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Home Retreat Experiences
Inspiring Examples of How Families manage... The Key to Daily Practice: A Father Speaks I have a wife and daughter
[4 years] and a job [8-9 hours/day] but still manage 3-4 hours of practice
each day. The secret is in these four: Simplicity:
Discipline and
effort: Inspiration and
Flexibility: Because of family life, I can’t always do as I want, so flexibility is very important. If I feel frustrated that I can’t do my daily practice, this could get projected, making a mess across the whole family. So not always having my own time and space is also a practice of developing flexibility and letting go. No Choice: Often our daughter wakes
up early at around 6.00 when I am still practising, I welcome her with
a warm cuddle – simplicity It was not always easy but now our daughter is used to our daily habit. She knows that the practice will continue for quite a while, until 7.30, and she is content now to play with toys or read books until it’s finished.
Finding Opportunities: A Mother Speaks My husband and I will both enter option 4 during the 3 year retreat. We have two children 10 and 7 years of age. My husband can schedule his own worktime, which is a great advantage! But, being freelance, it also means that he has to work hard to get new assignments. I work three days a week as a teacher at a school for children with learning and behavioural difficulties. This is very challenging and provides plenty of opportunity for integration! It also requires another year of studying 10 hours a week. Now, how do we organise our ambitious spiritual plans in this busy work/family schedule? This year we started to extend the time we spend on our practice. At the moment we get up at 5.45am to practise till 7.00am. We try to get up 5 minutes earlier every two weeks, till we will reach 5.30. At 7.00 the children join us for a few minutes. My husband makes breakfast and I leave home at 7.30. It takes me 25 minutes by bicycle to get to the school I work, during this time I listen to teachings on CD. During worktime I try to integrate as much as I can, for example by counting the moments I remember the Dharma! Sometimes in the afternoon I study when the children are watching a TV programme. In the evening I spend time with the children until bedtime at 20.30. Then I practise and study for another hour and a half. I go to bed at 22.00. There's not so much room for a busy social life, but I feel that social life becomes less important. On my days off I try to finish the study my work requires. This looks like a tight schedule, but I found out that it is important not to hang on to this schedule too tightly! My husband and I have our 'lazy evenings' when we watch a movie or talk about domestic things, and 'lazy mornings' during the weekends, when we sleep a little longer. I feel this flexibility is important. As the Buddha said: not too tight and not too loose!
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| Copyright 2005-2008 Rigpé Yeshé | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||