When
David Tresemer, a Harvard graduate raised in a world of private schools
and privileges, first came to Boulder, it was part of a spiritual journey
that had taken him from a PhD program in psychology to a rural farming
community in Vermont, growing organic vegetables and delivering baby
animals.
"When
I first received my degree, I realized I had just been awarded a certification
of expertise in an area whose true foundations I didn't understand,"
Tresemer says. "That sent me for a dizzying ride of self-inquiry."
His
pilgrimage culminated 13 years later in the building of the Star House and All
Seasons Chalice, a multi-faith, nature-based church that celebrates the
seasons and lunar cycles with an eclectic blend of ancient rituals, indigenous
wisdom and modern practices. Situated on 35 spectacular acres in Boulder's
foothills, the church is surrounded by a tight-knit spiritual community that
grows organic herbs and meets for regular prayer and meditation. Here,
Tresemer and his wife, Lila Sophia, talk to Ravi Dykema about Darwinism,
myth-based theatre and celebrating life through the seasons.
RD: How did you go from receiving a PhD
in psychology from Harvard to starting a church?
DT: Once I received my degree, I said, "Wait a minute: psychology.
Psyche logos. What is psyche and what is logos? What are these characters
that I am a doctor of?" Russell Lockhart, a Jungian psychologist, said,
"Psychology is soul speech: the word (logos) of the soul (psyche)."
I realized that none of the psychologists in the department could tell
me what "psyche logos" really meant. A long series of events followed
that realization, and I ended up as a farmer in Green River, Vermont,
finding psyche through a primary experience of nature.
RD: So it was a mystical quest of sorts that made you a farmer?
DT: Absolutely. It was not a career path that most people understood.
But I am so happy I made that decision, because I could have ended up
as an assistant professor talking about stuff I didn't know about. I
was in my retreat in Vermont from 1974 to 1986. In 1985, I came to Boulder
at the invitation of Jose Arguelles, the creator of Harmonic Convergence,
a worldwide event in 1987, and the Mayan calendar studies. He invited
me to a Gaia Synthesis conference in Boulder. I was so star-struck by
what Boulder had to offer that the fifth day I was here, I bought a
house.
RD: How did you have the money to buy the land in Boulder's foothills
and build the Star House?
DT: My mother passed away when I was 36 years old, and I inherited
money through her. I was quite interested in what they call "socially
responsible investing," and my socially responsible investments turned
out to practically responsible as well. I have felt, from the very beginning,
a sense of responsibility to use resources wisely. Now my accountant
tells me that I'm using them unwisely, but that's in comparison to how
most people who have resources handle them. I've found that to be unsatisfactory-
I think that if there's a resource there, it's there to be used, and
it's always been our impulse to use it in ways that benefit many.
RD: Typically, people who have what a lot of folks consider a
fortune, would buy a large property to build a giant house and isolate
themselves from neighbors. They might give to their church, but you
did something very different with your property.
DT: Yes, instead of giving to a church, we started one!
RD: Lila Sophia, how did you end up in merging your life with
David's at Star House?
LT: I first came to Boulder from Chicago in 1969 to go to college,
and I ended up becoming a co-founder of the Community Free School, an
adult education program. So I was involved in the early birthing of
what Boulder has always had at its core: a lot of diversity, a lot of
spiritual wisdom from different cultures and traditions. I left Boulder
in 1974 and moved to California, where I did a lot of multi-media work.
RD: So while David was doing a mystical journey on a farm...
LT: ...I was doing LA. Which I don't regret. I came back to Colorado,
to Aspen in 1990 and ended up meeting John Steiner and Margo King. Through
them, I got involved in working with the Avatar Institute, and we did
the Avatar trainings in Boulder for five or six years. And I knew that
Margo was going to introduce me to my future husband.
RD: That was sort of a premonition?
LT: Yes, and she surely did. I had a very short list of what
I wanted in my mate and partner- I wanted him to be interested in multi-media
and to have a really deep spiritual path. And there he was.
RD: David, how did you come to buy the property at Star House?
DT: Boulder seemed like urban life to me after Vermont. I felt
the need to have a place in nature, so I started looking in an hour
and a half travel radius from Boulder. The search took me way out to
Rollinsville and all sorts of places, but I kept coming back to the
land where Star House is now- it just kept calling me back. The land
had been subdivided into seven parcels, and we bought them all. That
was in 1987.
