How Lucky We Are… About the Guan Yin Retreat
by Amara Charles on March 30, 2009
in Articles

Hall of Ten Thousand Buddhas
I never imagined I would visit a Buddhist monastery, and to tell the truth, I often felt something too complex or grand in all of it for me. It took hearing Guan Yin’s name to lure me into the Dharma Realm, and the City of Ten Thousand Buddhas, after which, perhaps, nothing will ever be quite the same.
It turns out, billions of people around the world have been drawn to the sound of this name as well. It has an indescribable allure, which, once you begin hearing its cadence, as we did for seven days in the monastery, somehow fills the pores of your awareness with compassion. Don’t ask me how it works, but I think the 7-day immersion (such a short time!) of chanting, sitting, bowing, walking, eating and sleeping this name has something to do with it.
The name ‘Guan’ means ‘contemplate.’ Shi (pronounced ’sure’) means “world.” Yin means “sounds.” Contemplating the world’s sounds - all of them. Thus, one of the reasons why Guan Shi Yin is the Goddess/God who helps us cultivate compassion is because he/she helps us listen. It is the inner listening that begins to happen when you become quiet enough, and chant her name.
A Buddhist Parable
It is said that being born a human being is as rare as a blind turtle swimming in the ocean. Somewhere in the midst of this great ocean is a floating ring, the size of a life preserver. The moment the blind turtle happens upon the opening and pokes its head through the hole is equivalent to how rare it is for a human being to be born into a physical body.
It’s also quite rare, we are told at the monastery, for someone to show up and celebrate Guan Shi Yin in such a way. Perhaps this is why everyone seems so pleased when a few Westerners arrive. Out of a few hundred people coming and going, there are about six of us who stay for the entire retreat.

Guan Shi Yin
Things Are Not What They Seem
On the first night during a dharma talk, a monk tells this story. A junior and senior ’angel team’ descended to earth briefly to carry out some important work. One evening, they visit the house of a very wealthy man. Greeting the angels (who are of course in disguise), he puts them up for the night in a dingy basement spare room. There is a hole in the wall, which the elder angel spends the night repairing. The junior angel, who woke up slightly grumpy from a cold night’s sleep, follows his partner leaving the home of the wealthy man to carry on their mission for the day.
Soon they are greeted by a husband and wife, who upon hearing that the travelers need a place to stay, invite them for the night. Although the couple is extremely poor, they put together a fine meal of soup, cheese and buttered bread, offering the very best of everything they’ve got. The elder angel slips out in the middle of the night into the barn and then returns to sleep. In the morning, the husband is heard weeping over his only cow that died in the night.
Furious and upset, the younger angel complains, “The rich man who is stingy, you fix his house. Yet this generous couple, you take their only cow? How can this be fair?”
“What you did not see in the night younger brother, is that the angel of death came for his wife. I gave him the cow.”
***
How many angels or spirits visit us daily, protecting us from harm, nudging us to go this way and not that? ‘Things are not what they seem’ wafts through my mind throughout the retreat as I feel troubles and disturbances fade in and out of focus like the ending of a movie.
Things sound different when it gets quiet, and very different again when silence and stillness visit - sometimes curiously, in the midst of a chant. You get to hear you own sounds, at times the inane flood of what the Venerable Master Hsuan Hua calls, ‘false thoughts.’ Lots of them. Torrents. But hearing them, and sometimes stopping them in the chant is different. It’s like someone suddenly stops the train and all the stuff inside flies out, finally leaving the train empty for a moment.
I am not so sure whether this should be called a “retreat,” or an advance. It is good once in a while, or as often as we can, to suspend extraneous thought and actions, to cease the chatter and bustle. It is difficult to hear when we are swept away by the constant barrage of inner and outer sound. Curiously, there is a wealth of abundant, subtle energy that surfaces through kindness, giving, compassion and quiet joy.
Namo Guan Shi Yin Pu Sa
Homage to Guan Shi Yin Bodhisattva
‘Quehestemehah’
You Dance in My Heart
In beauty,
Amara

Hey Amarra
I am still feeling really good and after 3 months and I see real big changes in myself. I am more available to myself, my wife and others. All very positive.
My big thing is to use my energy (and the energy of others, with permission) to propel myself from where I am to beyond. I need to focus on were and what I want to be, though.
I still feel the energy pulsing through my body.
I have come to “more” realize that I am a sexual being and that fabulous.
I went to this party (60 people) and I was chatting in a small group (10 people) and I was giving this women a “hard time” (you know in my special “let’s see what kind of response I can get way”). Well she gave it back to me…she asked what my weakness were! At first I was taken back. (You think I have weaknesses?!) Then realized that this was an opportunity. A real opportunity to look at myself. My wife was not around and it gave me an opportunity to go for it. I quickly looked within and said you know I’m really lazy. As a group we talked about it some. Then I was asked for another weakness. That one I forgot. But my laziness comment has been with me for a while. And now when I don’t want to do something, I just do it because I don’t want to be lazy. It was so freeing to confront my weakness and move away from it!
Life is so much better when you confront your weakness and fears.
I look forward to confronting more weakness and fears and pushing forward!
Can you tell me the name of the songs that you played during the energy exchanging sessions?
Ricardo
Hi Ricardo,
It is great to hear from you again and I am happy you are doing well. I think you went right to the core of it all reflecting on being lazy. We all know quite a bit, so the only thing to do is live it every moment you can remember. Easy said, difficult to do. Being honest is the way, so good on you. Keep it up.
I am not sure what energy exchanges you mean, and I do play a ton of music at the Q’s. If you can be a bit more specific I might be able to tell you… The name of one group I often play is called Rasa.
Beautiful and inspiring. I have been practicing silent meditation, chanting, etc. for many, many years on and off. In the last four months, once again it has become a regular morning and evening practice. This is what centers me, grounds me and allows the true rest in my body and soul. I can only imagine the possibility when you are on retreat for even just a week; enmeshed in such practices. Thank you for sharing with me.
Nadine
FROM AMARA:
Thanks Nadine. I am glad you are meditating. Hope you will come by some day and sit with us. We chant Guan Yin and also practice qigong and Taoist Sexual Yoga. Right now it is just for women.
See you at Tigress Moon.
FROM WAYNE:
As I was introducing your e-mail to a friend, I asked her to read the ” Q ” link attached. And then I read the whole link ( about the Massai women!) WOW you do have great experiences. Along with having just finished Mutant Messenger Down Under, I am being blown away more and more!
Love,
Wayne
Hi Wayne,
Yes, that was a GREAT book. Thanks for all your support!
In beauty, Amara