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Dawning of Clear Light: A Western Approach to Tibetan Dark Retreat Meditation [Paperback]

Martin Lowenthal (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

August 1, 2003

Retreats in darkness have been used by all the great spiritual traditions for thousands of years as a method for tapping deep clarity, accessing sacred wisdom, connecting with the Divine, and training to transform the mind/body system into a manifestation of wisdom. In dark retreat, the practitioner lives in complete darkness--eating, sleeping, meditating, and simply existing in a world without external light.

Traditionally, in Tibet, dark retreats were performed by monks as part of their training with the support of their monastery and their fellow monks. But dark retreats are of value to people from all walks of life, from the monastic to the busy householder--those with jobs, families, and all-too-many responsibilities. Martin Lowenthal has taken a practice little-known in the West and made it accessible by incorporating methods based in western psychology with traditional Tibetan Buddhism.

There are many advantages of a retreat in the dark, one of which is rest for our eyes, weary from overstimulation in our visually oriented world, that then promotes overall relaxation of body and mind. This relaxation helps us cut through old mental and emotional habits, harmonizes the elements in the body, works with visions, and rests in the "Natural State."

Retreats in the dark also improve the quality of our daily life. We can develop greater clarity and awareness in every aspect of living. When we improve the conditions of our lives, we provide an atmosphere more conducive to continued meditation practices. Dark retreat is also a powerful setting for practicing tantra. Tantra uses imagination, senses, and creativity to transform experience into food for the spirit.

Dawning of Clear Light is a celebration, a joyous invitation to find the treasures that are hidden within your world and the world around you.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Tibetan Buddhist practice is elaborate, esoteric and challenging for Westerners. This book by Lowenthal, a psychotherapist, meditation teacher and longtime student of Tibetan Buddhism, breaks ground as an English-language guide to the technique of dark retreat, a traditional Tibetan spiritual practice that a Western, non-monastic Buddhist can experience by sitting in a sound- and light-proof room. The dark retreat affords a clearer view of how mental and physical processes generate an individual's experience of reality. Lowenthal explains the practice, frames it in the context of teachings from the Buddhist and Bon spiritual traditions of Tibet, and uses his journal, recorded during his own retreats, as an example of the retreat experience. The journal excerpts are especially helpful as a way of concretely describing what a practitioner might encounter under these unconventional circumstances designed to promote spiritual growth. While the author writes clearly and helpfully about techniques-two appendices give useful practical instruction-and is transparent about his experience, Tibetan Buddhist teachings about the nature of reality are complex. A few chapters are too short to shed sufficient light on central concepts that are very difficult to grasp. This is not a book for beginners, but an advanced practitioner with good guidance from a teacher can benefit from this clear and helpful introduction to a little-known spiritual practice.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From the Inside Flap

Retreats in darkness have been used by all the great spiritual traditions for thousands of years as a method for tapping deep clarity, accessing sacred wisdom, connecting with the Divine, and training to transform the mind/body system into a manifestation of wisdom. In dark retreat, the practitioner lives in complete darkness--eating, sleeping, meditating, and simply existing in a world without external light.

Traditionally, in Tibet, dark retreats were performed by monks as part of their training with the support of their monastery and their fellow monks. But dark retreats are of value to people from all walks of life, from the monastic to the busy householder--those with jobs, families, and all-too-many responsibilities. Martin Lowenthal has taken a practice little-known in the West and made it accessible by incorporating methods based in western psychology with traditional Tibetan Buddhism.

There are many advantages of a retreat in the dark, one of which is rest for our eyes, weary from overstimulation in our visually oriented world, that then promotes overall relaxation of body and mind. This relaxation helps us cut through old mental and emotional habits, harmonizes the elements in the body, works with visions, and rests in the "Natural State."

Retreats in the dark also improve the quality of our daily life. We can develop greater clarity and awareness in every aspect of living. When we improve the conditions of our lives, we provide an atmosphere more conducive to continued meditation practices. Dark retreat is also a powerful setting for practicing tantra. Tantra uses imagination, senses, and creativity to transform experience into food for the spirit.

"Dawning of Clear Light" is a celebration, a joyous invitation to find the treasures that are hidden within your world and the world around you.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Hampton Roads Publishing (August 1, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1571743758
  • ISBN-13: 978-1571743756
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.5 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.9 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,522,190 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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20 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Dark Retreat Journal, October 27, 2003
By 
Inyo (Van Nuys, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Dawning of Clear Light: A Western Approach to Tibetan Dark Retreat Meditation (Paperback)
This book was not at all what I expected. I was hoping that this was going to be the first manual describing the teachings of the tibetans regarding the practice of the Dark Retreat. I was sorely mistaken. The main problem with this book is the very misleading title: "A western approach to Tibetan Dark Retreat Maditation" A title that would have been proper would be: "The journal of a Western Practioner engaged in the Tibetan Dark Retreat Meditation" or something to that effect.

If your looking for a manual on the dark retreat check out "Darkness Technology" by the genious Master Mantak Chia. Even though he is Thai he certainly gives a much more "Western Approach" by including the results of tireless scientific research that sheds light on the psycho-physiological effects of the dark retreat. It also includes the general Taoist perpective on the matter. If your looking for the Tibetan perpective read anything by Namkai Norbu Rinpoche and Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche their teachings are priceless and they tend to mention the dark retreat practice from time to time. If your looking to actually do a Dark Retreat read as much as you can about Dzogchen and lots of experience with Tsa Lung or Taoist Qigong. Actually studying with these masters is also very important.

So all in all Lowenthal's journal was somewhat interesting and surely worth a read through if your planning to engage yourself in one of the most powerful spiritual practices known to humankind.

