Teen Meditation Retreat at Earthsong
~ The following was published in The Floyd Press, July 31, 2008
Summer camp is an all-American tradition for many teens. But what kind of camp teaches kindness as part of its curriculum, or instructs campers to disconnect from their high-tech, high paced lives in order to sit still and listen?
At the second annual Earthsong Teen Meditation Retreat teenagers from Arkansas, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Connecticut, Maine, and all over Virginia agreed to undertake five prerequisite commitments, one of which was to speak truthfully and kindly. They learned sitting and walking meditation skills and were given the opportunity to explore yoga, martial arts, visual and performance arts, primitive life skills, and to participate in a traditional Native American sweat lodge ceremony.
Hosted by Earthsong Farm and Retreat in Patrick County, Virginia, the week long event was held July 6 – 12 at a camp adjacent to Earthsong, thirty minutes from downtown Floyd. Rolling green meadows dotted with cabins, a pavilion, a large room for gathering, wooded pathways, and a nearby creek set the stage for a teen camp experience with retreat as its focus.
The founder of Earthsong, Maury Cooke, is an entrepreneur from Portsmouth, Virginia, who heads up The Center for Community Development, a non-profit organization that promotes affordable housing, arts and culture, and microenterprise. After the death of his son in a car accident, Cooke, a longtime meditater, vowed to find a way to mentor youth. When he met Erin Hill, a teen meditation teacher from California, and was inspired by her to attend a meditation retreat, he knew he had found the way.
For the Virginia retreat, teachers skilled at working with teens were flown in from California and Ohio. They included Hill, Tempel Smith, Marvin Beltzer, and Jason Murphy (CSAC). Smith has lived as a monk in Burma. Belzer, a Professor of Philosophy, helped develop youth retreats at the Insight Meditation Society in Massachusetts. Other teachers included twenty-nine year old Jessica Morey, who began practicing meditation at the age of fourteen at the Insight Meditation Society, and Joe Klein, LPC, who also helped to organize and managed the retreat. Assistant teachers were drawn from Floyd and surrounding areas and included Alan Forrest, head of Counselor Education at Radford University. Commenting on the retreat Forrest said, “What was amazing is that it was a transformative experience not just for the teens but also for the staff.”
In some ways the retreat resembled any other summer camp experience. Friendships were formed. Guitars were played around an open fire. But rather than the traditional marshmallows being roasted, teens munched on wild berry cobbler and other locally grown food. Teachers gave nightly talks. Teens were encouraged to use “wise speech,” and periods of silence were observed at designated times throughout the day.
The meditation techniques introduced to the teens were drawn from the Vipassana tradition, an ancient practice of self observation where attention to the breath is used to anchor the mind in the present. Vipassana, a Sanskrit word for “insight,” is sometimes referred to as “mindfulness.” The Teen Meditation Retreat brochure reads: “Meditation clears the mind, allows a sense of calm, and supports more appreciation and happiness. It is an avenue that empowers by allowing more control of our states of mind and emotions.”
“We’re giving kids skills to maintain their own mental, physical, and spiritual health,” said Klein. “They’re learning to practice loving kindness towards themselves as well as towards others,” he added.
Even mealtimes at the retreat provided opportunities to practice mindfulness, as teens were encouraged to slow down while eating and guess the ingredients of the chef’s savory nightly soups. Clean-up was also encouraged to be done with mindful concentration.
Although developing meditation skills was the primary focus of the retreat, several of the sixteen teens who participated expressed their appreciation for the daily inclusion of small discussion groups, where feelings were expressed, barriers broke down, and the challenges of group dynamics were explored.
“At first I was sort of shy and then I started to warm up,” said Devin Deerheat Gamache. Gamache, who grew up in Floyd but now lives in Arkansas, attended last year’s retreat and returned this year. He credited a small group game called “If you really knew me, you’d know that …” for helping him quickly forge friendships. Liota Weinbaum, another retreat participant, said the small groups were “a unique social situation where relationships got more real and meaningful.”
The retreat culminated in a spirited Community Sharing the night before the end of the retreat. After dinner teens and teachers shared poetry, songs, drumming, and dancing in an open mic atmosphere. They also presented theatrical performances, learned in workshops throughout the week.
