Center observes 10 years of purpose
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Elia Powers
Four years ago, Newport Coast resident Bob Posert stepped into a
two-story office building in Costa Mesa in search of clarity. A
series of what he called “everyday frustrations” weighed heavily on
his mind, and he needed a place to go for reflection.
“I was looking for a way to get connected with what was happening
in my life, as opposed to wishing things would happen,” said Posert,
vice president of product development for a software engineering
company.
Today, he still visits the Zen Center of Orange County at least
once a week and helps maintain the center’s website. Posert credits
the Rev. Dr. Deborah Barrett, the center’s executive director and
co-founder, with helping him understand how to come to grips with his
emotions.
The center will mark its 10th anniversary today with a celebration
from 5 to 7:30 p.m. at the Neighborhood Community Center in Costa
Mesa. The $40 event is open to the public.
Barrett chose a varied program for the event, showing that Zen is
more than just meditation.
“We all desire to wake up to the purpose of our life,” Barrett
said. “But not everyone is attracted to meditation.”
A martial arts and archery expert from Los Angeles will teach
attendees the art of Kyudo, a meditative activity that stresses
preparing and shooting the arrow. The event also includes a bamboo
flute performance, a flower-arranging demonstration and a vegan meal.
Barrett will speak on “The Way of Zen as Everyday Life in Orange
County.”
“There are two choices -- you can be faithful to your sense of
spiritual development or you can be lost in consumerism,” said
Barrett, a regular contributor to the Daily Pilot’s “In Theory”
column.
“I’m interested in what it is that makes us feel satisfied in
life. For me, it’s serving and being available.”
Barrett practiced what she preached as a Roman Catholic sister for
20 years. She received a law degree from DePaul University in the
late 1970s. While living in Chicago, she made regular trips to the
Cook County Jail, where she taught inmates -- many of whom had yet to
be sentenced -- about civil rights and the legal system.
She lived for years in a church-sponsored facility that housed
recent prison inmates looking to transition back into society. As she
was mentoring the residents, Barrett said, she realized that teaching
was her true calling.
On a church-related trip to Idyllwild in 1987, Barrett said she
became interested in Zen -- and in moving to Southern California. She
came to Orange County that year and opened the Zen Center eight years
later.
It started with 10 people meditating together in an upstairs room.
The Zen Center now has more than 35 active members who come to
twice-weekly meditation programs, workshops and instruction sessions.
Some, including Posert, attend daylong retreats at the Costa Mesa
facility. Posert began by participating in an indoor meditation
program at the Zen Center, sitting still for 30-minute intervals and
pacing slowly for 10 minutes in between.
“It helped me understand why I felt the way I did,” Posert said.
Barrett, who has a doctorate in psychology, teaches classes on
aging, religion and mysticism at Cal State Fullerton, and she holds
individual counseling sessions with clients.
She also started a weekly program offering Zen training and stress
reduction at a maximum-security penitentiary for men near the
Mexico-California border.
“I like the notion that whoever you are and wherever you might be,
you are spending time each day reflecting,” she said.
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