A
group of people came together to design and build Star House, including
Phil Tabb, a wonderful architect in Boulder, and Robert Armon in Denver.
There were Platonists- now, a Platonist architect is a wonderful thing.
Their approach was, "Star House already exists; it is our job to bring
it from the unseen realm into the seen realm." They didn't say, "Oh,
this is a great opportunity for me to show off my architectural fantasies."
They were very much in service to what the vision was. Then we had a
team of primarily five people building the place. From the very beginning,
we had a pact that the end does not justify the means, that the means,
the process of building, had to be as potent as what we ended up with.
During
the process, we said prayers. We actually sang to every board and nail
and piece of equipment that went into that building. Singing to all
these material pieces is becoming very aware of them.
RD: It sounds sort of like the way a temple in the Buddhist or
Hindu tradition might be built, with a lot of care taken to include
deeper awareness.
DT: Yes. And from the very beginning we were committed to being
transdenominational. We chose from many traditions. That kind of eclecticism
can be dangerous if it becomes muddy, but if you choose purely and carefully,
then it actually can become a better meal. I think of it as the highest
common denominator: What are the qualities that call us into a resonance
and a kind of transpersonal way across different traditions? In a way
that's really how Star House has continued to be held, as a transdenominational
experience.
We
were led by a vision of what this place would look like. When you're
led by a vision, you are often led a few steps of the way at a time,
and you don't really see the end; if you did, most sane human beings
would dig in their heals and say, "No." So we went slowly, step by step,
and really saw the building- just what the angles should be, how all
the things should connect together. It took a terrific amount of thought-
it wasn't just handed over to an architect, who delivered some plans
and that was that.
We
also had an agreement that the way in which the house was being constructed
was key. Near the end, there was an argument about one of the aspects
of construction, between two key people on the construction team, that
seemed to be unsolvable. We worked it and worked it and worked it, but
there was extreme tension and bad feelings, so we said, "Okay, shut
it down." We actually stopped construction completely two weeks before
the house was predicted to be complete. We felt it was a sign, that
the timing wasn't right. So we sent everybody home, and the building
sat there for 12 weeks. We worked with it quite a bit during that time,
to purify and release and find out what was being stuck. At one point,
it had the palpable feeling of being relieved and released, so we called
everybody back, and we said, "We're ready to finish now. Are you still
available?" And everyone was still available, which is a minor miracle
in the construction trade. So they came back and completed the building
in good spirits.
RD: Now, you formed a church, All Seasons Chalice, at Star House.
Can you tell me how that came to be and what your vision is for it?
LT: Our original inspiration had been that the building was to
be a place for meditation for small groups of people. We had a small
esoteric group studying world spiritual traditions that met once a week,
and our first thought was that the building was for our group. Then
a man named Kevin Townly approached us and said, "You know, there's
a person in Boulder, Timothy Dobson, who performs this wonderful service
of Dances of Universal Peace. Come experience it." And that was love
at first sight. It's a wonderful practice of dances, chants, songs from
all spiritual traditions. It's brilliant. So just after we had opened
in 1990, we brought in the first Dances of Universal Peace to be at
the Star House, and they've been there ever since, meeting twice a month,
open to the public.
RD: And that's unusual, too- that you've opened your "home,"
so to speak, to the public. Was that your original intention?
DT: Yes, in the sense of meditation and dance. It was a big step
to say, "This is open to the public," but we didn't think of it as open
to the public, because the Dances of Universal Peace was its own little
community. So we said, "Oh, we'll invite this little community to join
us." Then, by slow steps, it became more of a public event because we
said, "Well, let's see if we should invite other people to our full
moon meditations." Then word gets around, and all of a sudden you realize,
"Oh, I guess we're being public."
Then,
at a certain point, we said, "Gosh. It appears that we're being a church
here." That's really what a church is- it talks about the meaning of
life. So we thought, "Well, we should probably say what we are, which
is a church," and we began the process of working with the Internal
Revenue Service to demonstrate that we are a church. Then we were incorporated
as "All Seasons Chalice Church" in 1993.
RD: Did you have a congregation, or at least a germ of one?
DT: A germ of one, I think, would be more appropriate.
Shortly after that, we pulled together our board of directors
and began the inquiry into the meaning and purpose of the temple and
how to become relevant to the spiritual and social needs of a community
as eclectic as Boulder. We still ask those questions. I think the most
successful program there at the moment is "The Path of the Ceremonial
Arts for Women." That's something Lila Sophia began four or five years
ago. It's a three-year training for women, and it is brilliant.
