
Waking Up in Free-Fall: Bringing The Buddhist Practices of a Bodhisattva to the Bardos of Everyday Life
with Susan Chapman
Join us in person at the Shambhala Meditation Center of Milwaukee to participate as a local group in this Shambhala Online program. We will watch the program live on Zoom, and have an opportunity afterwards to engage in discussion with each other.
Register using this affiliate link. Monies will be shared 50/50 between Shambhala Online and the Shambhala Meditation Center of Milwaukee. If the program price is an obstacle for you, you may request a discount (before you register) from Shambhala Online.
The Shambhala Meditation Center of Milwaukee has a Generosity Policy to make our offerings available to anyone who wishes to participate. All are welcome to join us at the center for this program, regardless of ability to pay.
For questions/technical issues with your registration or payment, please email [email protected].
For other questions, please email [email protected].
About the Course
The word “bardo” is a Buddhist term often used for the after-death experience. But it also describes the gap triggered by any unexpected crisis. The shock of illness, death, or any kind of loss can be the most brutal of interruptions. Your life’s timeline no longer makes sense. You feel vulnerable and alone. But we’re not truly alone. We’ve just dropped out of everyday life into a new dimension, a bardo-world that appears as if out of nowhere.
-Susan Chapman
In this course, consisting of four live sessions, Susan will explore with participants how the Buddhist teachings on the bardo can be a guide to keeping our hearts open when life seems to fall apart. These teachings and sessions will be derived from her new book, Which Way is Up? (Shambhala Publications 2024).
Susan will talk about how working with the bardos of everyday life is understanding how to work with three very different kinds of fear:
- Awake Fear: When you learn you have cancer, the shock can wake you up to the reality that you will die someday. The bad news is actually good news. We’re alive right now!
- Frozen Fear: Waking up through fear shows us the edge of our denial, which is frozen fear. Denial of reality is denying the flow of goodness in our own body, our relationships and our ability to learn from our experiences.
- Core Fear: At the root of denial is the hidden fear, the background anxiety that there is something wrong with who we are. This self-doubt keeps us turning away from the truth, which is our basic goodness.
Susan will further explore with participants that to work with these three kinds of fear, we can look at three kinds of love:
- Loving Presence: Being willing to be present with whatever experience we’re going through is the way to support Awake Fear.
- Compassionate Insight: The way to work with denial, or frozen fear, is with compassion, feeling the pain of shutting down, and insight, being curious about where our ideas and opinions come from.
- Mother-Child Reunion: Our core fears go back to the misunderstandings of early childhood when we formed ideas about who we are to stay in relationship with the caring adults in our life. Somewhere along the line we concluded that there was something wrong with who we are, “I’m unworthy, unloveable, unforgivable, unwelcome”. When we discover our basic goodness, it’s as though the loving mother of wisdom brings the lost child home, showing us our true nature.
Susan’s warmth, gentleness, and loving kindness pervade these powerful teachings. Her approach to presenting the bardo teachings is informed by her personal experiences with death which have turned her towards understanding that there is beauty and sacredness in every moment of life. The themes of love and fear, along with the Buddhist teachings on death and dying, have been her central focus over the past few years after being diagnosed with an aggressive cancer in 2020 and she has shared that, “the experience of chemotherapy in particular gave me a taste of witnessing my familiar body and mind dissolve into someone new. The thread I was able to hold onto was trust in the heart-instructions, to bring loving presence to fear, to let go into a bigger space of tender vulnerability, and most importantly to have a deeper understanding of what suffering means to countless others.”
Join Susan for a tender, personal, and compassionate approach to ancient bardo teachings that will feel relevant for everyone who struggles with the groundless and transitory nature of life!
"A bardo is an emotional free-fall. We’ve moved into a strange new neighborhood, or we just lost our job. It’s the morning after a painful fight with our lover. It feels like a sinkhole has opened with our past on one side and our future on the other. We are refugees from the life we thought we had. Like refugees, we need to know where to find support, shelter, and nourishment. The path of awakening through fear is with love. Love is stronger than fear."
-Susan Chapman
About the Teacher
Susan Chapman has been studying and practicing the Shambhala and Buddhist dharma for nearly 50 years. During that time she’s worked in prisons, battered women’s shelters and in private practice as a family therapist. She spent nine years in retreat at Gampo Abbey followed by 10 years serving as an acharya. In 2020 she was diagnosed with an aggressive form of breast cancer and her experience in that living bardo is the basis for a new book and this class. Previous publication: The Five Keys To Mindful Communication.
PLEASE NOTE: Prices are in US Dollars. Request a discount before you register to allow for exchange rates or other discounts.
Register using this affiliate link.