By Maryanna Gabriel
“Great is the matter of life and death
Awake, awake
Don’t waste time.”
Zen saying on the dining room bell at Gampo Abbey
Dramatic Cape Breton Landscape |
I rested a time on a really nice beach where the
Northumberland Ferry came in from Prince Edward Island and then drove to Cape
Breton noticing that the English words were translated into Gaelic. By the time
I got to Cheticamp I could see I was in the heart of Cape Breton. Here French replaced the Scottish Gaelic. I stopped to
buy some handicrafts made with hooking and I was shown the photos of the elderly
women who made them, in their eighties, doing 144 stitches per square inch. It
made me feel comforted somehow to see their work, kind of like a group of benevolent
grandmothers practicing so much patience with the wool. That night a fierce
wind came up with lashing rain. It gave me a sense of how dire the weather can
be. The houses reminded me of the photos of Newfoundland, kind of placed like
blocks without a lot of form or colour on a treeless landscape. I had it in my
mind to go to Gampo Abbey which is the home of Pema Chodren because before I came on
this journey I had had a psychic reading and I was told to come to the place,
that I would love it. Pema Chodrem is somebody who I have a great deal of
admiration for and I have read a few of her books. If you don’t know, she
thought she was happily married and came home one day to be told by her husband
that he was leaving her for his secretary or some such thing. The hurt and pain
that came up was so intense that she sought refuge in Bhuddist teachings and
now, as her life has turned out, she is a tremendous tour de force in translating
tenets to the western psyche. She is apparently shortly to appear on Oprah
which would be interesting to watch.
Gampo Abbey, Cape Breton Island |
A Monk Gives Us A Tour - The Sanctuary Of Gampo Abbey |