That's
the kind of work that was intended when we brought other people into
full moon ceremonies. Full moon ceremonies are powerful not one at a
time, but in series. It's something that asks us to, through repetition,
continue to build our spiritual personal resources, and make something
stronger of ourselves, so that when those resources are needed in some
kind of an emergency or crisis- it could be the crisis of everyday living,
or it could be a greater crisis- when those resources are needed, they
are available.
RD: What I would encounter at a full moon ceremony?
DT: The plan right now is that there's a solar and lunar event-
it's kind of how we organize the year, around new moons and full moons.
A full moon would be mostly led by one of the nine ordained ministers
of All Seasons Chalice. One of them would work with a seed thought for
a meditation related to the moon and the month that the moon falls in.
And there's a sketch of an outline that would include several things,
but then the individual can create it according to their interest and
inspiration.
RD: Could you give me an example of a seed thought?
DT: The first one that comes to mind is, "I build a lighted house,
and therein dwell," which is a seed thought for the full moon of Cancer,
related to building of home and creating a spirit within that space.
The
full moon falls in a certain astrological sign, so that's basically
how we come up with some of the themes of each of the moons. The thing
that every human being has in common are lunar cycles and solar cycles,
the seasons of the earth, the fact that we live on the earth, and are
most often inspired by the stars. So solar and lunar events, we figured,
were really viable to organize around. It also gave us a rhythm that
was different than an "every Sunday morning" congregation; instead,
we have twice a month a full moon and a new moon, four times a year
a solstice or an equinox.
RD: Some might hear pagan overtones in this structure.
DT: The word "pagan," and the word "peasant," have the same root
as the word "peace." It means "connected to the earth," connected to
what the needs of the earth are and the earth's rhythms. When you really
understand the needs of the earth, you become peaceful, because then
you're living in response to the earth. So "pagan" means "responsive
to the earth." Now every religion is pagan, if you look at when their
festivals are. Thai Buddhism is very closely connected with the moon
rhythms. The Jewish calendar is connected with the moon rhythms. The
placement of Easter is the first Sunday after the first full moon after
the equinox, so that's sun and moon rhythms. So if you would call what
we do "pagan," then you have to call what they do "pagan" too. Pagan
has gotten, in some people's eyes, a bad name because of some of the
strange things that people who call themselves "pagans" do. But that's
true for anything- for Christians, for capitalists, for peacenicks,
for any group of people.
LT: If you looked at the background of both our board members
and our ministers, we really represent what we're talking about. We
had a Methodist minister who's been working within the peace movement
since he was in his 20s, a high-level Sufi initiate who's a minister,
a certified psychic who talks to angels, some Buddhist influence, as
well as pagan and esoteric Christianity, David has quite a background
in theosophy and anthroposophy as well. I feel like we've brought together
traditions with a deep respect for their teachings and a determination
to find that common stream of spirituality- I really feel if we don't
understand that on a global level, we will never come to be a planet
that can live in peace.
RD: Please tell me more about the full moon meditations.
DT: The solar meditations, like winter solstice and summer solstice,
are more celebrations. The moon ones are much more contemplative. The
hypothesis is that there are spiritual beings available during this
alignment of sun, moon and earth, called the full moon or new moon.
Our responsibility is to show up to test that hypothesis through our
own experience. And we're going to do that through various kinds of
activities, but there's always a meditation, a quiet time of introspection
and contemplation, involved. That's the way we listen.
RD: What do you mean by "spiritual beings?"
DT: It's the experience that you would say is not "me," is something
that is something greater than me, than my own worldly concerns. What
do I experience that is greater than that? It might be visual, it might
be auditory, it might be kinesthetic. Again, we invite people to honor
what is sacred for them, so if "spiritual beings" works, great. If other
people deal more with archetypes in the sense of aspects of their own
psyches, great. We're trying our best not to go into a projection of
what a spiritual reality is as much as inviting people to identify with
their own experiences.
RD: Tell me about the women's ongoing workshop that you're doing,
Lila.
LT: The new moon started out as a women's celebration of the
beginning cycle of a new moon. After about a year or two, we realized
there was so much interest within the women's community in Boulder that
we put out one small flyer. Within a couple of weeks we had 35 to 40
women who had responded to the idea of an ongoing women's exploration
of ceremonial arts. That was five years ago, and it has been an ongoing
discovery of sisterhood, how to be women together, exploring what interests
women.
