogs can also attune us into stillness, calm and rest.
Through listening practice we understand one of the principles of nature practice, that it can be done in a relaxed, effortless way and discover how naturally we can abide in present moment awareness.
The second meditation we will explore is an Open Sensory Awareness Practice. Mindfulness meditation generally orient either to a more focused lens of attention or being present with a wide aperture where we take in the fullness of our experience
In sensory awareness practice we learn to abide with a meditative presence present to the rich flow of sensory experience: the vitality of the fresh oxygen we breathe, the rich cacophony of sounds around us, the breeze touching our skin, the fragrance of the air we inhale, the sunlight warming us, and the quality of light dancing everywhere.
With that we feel the natural supportiveness of sensory experience to ground in the present moment. We begin to viscerally understand the changing nature of experience, no two moments being the same. And we begin to open to the delight of this connection with the living world around us.
Week 3: Inclining to Joy & a Beauty Walk
The teaching is oriented around the Buddha’s key phrase – “Whatever the mind (attention) frequently dwells and ponders upon, that becomes the inclination of the mind (and heart).”
The self-awareness that comes with mindfulness practice helps us to notice when our mind and attention is inclined to what is useful or harmful.
The gift of Nature meditation practice is we can learn to train our attention to notice beauty and that which is uplifting to mind and heart.
The first meditation–Inclining to Joy–orients you to pay attention to your inner and outer sensory experience and what allows you to feel positive and what uplifts your heart and mind.
The second is a moving, walking meditation called a Beauty Walk. In this practice we take our practice outdoors and incline our attention to beauty and to whatever brings gladness and delight through attuning to sounds, sensations, sights, smells and the touch of the natural world.
The teaching in this week focuses on how inter-dependent our mind, heart and attention are. It is so easy in times of stress to focus on the negative, to what is broken, wrong, distressing or problematic. Although we need to attend to the challenges in our life, to only give them our attention and not to the other things in our life that are not stressful, leads easily to burn out and contraction.
So, with that understanding and with skillful, mindful intention, we can learn to incline our awareness to that which allows us to feel nourished, grounded, joy. All these qualities are key factors in developing a sustainable resilience in the face of difficulty.
Week 4: Attuning to Impermanence & Meandering Walk Practice
Indigenous cultures have known for millennia that the earth is a profound and perennial teacher. Its teachings are everywhere for those that have eyes and ears to listen.
And with mindfulness practice we can learn to attune to the wisdom that whispers in the breeze or from the flow of the stream.
Impermanence, the eternal truth that everything is changing constantly, is perhaps the most obvious lesson we learn from natural world. No two moments are the same. Indoor living tends to shelter us from this truth.
Being outdoors with awareness we see and hear first-hand this living reality. And as we become more intimate with this experience through a contemplative attentiveness, we see how everything is constantly in flux, being born, growing, flourishing, decaying and dying and renewing.
The more we attune to this the more we come to know this in our bones and live in harmony with this wisdom.
In the Meditation on Transience, we discover this in our moment-to-moment changing sensory experience, that every moment our body, breath, mind, thought, heart and senses are always in flux.
Such orientation allows us to find steadiness in the midst of the inevitable and unpredictable changes in our lives.
In the Meandering Walking Practice we allow ourselves to wander through a landscape and orient to that truth all around us. Meandering meditation also allows us to let our body walk and be drawn to whatever is present in the environment and so brings forth a natural curiosity and grounding connection to the landscape we are in.
Week 5: Fluid River of Awareness Practice & Orienting to Stillness
This week you will explore how Mindfulness in Nature practices are important resources during periods of stress.
Life is like a river, always flowing, changing. It is perennially responsive to the obstacles that lay in its path and forever finding ways to navigate the challenges it encounters on its ever descending path.
In the same way with an open awareness and a non-reactive attention we can learn to become like a river, fluid, and flexible as we in turn charter our own unique path through the challenges in our own lives.
The Fluid River of Awareness Meditation reveals how we can develop a spacious attention that can not only accommodate all experience, but can learn to flow with it in a skillful way. With that attunement it is easier to then find the appropriate response to the moment wherever we are.
Often in times of turmoil, we feel tossed about like the surface of a lake during high winds. In those periods it is easy to feel agitated, and our mind can be a flurry of thoughts while our body experience restlessness and our heart troubled.
Taking refuge in nature during those times, with a contemplative attention can be a great balm during such times.
Nature is rarely stressed and often exudes a calm presence, a deep stillness and a soothing quiet, that is like medicine to our troubled nervous system.
In this Stillness Meditation we learn to attune to stillness around us in nature – in the stability of the earth underfoot, to the calmness of stone, the steadiness of trees in the forest, or the tranquility of the still morning air and the silence of the night.
Orienting to stillness in our environment allows that quality to be evoked within us. And the more we learn to access that quality the easier it is we can invoke that still presence when necessary.
Week 6: Loving Benevolence & Gratitude Practice
Nature is often a place we sense a quality of safety, welcoming, acceptance and non-judgment more than perhaps anywhere else. Because of that, being outdoors in a natural setting can be healing and an important counterpoint to the ways we can judge and reject ourselves or ways we feel hurt and criticized by others.
In the Benevolence Meditation we attune to all the ways we feel loved and cared for by the earth. That may be the way we feel safe and protected in a grove of trees, or warmed by the life-giving sun, or soothed and nourished by gentle rain.
In the same way we also learn to extend our hearts to all the life forms in nature that touch and nourish us. We learn to radiate kindness and love to trees, plants, birds, animals, insects, clouds, mountains, skies and the earth herself. With that, we come to hold all life with a heart as wide as the world.
What arises out of feeling all the ways we are given to, held, inspired and nourished by this earth is often gratitude, a deep appreciation for life that sustains us moment by moment.
In the Gratitude Meditation we learn to extend an appreciative heart to all the life that sustains us. This includes the air we breathe, the sun that warms us, the plants that nourish us, the beauty that inspires us and the rains that hydrate us.
As we reflect on all that we are grateful for in nature we realize that our list is never ending. And in that nature teaches us to be thankful for every moment in every day, which allows us to live with a heart of abundance and joy.