Working Meditation

To participate in working meditation can be a great happiness. It is an opportunity to engage in the maintenance and care of our practice center while enjoying our practice of mindfulness. When we wash the cars, or turn the compost piles or chop wood we stay mindful of our breathing and the activity that we are doing. We speak only when necessary and about the work at hand. We can maintain a light and easy feeling as we work. An environment that is quiet can make the work more pleasant and enjoyable.

When we work in the garden we get in touch with the plants and nourish our connection to the earth we are living on. Sweeping and mopping the meditation halls we see that we are already practicing to calm our mind and body. Please, do not be in too great of a hurry to get the job done. Our most important contribution to the Sangha is to maintain our practice of mindfulness.

Working Meditation links us to our everyday life, both here and when we return home.

As we are working at our computer or preparing dinner for our family or teaching a class, we can practice stopping, calming and refreshing ourselves with our conscious breathing. We can relax and smile at our co-workers and pace ourselves to maintain a light and serene state of being.

Do not miss :

21 November 2024 - 19:00 : Thursday evening meditation
22 November 2024 - 7:30 : Méditation du matin
24 November 2024 - 8:00 : Méditation du dimanche matin
25 November 2024 - 7:30 : Méditation du matin
25 November 2024 - 19:00 : Méditation du lundi soir
26 November 2024 - 7:30 : Méditation du matin
26 November 2024 - 19:00 : MPC Book Club
27 November 2024 - 7:30 : Méditation du matin
27 November 2024 - 14:00 : Groupe de méditation Ste-Mary-IPCAM
27 November 2024 - 19:00 : Méditation du mercredi soir
Just as vegetation is sensible to sunlight, mental formations are sensitive to mindfulness. Mindfulness is the energy that can embrace and transform all mental formations. Mindfulness helps us leave behind "upside-down perceptions" and wakes us up to what is happening.
- Thich Nhat Hanh