We
keep it pretty broad in terms of the elements of ceremony and design,
and allow women to also explore what's of interest to them. They can
come in with a Native American interest or a Buddhist interest or a
Christian interest. So we're not doing as much teaching as we are facilitating
the space where they can learn and be inspired. But we have a good first-year
program that's a little bit more structured in terms of the elements
of ceremony and ritual design. The second year moves more into the experience
of creating and facilitating ceremonies.
The
women of the PCA, the Path of Ceremonial Arts, are the ones who facilitate
the new moon ceremonies. And they also have started something called
"Journey of the Feminine," which becomes familiar with a different feminine
archetype every month, so that's a different program facilitated by
graduates of the Ceremonial Arts program. We also do rights of passage
work, everything from celebrating weddings and baby blessings and rights
of passage for teenagers, so it's really becoming a woman's wisdom culture.
We occasionally invite David to come do a teaching module.
DT: They give me an hour every four months, and it permits me
to observe the astonishing power of a group of women, how they have
common concerns and can share their aspirations in a way that really
isn't available in other aspects of the culture. The maturity, the growth
that occurs, is stunning.
RD: How many people are involved in the group right now?
LT: I would say 35. And then there are the graduates, who are
now coming back to help teach modules. It's very inspiring. We're also
looking to get off the mountain more and do more service and work in
the community. I think that will start happening even more this next
year. We've already started going to some assisted living centers- there's
a quilting project that we're starting in one of the Sunrise Community
Homes.
Graduates
of the program are also developing the Ceremonies for Sacred Living.
They've been working on it for about seven months, to create ceremonies
that they can offer to the public, to acknowledge important passages
in a person's life. Marriage is the one we know the best. So is a memorial
service. But there are others. There are coming-of-age ceremonies, ceremonies
for getting a new job or blessing a new house, which are known worldwide,
and these women are going to be offering those to the public.
Also,
after four or five years of the program being specifically for women,
the men's work has started to become stronger as well. My brother, David
and other ministers are hosting men's new moon events; so now we're
catering to both women's and men's spiritual work. In 1990, Star House
was originally dedicated to sacred marriage, to this understanding of
the union and communion that needs to happen between heaven and earth,
between the divine feminine and the divine masculine, between sun and
moon.
RD: I'd like to change course a bit and ask you about your playwriting
and producing. I know it relates to all this, to what you've been working
with at Star House.
LT: Yes, it does, very strongly. David and I both have a love
of mythology, ceremony and ritual, and we come from very different backgrounds-
me from Los Angeles and him from Harvard and a Vermont farming community.
To describe the kind of ceremonial theatre we're doing, we landed on
the phrase "modern mythic drama." David had been working at Star House
with the twelve labors of Hercules- that had been his way of exploring
myth through community theatre and involving people in the 12 labors
according to the 12 astrological signs.
RD: How many plays have you written and produced?
LT: Altogether he and I worked on two Hercules plays that were
produced in theatres, and then four plays of our own. We had just done
a production at the Dairy Center for the Arts, "The Crazy Metal Birds."
A friend of ours, who knew that the Nomad Theatre in North Boulder wanted
to reopen and was having some difficulty, asked if we were interested
enough in doing theatre that we'd like to be in relationship with Nomad.
So I joined the board, and we worked out some ways to help get the theatre
reopened.
RD: Was your vision with Nomad partly that this would provide
you with a great venue for your theater company, the New Troubadors?
LT: Yes, and fortunately it was a good partnership all around.
Don Berlin, who's the artistic director, directed the last play- "Darwin
in the Dream Time"- and has been very supportive of us as playwrights.
He's helped us enormously in many ways, and we feel the relationship
has benefited both of us, the theatre as well as us as playwrights.
It's just a sad fact that theatre and arts across the country are really
suffering right now. There are many theatres around the country that
have shut down, or restricted their programs from six plays to three
or two.
RD: Tell me about your plays.
LT: We felt the call of Mary Magdalene seven years ago, and wrote
a play called "My Magdalene," which was actually the first one that
we produced at the Nomad Theatre. Since then, we've changed it- it's
matured some, which plays need to do. You must continue to work with
them and make them better. Our last play was "Darwin in the Dream Time."
This came from our experience in Australia working with Robert Lawler,
author of Voices of the First Day, and also author of Sacred Geometry.
