Our Winter Noble Silence Meditation Retreat Weekend

Our Winter Noble Silence Meditation Retreat Weekend

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We kicked off the 2021 Retreat Season this balmy winter Midwest weekend. I’ve imagined the Winter NSMR weekend as a time of hunkering down with cozy fires as we’re pummeled with thunder snow storms and the open field drifts that can turn Southwest Michigan into a mini arctic this time of year. Instead, after a couple weeks of icy, freezing temps, we dealt with the muddy roads and bright, brilliant skies of a late February thaw. As I’m fond of pointing out, the weather on the outside was secondary to the weather on the inside, which, after several days of silence coupled with deep practice periods, left us all clearer, brighter and partly sunnier. We’ll be hearing from our attendees shortly I’m sure, and all looking forward to our next Spring NSMR, planned for the weekend of April 30th - May 1st, 2021, and soon open for registration.

Our Upcoming Winter Noble Silence Meditation Retreat

Our Upcoming Winter Noble Silence Meditation Retreat

Snow-covered Mt. Humphreys in the San Francisco Peaks above Flagstaff is Arizona’s highest point at 12,633 feet.

Snow-covered Mt. Humphreys in the San Francisco Peaks above Flagstaff is Arizona’s highest point at 12,633 feet.

"The Fall Silent Retreat was challenging in all of the right ways. Abiding in silence came as a relief from the incessant workings of the thinking mind. A sense of inner stillness and presence solidified within me as the weekend progressed. The classes were insightful and inspiring. The long periods of sitting and walking meditation really helped to deepen my meditative practice and carry a sense of inner peace forward into my everyday doings. I highly recommend this retreat experience." - Warmly, Mindy

That’s Mindy’s positive report on the uplift she received during as well as after our Fall Noble Silence Meditation Retreat (NSMR). Retreat is a wonderful time to reconnect and renew, especially during the silence of Winter’s serene season. But you’ll also go home with a new or sharpened set of skills to sustain your psycho-spiritual growth. We’re safely spacing at our Winter Noble Silence Retreat Weekend coming up at the end of this month, Friday February 26th - Sunday, February 28th, with only one spot remaining. With the home fires burning in a couple weeks, consider jumping in and joining us, or watch for The Spring NMSR open for registration afterward. We look forward to seeing you shortly or in the very near future. Toksha

Desert Mushroom Walk

Desert Mushroom Walk

Climbed a mountain & turned around & I saw my reflection in the snow-covered hills Til the landslide brought me down

Climbed a mountain & turned around & I saw my reflection in the snow-covered hills Til the landslide brought me down

A good start to engaging with this post would be to click on the picture above the picture above to fully take in the landscape to the East-Northeast of The Valley of the Sun, below Four Peaks, the area the Yavapai people call Wi:khoba. Below that prominent landmark on Phoenix’s eastern skyline lies the rocky, red expanse around the Verde River, one of Arizona’s oldest, originating Southwest of Flagstaff and flowing 195 miles to connect with The Valley’s Salt River. Snow-covered for a week or two every Winter, as it was during our visit, the northernmost mountain of the four is called Brown’s Peak, the tallest at 7,659 feet, and highest point in Maricopa County. To the South is Weaver’s Needle and The Superstition Mountains (Yavapai Wi:kchsawa). Our aim more to the West was a short ramble through the Desert Creosote and looming Saguaro Cacti of The McDowell Mountain Wilderness area, the trail that leads to traces of The Marcus Landslide.

Discovered in 2002 by two Arizona State University students, the spot was named posthumously in honor of their teacher, Dr. Melvin Marcus, a geography professor at ASU and accomplished alpinist, academic and mentor. Scientist’s estimate The Marcus Landslide occurred approximately 500,00 years ago, when the climate in the area that today is known as The Sonoran Desert was vastly different than 77 degrees and sunny it was a few weeks back. Although ice actually never covered the area, it was much cooler and wetter during that time period. Speaking of cooler, the science of giant boulders and a mountain peak cascading across the landscape holds its own intrigue. But, like a wild west Anthony Michael Blowers nature walk, we were after the columns and worn rocks that are characteristic of weathered granite, mushroom-shaped forms that impressively towered over the desert landscape. 

 The mushroom-like features in the craggy slabs pictured above began as rectangular blocks of rock underground. Naturally occurring fractures in the granite defined the sides, edges and corners of the blocks. Water penetrated these fractures and over millions of years decomposed the granite into sand-sized particles. Because corners of the block are exposed to water from three different sides, they decompose faster than the faces or edges of the block. Similarly, edges decompose faster than faces. These different rates of decomposition produce rounded shapes. Erosion then removed the decomposed material around the block, eventually exposing the top at the surface. Water running off the exposed top soaked into the surrounding soil, further weathering the buried sides, edges and corners into a cylindrical shape. When erosion finally exposes the rest of the buried rock, the top-heavy mushroom shape emerges.

Voila! Stems and caps city. Some exposed rock may be top heavy and unstable, factors also playing a role in the massive ancient Landslide. Now that we’re closer to home, look for a more local stroll with Anthony in late April, currently in the works, as well as a magic Morel Mushroom hunt come early May, with our Spring schedule up and Flowering.