INVITATION TO

Connecting in Nature

A Spring offering by Margaret and Jim Drescher at Windhorse Farm
​April 20-24, 2017

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Natural brilliance in a dark age.

Yes, the world is entering a “dark age”, marked by extreme aggression, greed and ignorance.

AND

Spring is the season of possibility.
Will we plant seeds that can nourish our lives and bring light to this world?

As we come out of a winter of deepening our practice and clarifying our intentions, what is sprouting in the compost from last year?

As the waxing sun warms the earth, thaws the ice and causes the water to flow, what is swelling in us? What is wanting to be born?

The themes of Spring are invitation, communication, warmth, compassion, love.
How is nature evoking these in us, personally and collectively?


We invite you to join in exploring the connections this season can open for us: individually, with each other and with our world. What is emerging in our lives? How will we grow our most important and beneficial work in tough times?

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In this retreat, much of it in the forest, gardens and wetlands of Windhorse, we will deepen our meditative/contemplative practices and lean into our unique roles as leaders (everyone is a leader and every leader is in training), informed and inspired by nature in springtime.

How will we respond to the paradox of dark times and natural brilliance?

REGISTRATION & INFORMATION

The Seven of Pentacles
by Marge Piercy

Under a sky the color of pea soup
she is looking at her work growing away there
actively, thickly like grapevines or pole beans
as things grow in the real world, slowly enough.
If you tend them properly, if you mulch, if you water,
if you provide birds that eat insects a home and winter food,
if the sun shines and you pick off caterpillars,
if the praying mantis comes and the ladybugs and the bees,
then the plants flourish, but at their own internal clock.

Connections are made slowly, sometimes they grow underground.
You cannot tell always by looking what is happening.
More than half the tree is spread out in the soil under your feet.
Penetrate quietly as the earthworm that blows no trumpet.
Fight persistently as the creeper that brings down the tree.
Spread like the squash plant that overruns the garden.
Gnaw in the dark and use the sun to make sugar.

Weave real connections, create real nodes, build real houses.
Live a life you can endure: Make love that is loving.
Keep tangling and interweaving and taking more in,
a thicket and bramble wilderness to the outside but to us
interconnected with rabbit runs and burrows and lairs.

Live as if you liked yourself, and it may happen:
reach out, keep reaching out, keep bringing in.
This is how we are going to live for a long time: not always,
for every gardener knows that after the digging, after the planting,
after the long season of tending and growth, the harvest comes.

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