At an Appreciation Circle the next morning, feelings of gratitude were verbalized. One teen described the retreat as “the single best week of my life.” Another remarked that he enjoyed learning drumming and how to use poi lights (a string of LED glow lights that change colors and make a light show when swung at night). Others used the forum to voice gratitude for what they had learned and to thank the adults for making the retreat happen.
As the week wound to a close, goodbyes were exchanged with humor, hugs, and emotion. Many of the teens expressed enthusiasm for coming back to next retreat. “Everyone here was so loving. I just felt loved,” said fifteen year old Maya Matlack before heading back to her home in Pennsylvania. ~ Colleen Redman
Post notes: Earthsong Farm and Retreat will host two more Teen Meditation Retreats before the return of the annual retreat next summer. The first one is scheduled for Columbus Day weekend, October 10 – 13. A second longer retreat is planned for New Year’s weekend, December 28 – January 2nd. The cost for the October Retreat is $125. The January Retreat is $500. Teen Meditation Retreat organizers are seeking sponsors so that they can offer scholarships to some teens. Please contact Joe Klein at joklein@swva.net to make a scholarship donation or for more information about the retreats. The Earthsong Farm and Retreat webpage is earthsongretreat.com.
Read an article on the retreat that appeared in the Roanoke Times HERE and one from The Virginian Pilot, written by a recent high school graduate who participated in the retreat HERE. The Virginian Pilot also did a July 12th feature on Maury Cooke, which appears as an excerpt HERE.
August 25th, 2008 10:42 am
Wow..wow..wow
How about one of these for adults?
Susan 🙂
August 25th, 2008 11:11 am
Joe and Alan are working on putting one on for college students and another for counselors. Others do meditation retreats for adults, but they are too heroic for me, ten days of sitting in silence. A teen one is much more my speed, but I’m a little old for it. I would need the balance of the small discussion groups, fun, workshops, and inspiring nightly talks to make it work for me.
I do passage meditation as taught by Eknath Eswaran: http://www.nilgiri.org/page/188
Here’s a link to the Vipassana Meditation Retreats Joe did and many others I know http://www.dhamma.org/
August 25th, 2008 1:10 pm
I agree. I sort of had this philosophy with my Brownie Scouts years ago.
August 26th, 2008 8:17 am
heartwarming and inspiring in every way !!! sandy
August 26th, 2008 10:12 am
What a wonderful idea! We could ALL benefit from a retreat like this. I think we should all have days where we step away from our cell phones, our televisions, our MP3 players, and, yes, our computers. 🙂 So we can remember again how to really listen and pay attention…
August 26th, 2008 11:27 am
Oh I wish I had known about this for Sami. I bet she would have loved it! But… did it cost? (as you know, this would have been an issue). Remind me when it comes around next year!
August 26th, 2008 3:11 pm
Wow, I wish I could go to that! We all need something so wholesome and peaceful and positive to recharge our batteries! Sounds like good old fashioned hippie stuff.
http://www.GreenerPastures–ACityGirlGoesCountry.blogspot.com
August 27th, 2008 10:40 pm
Sounds fabulous! I’d like to go myself!
Hope you’ve had a great summer.
August 30th, 2008 7:52 am
Sounds very calming. Love the composition of the top picture!
May 18th, 2012 11:45 am
[…] The three dogs all got along great, Maury’s, Jude’s, and ours. Maury (pictured with Joe below) brought me roses that he grew in his backyard, ones that adorned the dining table at the weekend meditation retreat for caregivers and counselors that he, Joe, and Alan Forrest (head of the counseling department at Radford University) just finished hosting. It was a Sunday afternoon pit stop before the threesome (five, counting dogs) would head off to Charlottesville for a Monday morning meeting on mindfulness and death and dying. They were tired but buzzing with good vibes. With porch swings swinging and wind chimes singing, we lollygagged on the porch, talking about Love and Kindness, Buddhism, and the Wise Woman tradition. I dished them up venison spaghetti and greens from the garden, and after we ate, I sent each one off to find a bed for an hour long nap before starting the next leg of their adventure. Post notes: Together, with a group from California, Maury and Joe helped launched MAYA (Mindful Awareness for Young Adults), a national organization that presents meditation retreats for teens and young adults. The next Virginia Teen Meditation Retreat, held 30 minutes from Floyd, is August 9-15. More about that retreat and others, including press coverage and photos can be found at the website for Earthsong Organic Farm and Retreat Center in Stuart, where some of the retreats are held. […]