Visiting teacher Ben Connolly offers a morning workshop based on his new book Mindfulness and Intimacy.
Mindfulness is the powerful practice of nonjudgmental awareness that helps us ground ourselves in the present moment. But there’s a risk: we might see our experience as separate from ourselves. To close this gap, mindfulness has traditionally been paired with a focus on intimacy, community, and interdependence. Ben Connelly shows us how to bring these two practices together: bringing warm hearts to our clear seeing.
Meditations and exercises will show how mindfulness and intimacy together enrich our empathetic engagement with ourselves and the world around us.
Registration
No cost for Red Cedar Zen Members. The modest sliding scale cost which Is requested of non-members goes to Red Cedar Zen. An opportunity to make a teacher donation (dana) directly to Ben will be offered at the event.
About Ben
Ben Connelly is a Soto Zen teacher and Dharma heir in the Katagiri lineage. He also teaches mindfulness in a variety of secular contexts including police and corporate, correctional facilities, and addiction recovery. Ben is based at Minnesota Zen Meditation Center and travels to teach across the United States.
Book Endorsements:
“Zen teaches that ‘enlightenment is Intimacy with all things.’ Ben Connelly beautifully articulates that a worthwhile spiritual practice—a worthwhile journey through all our triumphs and travails; indeed, a worthwhile human life—is cultivating an intimacy with all things.”—Larry Yang, author of Awakening Together: The Spiritual Practice of Inclusivity and Community
“With clarity and grace, Ben Connelly affirms the deep intimacy needed for true awakening. From his conscientious and reflective work, the path into our sleepy interior worlds unfolds beautifully into the light step by step. We only need courage to stand in such radiance. Highly recommended.”—Zenju Earthlyn Manuel, author of The Way of Tenderness: Awakening Through Race, Sexuality, and Gender
“Our true heart’s desire is connection: intimacy. Yet our minds and hearts are often focused on what separates us from other people and the rest of creation. In this clear and helpful book Zen teacher Ben Connelly presents twenty-seven aspects of our life that, through the practice of mindfulness, can become fertile fields for dissolving our sense of alienation and deepening our experience of interdependence and intimacy.”—Jan Chozen Bays, author of How to Train a Wild Elephant
“This book carries vital medicine for today’s world. Ben Connelly speaks from the heart of Zen and reminds of our true and innate capacity for intimacy, that we can always take one step from where we are to heal the myth of separation. Mindfulness and Intimacy offers practices and contemplations that affirm the embodiment of interconnection through everyday ordinary life. I recommend it for everyone!”—Deborah Eden Tull, author of Relational Mindfulness: A Handbook for Deepening Our Connection with Ourselves, Each Other, and Our Planet