Buddhist Psychology: Jan 2025

Retreats

Since ancient times, all wise cultures have understood the value of retreat. Time in retreat allows us to step out of the complexity of our life and to listen deeply to our body, heart, and mind.

For 2,600 years, meditation retreats have been a central part of the Buddhist path of awakening. Retreats offer practical instruction and group support for discovering inner peace, deep understanding, and liberation.

Spirit Rock retreats combine the fertile atmosphere of silence with extensive time for meditation and walks in nature, supported by Buddhist teachings on meditation, well-being, and the path to liberation. Careful guidance and training is also offered in meditation and mindfulness. Most of our retreats are suitable for both new and more experienced meditation practitioners.

Spirit Rock offers retreats of one day to two months on our campus of over 400 acres in picturesque Marin County, California, and conveniently online, supporting practitioners around the world to deepen their practice in connection with saṅgha (spiritual community) and teachers. We are grateful to be open and practicing together again, with protective Covid-19 Safety Protocols in place.

On-Land Retreats

A retreat provides an opportunity and a caring container for undertaking deep meditation and spiritual exploration. The central practice is mindfulness, which enables us to discover a freedom of heart in the midst of all the difficulties of life. Mindfulness practice on retreat is often accompanied and complemented by training in lovingkindness (mettā) meditation.

Spirit Rock on-land retreats involve a gathering of around 30 to 100 or more participants. Most of the retreat is held in silence, and retreat participants do not speak to one another. Writing and reading are also discouraged, so that retreatants can better stay with their own present experience as it unfolds moment to moment. In this silent and mindful environment, awareness sharpens, the body quiets, the mind clears, and space opens for insight and understanding to unfold.

Learn More About The Experience Of Retreat

Retreat On-Land

Saturday, November 30 10:00 AM - 4:00 PM

Equanimity: Finding Balance in Difficult Times 

Equanimity, or upekkha, is a highly valued quality in Buddhist teachings. It is a Divine Abode, a Factor of Enlightenment, and the precursor to the experience of awakening. But what is equanimity? How can we cultivate and access it in our daily life, especially in times of uncertainty, fear, and sadness for the suffering in the world? Explore these contemplations during this daylong retreat, which will include meditation instructions, periods of silent sitting and walking meditation, and Dharma talks.

James Baraz

James Baraz

Retreat On-Land

December 1 - December 7, 2024 Sunday - Saturday | 6 nights

In the Presence of Love: A Mettā & Qigong Retreat

Join the waitlist. This retreat focuses on cultivating lovingkindness (mettā in Pāli), infusing our hearts, minds, and bodies with a strong, caring wisdom. Lovingkindness practices open the heart, allow a kind embrace of ourselves, and connect us intimately with all of life. Qigong—a practice of aligning breath, movement, and awareness—perfectly complements traditional sitting meditation practice and has a well-established connection to contemplative traditions. On this retreat, lovingkindness practices will be supported by guided instruction as well as Qigong, meditation, and meetings with teachers.

Vinny Ferraro

Vinny Ferraro

Teja Bell

Teja Bell

Leslie Booker

Leslie Booker

Retreat On-Land

December 7 - December 8, 2024 Saturday - Sunday | 10:00 AM - 3:00 PM

Living in the Mystery: How to Practice with Uncertainty 

A sense of certainty allows us to feel that there's solid ground beneath us, yet every form of comfort rests on an unreliable foundation. Confronting the reality of instability can evoke fear, anxiety, and grief. The teachings remind us that liberation arises from a true understanding of the Three Marks of Existence: impermanence or Change (anicca); suffering or unsatisfactoriness (dukkha); and not-self or insubstantiality (anattā). In this retreat we will explore these teachings through Dharma talks, group discussions, and meditations.

JoAnna Hardy

JoAnna Hardy

Leslie Booker

Leslie Booker

Retreat On-Land

December 8 - December 18, 2024 Sunday - Wednesday | 10 nights

December Insight Retreat: Cultivating Calm, Contentment, and Confidence

Spaces Available. In this retreat, we tend to the three qualities of stability, well-being, and confidence, all of which support insight into the three characteristics of existence. Then we explore and befriend these characteristics—namely, aniccā (impermanence, inconstancy), dukkha (stress, unsatisfactoriness, suffering) and anattā (not-self, impersonality, ungovernability)—in our own lived experience. When we understand and make peace with these characteristics, we have more ease, compassion, and freedom in our lives, and we can be of more benefit to ourselves, others, and the world.

