Amazing Graces: Days Two and Three

By the second day there are actually 135 participants -- almost 180 of us altogether. The ones who didn't come to the opening are present and others from the waiting list have found a way.
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By the second day there are actually 135 participants -- almost 180 of us altogether. The ones who didn't come to the opening are present and others from the waiting list have found a way. There are 13 in most of our small groups.



One of the remarkable things about our trainings is how often people who at first seem utterly closed down -- walled off with indifference and suspicion, sunken beneath sorrow -- suddenly come alive, sharing what they have not spoken of before; discovering new worlds of feelings, possibilities, hope.

The soft belly meditation invites calm and acceptance. The drawings play to the imagination, sometimes revealing solutions to problems that have seemed intractable. Shaking and dancing loosens most of us up. And the experiences that follow in the large and small groups provoke wonder.

Regine tells me about one of the leaders of the regional police. He came to early morning yoga and scoffed, "I thought we were talking about taking care of people. This is sports." The drawings seemed, at first, ridiculous. "This is child's play." He stays and later in the day she sees him sitting quietly in meditation, laughing as he shakes and dances. He's back the next day and the day after.

The drawings of a young woman whose face is filled with rage evolve from cramped stick figures -- she is fighting with her parents -- to a full-bodied woman standing apart from them looking at the horizon. When she does the safe place imagery she sees herself "playing hide and seek with my friends having fun as I did when I was a girl." And then -- and a smile cracks her stern face -- "flying free."

I do Mindful Eating in the large group: a third of a banana for each participant. Almost 200 people feel, smell, taste, and slowly chew. A fit man in his 50's comes to the front of the room. "I have tended banana trees since I was a child. I know everything about the fruit and the tree and the soil and the bugs that come around. I sell bananas and give them away to the poor and have done so for many years. I eat them every day. And yet, I have to tell you, this is the first time I have truly eaten a banana." The room swells with laughter as everyone gets the message: It really is possible to come to any experience, including eating an everyday banana, with an open mind and an open heart, as if for the first time.

James S. Gordon MD, a psychiatrist, is the author of Unstuck: Your Guide to the Seven Stage Journey Out of Depression and the Founder, Director of the Center for Mind-Body Medicine in Washington, DC, and Dean of the College of Mind-Body Medicine with Saybrook University.

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