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How did you get into labyrinth work?
When I finished my master's thesis, I was at a roadblock
and didn't know what direction to take next. I had worked
as a nurse and became burned out, so that was not a
choice. Yet I wanted to utilize my education in a meaningful
way.
I was not a labyrinth person, but I went to the labyrinth
at Grace Cathedral [in San Francisco] and decided to
walk it while asking what could be my next step. It
was only the second time I had walked the labyrinth,
and I felt uncertain about the whole thing.
Then I thought I was getting to the center, but was
flung off onto another side and really got mixed up.
When finally I did get to the center of the configuration,
it came to me that I needed to become a labyrinth facilitator.
I attended a four-day weekend seminar at Grace Cathedral
and that was the beginning.
What does a labyrinth facilitator do?
I sometimes feel like a labyrinth gypsy because I travel
around with my portable one. I offer a short history
about labyrinths and tell people about the best-known
one on the island of Crete that was constructed 4,000
years ago.
There also are guidelines for the meditative walk,
such as finding one's own pace and spending all the
time necessary in the middle that one needs.
When facilitating, I'm a variation on a traffic cop,
who has the responsibility of "holding the space"
outside the maze so those meditating inside don't have
to worry about what's going on beyond their private
journey.
What's special about a labyrinth?
There are 180-degree angles within the design that
mimic curves in our bodies, such as intestines, brain
tissue and our ears. The labyrinth is based on spirals,
as is our DNA.
It is also an archetype pattern that is big enough
to hold all of a person: all their joy, pain and questioning
of life. There are-like life-many unexpected turns.
What has been your most interesting
experience?
I took my labyrinth to the University of
California, San Francisco after the Sept. 11 disaster
for students and faculty to utilize. It was an offering
for people's use. Walking the labyrinth can be a way
to connect with one's spirit or inner guidance.
The Rev. Lauren Artress, Ph.D., of Grace Cathedral
has studied the Chartres pattern. She said the center
circles represent earth, plants, animals, humans, angels
and the universe.
Wherever I take my labyrinth, everyone listens and
finds what they need from the experience. It's a metaphor
for life because what happens in the labyrinth is indicative
of one's path.
I also went to the San Francisco Recreation Center
for the Handicapped, where participants used wheelchairs
or crutches.
One person had two assistants, one on each side, to
help navigate. That was a tremendously rewarding experience.
Have you experienced any resistance
to your offerings?
The labyrinth is an unfamiliar tool, a walking meditation,
and people aren't acquainted with it. They may see it
as strange or New Age stuff and may not want to take
the 15 or 20 minutes to complete the circuit.
It would be a wonderful tool for those in waiting rooms
where people are passing time anyway. Why not quiet
the mind and find a focus using the time while one is
waiting? It can be such an enriching experience.
Where can one walk through a labyrinth?
There is an indoor and an outdoor labyrinth at Grace
Cathedral at 1100 California St. in San Francisco. The
outdoor one is open year-round. The second Friday of
every month the inside design offers music beside the
labyrinth from 7 to 8:30 p.m.
The California Pacific Medical Center in San Francisco
has a labyrinth at the front entrance. One is also located
at St. John's Regional Medical Center in Oxnard, Calif.
St. Mary's Medical Center in Apple Valley, Calif., has
a portable labyrinth.
A person also can follow along a labyrinth configuration
on a piece of paper and still have a wonderful experience.
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