Week 11: Marin County

So yes, I’ll admit, my past few posts have been a bit introspective and gloomy.  This one will have gloomy bits as well, but for a different reason.  But I am getting ahead of myself.

The week started on a bright note, lunch with a new friend.  Several years ago I came across an article celebrating the 50th anniversary of the San Fransisco Zen Center.  This article included a section on Green Gulch Farm, the organic farm the center runs in Marin County, and a told of a new program, Honoring the Path of the Warrior, where mindfulness practice, including work on the farm, was helping returning OEF and OIF veterans come to terms with their experiences overseas.  I have been following their programs, which have expanded to include wall climbing, day hikes and week-long rafting and writing retreats, and they recently published a guide for other retreat centers who wish to develop similar programs.  Over lunch, their Operations and Development Manager updated me on recent changes to their programs, and since we are both female veterans (her Army and me Air Force), we had a nice conversation sharing our time in the service.

DSCN2199  My heart and belly full, I headed north on the Pacific Coast Highway to Green Gulch Farm, where, inspired by my interest in Honoring the Path, I would be spending the next two weeks as a Guest Student.  Cresting the coastal range, I was treated to a sign normally seen from the air: a blanket of fog covering the valley below.  Slowly I descended the twisty road, going ‘IFR’ shortly before I reached farm’s driveway.  The dirt track wound through an eucalyptus grove, the dark green leaves hanging from white and tan smottled trunks cloaking my arrival as the sky darkened and the air took on a chill.  Little did I know that I would not see the sun again for three days.

DSCN2240Green Gulch Farm was founded in 1972 at the direction of Shunryu Suzuki, the spiritual founder of San Fransisco Zen Center, as a place where lay practitioners could live and practice together. Located on a former working ranch in Muir Valley, the property includes family housing, several dormitories, a tea house, and the Green Dragon Temple. Over the years many notable gardeners have lived and practiced here including Alan Chadwick, who helped spread organic and biodynamic farming techniques in the US, and Wendy Johnson, the lead gardener for over ten years who now mentors aspiring farmers through the Edible Schoolyard program and the local community college. The farm’s grounds now include eight acres split between a fruit, herb and flower garden, and the vegetable farm.

The schedule Green Gulch focusses on work practice.  We would wake at four thirty and sleepily make our way to zazen at five.  The zendo, located in a converted barn modified to incorporate traditional Japanese design principles and temple features, is beautiful.  The original wood beams and support structures, now sanded to a shine, rise two stories above a recovered plank floor.  The early hour was dark, the temple lit only by the candles on the two altars, one to Manjushri (wisdom) and one to Tara (compassion), that sandwiched rows of black cushions from opposite ends of the temple.  We would enter one by one, stepping in with the foot closest to the door, two steps, bow, then down a short staircase to find our cushions.  It was cold, and as the service proceeded, it would soak though my sweater and chill my toes. The sitting intervals here were longer than I am used to, forty minutes.  The first would include elements of the service, lighting the altar and ringing of bells.  My mind would settle quickly but after an interval my legs would numb and then begin to ache.  Slow walking would clear the kinks and slightly warmed by the movement, I would settle back on the cushion to watch the pine

DSCN2279 - Version 2After breakfast was work practice. Each work location had a small altar, and samu would begin with incense, a reading from Zen teachings, and a bow. As guest students, we would begin with dishes, then rotate through the different departments: chopping veg in the kitchen, pulling weeds on the grounds, cleaning the guest house, thinning and planting seedlings for the farm, and cleaning flower beds in the garden. We would break for lunch, vegetarian and prepared with produce from the garden, then continue for another three hours. In the late afternoon we would to clean our tools and close the practice. After this, we had free time for the remainder of the day.

DSCN2202The farm, located adjacent to the Muir Woods National Monument, is surrounded by miles of glorious trails.  On the first few days, drained by the physical work, I ventured only as far as the beach at the bottom of the valley.  It was so foggy and cold I would wear my winter parka, a bright of magenta in the sage and grey, returning from trail with mist dripping from my nose.  On Tuesday there was a break in the clouds, with actual sunshine on Wednesday (the sky seems to be broken), and I took the opportunity to hike the coastal trail.  Accustomed to the sheltered bay of my childhood, I was surprised when I looked south, where I could see past the mouth of the bay to Half-Moon and beyond.  To the west was a line of ships on approach, dashes of reds and oranges on heir hulls and deck, distance belying their size.

Friday was our day off. After sleeping in (until a late six thirty) I spent the morning on a trail that wound up the hills on the south side of the farm.  The trail head was sheltered by yew, pine, and juniper that slowly gave way to wild flowers, berry brambles and coastal sage.  As I approached the top I looked down, and my eye was caught by movement, a smudge of rust above the green of the valley.  It was a red-tailed hawk, making lazy circles in the thermals.  As I watched, he slowly rode one, then another, higher and higher: first below me, then abeam me, then above me.  I was familiar with this from flying, at one airport it was not unusual for a hawk or crow to fly off our wing as we taxied or departed, but watching him from above, adjusting his light feathers to better capture the wind, was a first.  This will be one of the memories from this adventure I will treasure most.
Another treasure from this adventure were my fellow guest students.  Green Gulch is also a monastery, with students committing to study for residence intervals of three months, six-months, or longer.  The entry path to these residencies was the two-week guest student program, which we completed as a group.  The first week there were six of us, and we would tend to drift to each other.  Over the course of the week, one, calm and confident, came to stand out.  Though I have to admit, what first caught my eye was that he was a total hottie, in an Orange County punk scene lead singer kind of way.  Over time, I was pleased to learn he was also a learned practitioner with deep knowledge across a wide range of Buddhist practices and other spiritual traditions.  His favorite teaching was the Platform Sutra, the foundation of Chan Buddhism. Meals with him were a joy; he openly and humbly shared the wisdom he had gained at various practice centers and during a thirty-day silent retreat.  He also really helped me with my sitting (“Master Chan says make friends with the pain”) and how to approach practice (Rules for walking the spiritual path: Accept what is given; Do the right thing; Make nothing of it.)  He also brought a relaxed, playful approach to practice that seemed to infect our group as the week progressed.  
 
More on the others, and the second week of my stay next time.  🙂

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