He knows quite a bit about the roots of aboriginal thinking, and from
that, we began to realize the impact of Darwinistic thinking on our
whole world.
Darwinistic
thinking would have us be the result of random activity of cosmic rays
working on DNA, creating mutations, which are then subject to the vagaries
and whims of nature, changing food supply, predators, warmth and cold.
As a consequence, we make changes over time, called evolutionary changes,
which render us a random collection of mongrel parts. In addition, all
of this is thought to be happening on a little rock orbiting a mediocre
star, which is in a backwater of a galaxy amongst billions of other
galaxies- in other words, life is all totally random and insignificant.
Now,
where does that lead you? It leads you to the conclusion, if there is
no past and no future, there is nothing but your senses, nothing but
pleasure. That leads you to consumerism. In other words, there's money
in Darwinistic thinking. And there are reasons- maybe conscious, maybe
unconscious, depending on how conspiratorial you'd like to be- for people
who sell things to want you to think in a Darwinistic manner. That summarizes
my view of Darwinism.
DT: I would want to bring in social Darwinism, because it's essential
to recognize that social Darwinism took advantage of a very narrow perception
of the theory of Darwin, and used it to its advantage at the particular
time that Darwin hit the Victorian English scientific world. Social
Darwinism is basically what became the acceptable modus operandi of
"only the fittest will survive."
LT: Therefore let us prove that we are the fittest by flexing
our muscles and bashing people about.
DT: Now, Darwin himself was a fine scientist, a good observer
of nature and very reclusive. And he was a brilliant naturalist. The
current applications of Darwinistic thinking are very different from
Charles Darwin himself. So the play takes Darwin as a disembodied spirit,
puts him together with his great-great granddaughter, who is on her
death bed needing to sort some things out, and brings in her mentor,
a native indigenous woman named "Mamala," who is helping her alleviate
the tensions in her ancestors. Most cultures think about taking care
of their ancestors, and if there's one that's stuck in what you could
call purgatory- some place where people do not die peacefully- it's
the living's responsibility to help them get unstuck and let them move
on. There's also a hospital nurse, a young indigenous man who has rejected
his past. And so we have all these dynamics on stage. And the reason
Sarah Darwin wants to know what's going on with her great-great grandfather
is that she experienced indigenous culture as a young girl, and came
to know its beauty and its simplicity.
RD: I'm assuming your indigenous culture represents a contrast
to Darwinian thinking.
DT: It very much represents indigenous wisdom.
RD: Characterize it in contrast to Darwinian thinking.
LT: Earth. Life. Love of place, understanding the elders and
the importance of the ancestors. So the idea that Darwin would consider
evolution through a monkey ancestor is particularly amusing to the indigenous
woman because their culture is so clear. And they're clear that they
don't come from monkeys. Her creation story is that her ancestors come
from the same stuff as the stars.
Our
culture has always said you either are a creationist, meaning you believe
literally in the Bible and Adam and Eve, or you're an evolutionist,
and you believe that we came from monkeys. And there's nothing in between,
nothing that incorporates both, and maybe is bigger than both, which
was David's and my inspiration for this play. If you're not a creationist
or an evolutionist, there must be another choice. A creation myth that
our culture could find and identify with might, in fact, give us some
sense of where we've come from and where we're going.
RD: Does this play present a creation myth that bridges those
two?
LT: No, it wants to just ask, to pose the question. A lot of
people haven't paused to think about it, or they've been taught so strongly
through the filter of science classes that Darwinism is a fact, when
in fact it is not a fact. It's a theory that has a lot of holes in it,
but it has come through an educational institution that says "This is
the way it is. We come from apes." We don't question it, because that's
what we've been taught in school. Or we believe in the creation model,
because that's what we've been taught in church.
I
don't think it's one or the other, either creation or evolution. I think
it's some intricate combination of the two. And I really think individuals
need to inquire about it. It can't come through a belief system and
be authentic. It's got to be deeply asked and deeply answered in a life.
We need to become a country of Gnostics, a country of people who are
willing to directly know and experience, to question authority and what
we've been taught, and to come into authentic wisdom, so that we can
survive as a species- so that we deserve to survive. That's even more
appropriate. Why do we even deserve to survive, given the kinds of things
that are going on? We're so out of balance with the earth, and of being
stewards of this beautiful place.
RD: It sounds like you're describing what you hope an audience
member who sees your play would walk away with.