For the liberation of all sentient beings!
-Inyo

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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Western Bridge to the Dark, April 20, 2004
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This review is from: Dawning of Clear Light: A Western Approach to Tibetan Dark Retreat Meditation (Paperback)
Of all the dzogchen practices within the Bon/Buddhist tradition, few have remained more mysterious, or have rubbed more against the grain of our Western culture at large than that of the dark retreat. The practices of the dark have continued to lie out on the distant horizon of experiential understanding for many practitioners here in the West who are making their way through the Bon or Tibetan Buddhist traditions.

Now, though, with a depth and breadth of understanding that comes through having had extensive dark retreat teachings as well as having completed over a dozen dark retreats, combined with over thirty years immersion in the mainly Bon and Tibetan Buddhist traditions, Martin Lowenthal, dharma teacher and founder of The Dedicated Life Institute, has written a landmark book, complete with a blessing and forward by the wonderful Bon lama, Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche, that sheds an illuminating contemporary ray of light on this ancient practice of the dark.

After Tenzin Rinpoche's forward which praises Martin's work and warns that practices of the dark must be approached respectfully under the guidance of an experienced teacher, the book begins with a brief overview of the ways in which the dark has been used within great wisdom traditions. At the heart of the book is a beautiful tapestry woven of two parts: actual journal entries which document some of his lived dark retreat experiences mainly from a four-week dark retreat completed in 1998; and Martin's commentary written more recently that establishes those experiences within the radiant spaciousness toward which his own teachings as well as those of Bon and Buddhism point.

Here, then, we have the first-ever spontaneously live broadcasts from the front-line of a dark retreat manifested as poetry, reflections, insights, and Martin's descriptions of his daily experiences in the dark from the mundane to the subtle and higher. Thankfully, throughout the journal entries, Martin remains transparent, allowing the reader to live vicariously for a moment within this illuminating darkness. Here's one entry, a poem, as an example:

Sitting in the Dark

Sitting on a firm cushion thoughts come and go
Mind remains.
Feelings arrive insistently and exit reluctantly
Heart remains.
Inner lights and colors arise, pass through, and disappear
Darkness remains.
"I" goes
"Am" remains.

These journal entries act as springboards for Martin's flowing commentary within this section and the portion following, entitled "A Framework For Understanding the Teachings." An established dharma teacher in his own right, Martin's melodic contemporary writings on some of the perennial subjects found within the teachings of the Bon/Buddhist tradition provide freshly whispered heart-reminders that coax one beyond the clinging to familiar dharma concepts, and toward the Truth that only ever just IS! Here is one jewel:

"All spiritual work requires a fine balance between will and willingness. With will we mobilize our attention and energies with determination in a direction. Will helps us to start and to sustain effort. Willingness allows us to accept and be shaped by grace. It suggests an open perspective and a heart posture of surrender in which we intentionally offer ourselves, realizing that our natural state is not at odds with life, but an authentic expression of Spirit."

Before the book ends, Martin gives us a brief overview of some of the specifically Tibetan Bon teachings on the dark retreat, and in two appendices, specific practices and preparations helpful for when one is properly prepared to do a dark retreat.

The mark of a great bridge is that it affords one a safer passage across what once seemed a wide gulf, and urges one when ready to move forward into new territory, transforming one's perspective, expanding one's horizons. From the gross, to subtle, causal and non-dual, from past to present, from deeply Tibetan traditions to an integration with contemporary Western culture, this landmark bridge, "Dawning of Clear Light: A Western Approach to Dark Retreat Meditation," works on many levels to help make our safe and effective passage into the dark retreat a reality.

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4.0 out of 5 stars A Rare Glimpse into the Light beyond the Darkness, August 31, 2010
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This review is from: Dawning of Clear Light: A Western Approach to Tibetan Dark Retreat Meditation (Paperback)
While there is some merit to the criticism that the author isn't performing "traditional" dark retreats as they were done in Himalayan caves, to dismiss this work on that account is a grave overreaction. Martin Lowenthal is unusually qualified to present his experiences, and their transformative nature, to an English reading audience precisely because he does struggle with and engage all of the hyperactivity of contemporary life. A trained therapist, a longtime meditator, and a writer capable of unique self-reflection, Lowenthal has created a record that allows the rest of us a glimpse into what goes on in the dark, after the lights go out. We hear a lot about the different possibilities of sensory deprivation, whether from scientific studies, anthropological observations and interpretation, or through the use of catalysts such as entheogens (DMT, ayahuasca) or binaural beats, but rarely do these accounts offer such a balanced perspective providing both the non-ordinary experience in all of its awesome power and the interpretive analysis that sets it within the framework of a much broader spiritual vision.

If you are interested in visionary spirituality, out of body experiences, non-ordinary states of consciousness, meditation, or near death experiences, you will find this an invaluable read. The only other account of dark retreat practices in English that even begins to approach the level of nuance found here is in the Appendix ("Dzokchen Dark Retreat: An Abbreviated Phenomenological Diary") to David Michael Levins's philosophical tome, The Opening of Vision, which may not even be in print at this time.

The Opening of Vision: Nihilism and the Postmodern Situation
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
A dark retreat is a solitary journey done in total darkness. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
hosting presence, dark retreat, reactive habits, heart posture, essence drop, retreat space, wisdom qualities, intimate witness, beneficial presence, retreat room, wisdom presence, guru yoga, continuous consciousness, wisdom nature, wisdom energies
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Clear Light, Tenzin Wangyal, Lopon Tenzin Namdak, Father Jean, Heart of Compassion, Dhyani Buddhas, Three Aspects of Being, Yeshe Walmo
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Treasury of Precious Qualities by Bka?-?gyur Rin-po-che Klong-chen Ye-shes-rdo-rje
 

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