Nikki Mirghafori

Nikki Mirghafori

Tuere Sala

Tuere Sala

Rachel Lewis

Rachel Lewis

Sylvia Boorstein

Sylvia Boorstein

Mei Elliott

Mei Elliott

Isabelle Frenette

Isabelle Frenette

Retreat On-Land

Saturday, December 14 10:00 AM - 3:00 PM

Loving the House That Ego Built: Mindful Self-Awareness Practices 

During this daylong retreat we will explore the nature of ego and the enormous stress that comes with trying to be “someone.” With Insight Meditation, we can make peace with our various self views. In sitting and walking meditation, supported by instructions and Dharma talks, we will cultivate embodied presence. We will use the healing tools of mindfulness and lovingkindness to meet the activity of self with balance and openness, perhaps even learning to love the “house that ego built.”

Howard Cohn

Howard Cohn

Online Retreats

Online retreat is a powerful new experience of mindfulness practice, bringing together the immersive approach of our traditional meditation retreats with the daily life integration of practicing at home. In our online retreats, you join with the teachers and community on Zoom each day for meditation, instruction, discussion, movement, and small group support. You’ll follow a gentle self-guided schedule between sessions in a way that is flexible and integrated into your day.

Online retreats offer accessibility to practitioners worldwide, those who are unable to attend a retreat on the land, and dedicated practitioners between longer retreats or trainings. They are a beautiful, personal way to explore bringing focused mindfulness and meditation practice into everyday life, and to enjoy the deep rest and restoration of retreat without leaving your home.

Retreat Online

November 23 - November 24, 2024 Saturday - Sunday | 10:00 AM - 4:00 PM

Hidden in Full View: The Shared Heart of Spiritual Teachings and Practices

In stating “My religion is kindness,” the Dalai Lama highlighted universal principles of ethics, wisdom, and goodness that transcend any particular religion. Throughout this retreat, we’ll combine Buddhist teachings and practices to develop wisdom, ethics, and the awakened heart with various perspectives from other spiritual traditions. In doing so, we’ll connect with universal principles that can be expressed in ordinary, everyday language. Our time together will include meditation, talks and dialogue between Donald and Sylvia, and small- and large-group discussions.

Donald Rothberg

Donald Rothberg

Sylvia Boorstein

Sylvia Boorstein

Retreat Online

Saturday, November 30 10:00 AM - 4:00 PM

Equanimity: Finding Balance in Difficult Times 

Equanimity, or upekkha, is a highly valued quality in Buddhist teachings. It is a Divine Abode, a Factor of Enlightenment, and the precursor to the experience of awakening. But what is equanimity? How can we cultivate and access it in our daily life, especially in times of uncertainty, fear, and sadness for the suffering in the world? Explore these contemplations during this daylong retreat, which will include meditation instructions, periods of silent sitting and walking meditation, and Dharma talks.

James Baraz

James Baraz

Retreat Online

Sunday, December 1 9:30 AM - 12:30 PM

Embodying Ease: Resourcing Ourselves with Joy and Stability

In the midst of life’s complexities, it’s more essential than ever to resource ourselves with practices that nurture ease, joy, and stability. Join us for this half-day program to explore how contentment and happiness are not indulgences but foundational to living with resilience and balance. Through guided meditations, including lying down practices, and reflections on key Buddhist teachings, we’ll discover how embracing ease -- in lieu of over-efforting -- can serve as a refuge, supporting a steady mind, an open heart, and a life of greater freedom and peace—for the sake of ourselves and others.

Nikki Mirghafori

Nikki Mirghafori

Retreat Online

December 7 - December 8, 2024 Saturday - Sunday | 10:00 AM - 3:00 PM

Living in the Mystery: How to Practice with Uncertainty

A sense of certainty allows us to feel that there's solid ground beneath us, yet every form of comfort rests on an unreliable foundation. Confronting the reality of instability can evoke fear, anxiety, and grief. The teachings remind us that liberation arises from a true understanding of the Three Marks of Existence: impermanence or Change (anicca); suffering or unsatisfactoriness (dukkha); and not-self or insubstantiality (anattā). In this retreat we will explore these teachings through Dharma talks, group discussions, and meditations.

JoAnna Hardy

JoAnna Hardy

Leslie Booker

Leslie Booker

Retreat Online

Saturday, December 14 10:00 AM - 3:00 PM

Loving the House That Ego Built: Mindful Self-Awareness Practices

4 CE Credits. During this daylong retreat we will explore the nature of ego and the enormous stress that comes with trying to be “someone.” With Insight Meditation, we can make peace with our various self views. In sitting and walking meditation, supported by instructions and Dharma talks, we will cultivate embodied presence. We will use the healing tools of mindfulness and lovingkindness to meet the activity of self with balance and openness, perhaps even learning to love the “house that ego built.”

Howard Cohn

Howard Cohn

Testimonial

I now view my home, my meditation/yoga room, and my home practice completely differently now! It's astonishing how easy this format makes incorporating being on retreat with being a householder.

 
Online Retreat Participant