LT: Yes, and it's happened- maybe not on as broad a scale as
we would like, but it's happened. With the Magdalene play, we were fascinated
by how many women returned, having had a dream or a vision. In many
cases, something very deep and profound happened to them. They began
to unravel that myth, in which Magdalene was the carrier of the feminine
mystic quality, the high priestess energy, and was labeled a prostitute
instead. She was an intelligent and highly favored apostle and disciple
of Jesus, his constant companion- that part is clear from the Gnostic
texts.
Magdalene
represents an important part of this feminine lineage of strong, spiritual
teachers. She reminds us of the question, "Where do we find empowerment
as women?" And I think indigenous cultures have many of those answers,
understanding feminine mysticism and reclaiming the nurturing of the
earth itself. They're so connected to the web of earth and life. They're
part of the land, they steward the earth and that, to me, is a feminine
quality of caring and nurturing. There are different ways of being on
the earth, and clearly we need to shift the one that's operative now,
or the survival of the fittest is going to prove to be the demise of
everybody.
RD: What's your next play?
LT: We're not actively writing another piece right now- we're
working on rewording some of the plays of the past. We're rewriting
the Darwin play right now, and hoping to have it staged in Australia,
where we're also building a healing retreat.
DT: It's an extraordinary place, where the mountain rises rapidly
from the ocean. So there's the ocean, and a mountain that goes straight
up 2500 feet, and we're on the little valley off to the side with waterfalls
and fresh water coming down. It's an astonishing place. We call it "The
Healing Dreams Retreat."
RD: You have so many projects and activities. What do you see
yourself doing in 10 years?
DT: I want to make sure the Path of the Ceremonial Arts is an
ongoing, active, healthy program, with competent staff, because the
service it performs for women of all ages is extraordinary and needed.
The women who come out of there are so empowered and potent in the world.
One graduate has taken on the most interesting dedication: the healing
of water, which has taken her to many places in the world to be an advocate
for the purity of water. Another one has come up with a way to bring
star wisdom to people in a way that isn't airy-fairy or flaky. She actually
teaches a little class with me at Star House, called "Star Wisdom 101."
The
various PCA women have these wonderful, life destiny questions that
come to the fore in their lives, and rather than being pushed aside
for a year or years, they're acting on them now. A similar program for
men is also being created, although it will have its own flavor. That
will probably be starting in April of 2004. And then the Star Wisdom
part is always a theme in Star House. We have a conference at Star House
called "Star Wisdom in the Light of Sophia: Revelations of the Signs
of our Times," from June 18 to 20. We'll have mature astrologers from
various parts of the country, and one from Germany, gathering for a
presentation about Star Wisdom in the Light of Sophia, Sophia being
the divine feminine.
Our
role is to continue to monitor these kinds of programs to make sure
they never err on the side of hysteria, which is one of the downfalls
of spiritual thinking: for example, saying, "Oh, my God, Mars is the
closest it's ever been to the world. What do we do, what do we do?"
While these events are real, they're also subtle, and they need to be
experienced in subtle ways.
What
I love most about the Path of the Ceremonial Arts is that it's repetitive,
like the moons. We've all had experiences where we come away from workshops
feeling fantastic, but then we tend to slide. Over time, it's as if
the workshop never happened. But if you involve repetitive activity,
you can begin to nurture long term changes.
Star
House and All Seasons Chalice are devoted to that. We offer opportunities
to experience the seasons. So in the Winter Solstice, we experience
cold and dark: all the candles are blown out and everything is made
completely dark- we actually experience dark, which is extremely rare
for modern people.
We
often use the plant metaphor at the Star House: the plant goes from
the contraction of the sleeping seed, where it's the tightest and most
contracted. Then, in the spring, the shoot and the root and the leaves
begin to expand, then there's a contraction again into the bud of the
flower. Then there's an expansion again into the flower, and a contraction
into the pistil and the stamen. Then there's an expansion into the fruit,
and a contraction into the seed. That metaphor can help us understand
where we are in the season. Are we in a place of contraction or expansion?
We can use that to further our own growth.
Winter,
for example, occurs in the period between Christmas and Easter, which
is meant to be a time of inner spirit rest. Some time during that period,
you really need to find spirit rest, to go dreaming, to be still and
inert, like a seed. In the spring, when expansion begins, the responsibility
is to say, "How do I experience this awakening? What's awakening in
me? What is shooting out in terms of new roots, new shoots, new leaves,
opening up to the wisdom of the sunlight?"
