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PHILIP V. STARKMAN
Contained
within the life of Philip V. Starkman, the founding teacher of
Spring Rain
Sangha, is the harmonious marriage of two formidable
journeys:
one as the spiritual seeker, and the other as the
Psychotherapist
and Counsellor.
For
over 40 years, in his quest to answer lifes bigger questions,
Philip has been pursuing an in-depth spiritual development that
has taken
him to a number of countries on several of the worlds
continents.
His two-pronged journey began first with youthful
backpacking
through Europe. Then Philip
spent an intense 3-year study period at the Hebrew University of
Jerusalem, where he studied Philosophy, Literature, Art History,
Music,
and History in an attempt to shed some light on the dark, vast
expanse
of my ignorance, as he puts it.
More
academic studies in California, work in academia and later in
psychiatric
and medical settings, preceded his much dreamed of journey to
India.
Once
in India, Philip immersed himself in a number of Hindu meditation
traditions. This brought
the
focus and discipline that forged a firm spiritual foundation for
future
practices. The next four
years
were spent in daily study, meditation and yogic practices with
teachers
from most of the major Indian spiritual traditions.
His
decisive dive into Buddhist teachings occurred in 1981 while in
retreat in
Burma. Here Philip met the
profound Vipassana teacher U Pandita, who introduced him to the
Abhidharma
teachings. Their profundity
gripped him immediately. As
his understanding of the human mind deepened from a spiritual
point-of-view, so did his psychotherapeutic knowledge of the human
psyche.
The
1981-82 Burma retreat was followed by a short stay in a forest
monastery
in Thailand. Then
Philips practice took another intense dive, this time into
Japanese Zen
meditation. The challenge
of
maintaining a daily Zen practice gave him the discipline that was
so
crucial to nourishing all aspects of practice.
After a 3-year stay in Japan, Philip immersed himself in
more
Vipassana meditation, followed by Vajrayana practice in North
American and
India.
Philips
steadfast devotion to the spiritual path is evident in his 40-year
career
as a now Toronto-based Lifestyle Counsellor and Psychotherapist.
Integrating
his Buddhist insights into his understanding of human nature and
the human
condition, he offers a unique synthesis of mind/body/spirit
therapy.
It
was Philips years of extensive training in Buddhist meditation
that
prompted teachers, friends and clients to repeatedly request that
he begin
teaching meditation in a group setting.
In 1999, he began teaching weekly Vipassana meditation to a
small
gathering of people in Toronto.
Mounting
interest in his teachings eventually led the group to relocate to
the
Toronto School of Theology.
As
the numbers of meditators steadily grew, Philip went on to form a
small
Sangha. In 2000, the
non-sectarian, non-profit Buddhist meditation group known as
Spring Rain
Sangha was founded. People
of
all faiths were welcome to join.
The
practices taught by Philip had as their ultimate goal the
alleviation of
suffering, and the awakening of our innate peace and
happiness.
Philip
soon expanded his teaching responsibilities to include a number of
yearly
1-day and multi-day meditation retreats.
He also began giving talks at various Toronto-area venues
such as
Snow Lion Meditation Store, York University, the University of
Toronto,
Sunnybrooke Hospital, etc.
His
compassionate insight into the human psyche, coupled with his
seasoned
presentation of Buddhist teachings and practices, drew enough
weekly
meditators that a second teacher, Jim Bedard, was invited to join
Spring
Rain Sangha in 2006. In
September of 2008, Philip and Jim learned that the Sangha had
achieved
official status as a charitable organization in Canada.
Out of the humble beginnings of a handful of eager
meditators and
one passionate and inspiring founder, grew a thriving Sangha whose
numbers
continue to steadily grow.
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Philip V. Starkman

Jim
Bedard

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JIM BEDARD
Spring Rain
Sanghas popularity with new and experienced meditators alike
continued
to increase with the 2006 arrival of the groups second teacher,
Jim
Bedard. Jims deep knowledge
of and infectious enthusiasm for the Buddhas teachings, as well as
his
30 years of experience in Buddhist meditation, made him the ideal
candidate for the job. He
also
knew a thing or two about helping to run a Buddhist Centre:
for over a decade, Jim had sat on the board of directors at
the
Toronto Zen Centre, was actively involved in their fund-raising,
and had
worked as their head monitor and group leader before joining
Spring Rain
Sangha.
As with his
predecessor Philip, this personable ex-Catholic-turned-Buddhist
began his
spiritual journey with a series of deeper questions about the
nature of
existence and ultimate reality.
Jims
early twenties were spent exploring various religious teachings
that would
invariably lead him back to the limitations of
conceptualization.
In the mid 70s, he turned to the experiential practice of
meditation for spiritual insight.
Initial
forays into Christian and then Transcendental Meditation
eventually led
him to the study and practice of Zen Buddhism, under the guidance
of Roshi
Philip Kapleau. Jim spent
the
next twenty years practicing Zen meditation, while still finding
time to
pursue a successful sales and marketing career.
In 1995, Jim, then a
robust man in his early 40s, was hit with a devastating
diagnosis:
a deadly form of acute leukemia that would give him only 10
days to
live. He was determined to
combat the disease using the mental discipline and spiritual
strength he
had acquired through his years of Zen practice.
Jim survived the long, agonizing months of chemotherapy,
radiation,
surgery and bone-marrow transplants, and continues to be in
remission from
his cancer. In his
inspirational 1999 book, Lotus in the Fire, Jim chronicles how
various Buddhist teachings and practices helped him to cope with
life-threatening illness.
After completing his
formal training in Zen, Jim felt drawn to practice Vipassana
meditation.
He found its clear and direct adherence to the teachings of
the
Buddha instantly appealing.
Jim
also wished to balance his many years of emphasizing concentration
with
the therapeutic insights of mindfulness.
When asked why he accepted the invitation to teach at
Spring Rain
Sangha, Jim replies: I
found the style and tone [of the practice] very conducive to peace
and
equanimity something not often cultivated in other Buddhist
traditions. Peace and
profound
equanimity are included in the Buddhas list of factors of
enlightenment.
Those who have the
good fortune to have Philip and Jim as their teachers at Spring
Rain
Sangha, know well the reassuring sense of peace and equanimity
that comes
from belonging to such a unique spiritual community.
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