Our Kinship with Mongolian Eagle Hunters

Wambli (Eagle) Feathers used for Ceremonial Healing and Purification

Wambli (Eagle) Feathers used for Ceremonial Healing and Purification

I started this article previously by stating : “The previous post’s power outage lead to a curious confluence of recent events.” In retrospect, it’s not all that curious: I simply don’t turn the TV on very often, so blown power and no heat prompted a Sunday night at a buddy’s house, ironically catching the television newsmagazine 60 Minutes. That show’s piece of interest focused on Lauren McGough, an American woman from Oklahoma whose become one of Mongolia’s finest Eagle Hunters. The story began in the Mongolian province of Bayan-Ölgii, where Asia China Russia and Kazikstan meet. There, a group of nomads live the lives of 19th century ranchers, Cossacks who make up only 4% of Mongolia’s population, surviving on meat and milk and burning dung for fuel, all the while existing without running water and electricity, that last piece certainly gaining my attention.

Falconry - the ancient art of hunting with birds of prey - was born in this forbidding land, the Altai mountains of central Asia Mongolia. Hunters still loft Golden Eagles into the sky in a partnership of man and bird that that pre-dates recorded history. “This is where it all began it’s the cradle,” said McGough. “Several thousand years ago, we don’t know exactly when, a man saw a Golden Eagle catch a rabbit or a fox and had the ingenious idea to hunt in partnership with it. It blows my mind that’s its even real. It’s like something out of The Lord of the Rings, but you can do it.”

The Mongolian Steppe is the greatest expanse of grassland unaltered by human influence. It endures because human existence has narrow odds between the widest climate extremes on earth -  104 degrees in summer, 50 below in winter. (I was Ulaanbaatar-bound - the capital of Mongolia - in January at the start of this piece until they detailed that winter low). Nomads depend on the animals that yield nearly all of their food fiber clothing and fuel. And one of the oldest bonds in nature is an alliance of survival among hunters, horses, and Golden Eagles. The birds are abundant all around the Northern Hemisphere. In terms of survival as a species, conservationists call Golden Eagles an Animal of Least Concern.  It’s a ten-pound animal but as McGough pointed out, don’t be fooled if that doesn’t seem like a lot. “They have hollow bones and are mostly feathers,” she said. “Ten pounds on a bird is an enormous bird. They have a six foot wing span with lovely amber eyes, the name Golden Eagle derived from the lovely feathers they have on their nape, around the neck. They’re quite effective at killing, which is what they’re built for, they are modern day Velociraptor. a perfect product of evolution. I will never be tired of watching a Golden Eagle in flight; every single time I see it, it thrills me.” When I heard that statement, i thought: That’s exactly how I feel about running Ceremony. It’s an endeavor connected to the natural world that will never cease to cause me delight.

Once in the nomad camp, the indigenous culture’s warmth was evident, despite the harsh conditions. “These are the people that can talk to animals, because they have relationships with goats, sheep, horses, camels and eagles,” said McGough. They have intimate knowledge of where snow leopards and foxes are. There’s no agriculture there because the land is unworkable. These people ingeniously learned to work with domestic animals and build these unique relationships with wild animals.” The story closed on a young boy named Bekka, introduced as the hope of his family’s traditional world. He’s learning horsemanship and falconry, and in Bekka 60 minutes discovered the most endangered species of the steppe — the nomads themselves. In our world there may be only 300 eagle hunters left, a rare breed of human still speaking the language of the wild.

Our Outstanding October Yoga Weekend

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Uh, What a weekend! If you’re a reader of The Higher Haven blog, you’ve heard the line before, I know. But we’ve never actually opened with that interjection. And I’m pretty sparing with exclamation points. And this one truly did live up. Lived up to that Uh in the sense that we lost power early Saturday afternoon people! (Note second exclamation). I’m unsure how widespread state-wide Saturday’s storms were, but power was out all over shadowy Southwest Michigan, from Saugatuck on down. Actually, on second thought, power is not what we lost. Power as defined is the ability or capacity to perform or act effectively, and that capability was certainly not absent. What is it the Bible says? “The light shines in the darkness, yet the darkness did not overcome it” (John 1:5).

We won’t bore you with all the bloodshed; there was very little. Having to look after the people who come here for healing, there was no good way to run a somewhat arduous purification Ceremony, ask folks to get low and work their way through the experience, and then send them back to a lightless house with no ability to take a hot shower. Thank Wakan Tanka for wood stoves, as a roaring fire in the retreat house saved the day, saved the night, saved the weekend. We didn’t miss a (drum) beat, and reports coming back indicate that the blackout only made the experience cozier. “I had the privilege to attend the Higher Haven Yoga retreat with Brighton Yoga Studio over the weekend and can’t say enough good things about it… it’s hard to put into words how special this retreat center is. What it did for me was allow room for growth in my life, the chance to meet like-minded individuals from all walks of life and share in a truly moving experience. I unplugged from everyday life and focused on connecting with nature, meditation, and my own spiritual growth. I would recommend this retreat to anyone and everyone I meet. I can’t wait to go back.” Nothing missing there.

Many thanks Alissa. Thanks go out also to Amy, Donna and Kim, as well as our Rock Man Extraordinaire  J. Scott Campbell, leader of Wild Heart Guide Services and a steady presence amongst the peeps. Thanks too to Guy, Bridget’s companion, a fellow woodsman and Guy who knows how to wield an axe. As to teacher Bridget Erin Sheahan? I was a fan before but I’ve grown to be an ardent devotee. After our modified Fire Ceremony Saturday night, she lead a killer inner-heat building Ashtanga class Sunday morning in our chilly studio. How goes the other heartening quote? “If the world is cold, kindle fires to warm it.” Inner fires people. And on that note, If you’re up for joining us, consider the upcoming November weekend, with a focus more on meditation and spiritual purification. Or come for Bridget’s triumphant return February 22-24, 2019. We’ll close with an excerpt from her Paidraig O’Tuama poem, delivered near the end of our final class.

 “Oremus (Latin for ‘Let us Pray’). So let us pick up the stones over which we stumble, friends, and build altars. Let us listen to the sound of breath in our bodies. Let us listen to the sounds of our own voices, of our own names, of our own fears. Let’s claw ourselves out from the graves we’ve dug. Let’s lick the earth from our fingers. Let us look up and out and around. The world is big and wide and wild and wonderful and wicked, and our lives are murky, magnificent, malleable, and full of meaning. Oremus. Let us pray.”

Man Cave Meditation

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Man Cave of this post’s title is a personal josh, “Write Man Cave Article” being my reminder in this week’s list of things to do. The Cave spoken of here is not the proverbial man space or Mantuary, a male retreat or sanctuary down in the basement, garage or out in the back wood shed. This was simply my joke amongst an upstanding circle of men visiting South Haven last week from the Chicago Family Business Council’s Peer to Peer Networking Group associated with DePaul University. Eight owners and entrepreneurs of various businesses were part of a forum group promoting better communication by exploring emotional intelligence skills in the purpose of creating a safe space where the group could explore themselves, their businesses, and dive deep into looking closely at who and what they were, are, and hoped to become. The exercises in preparation for their Michigan getaway asked questions’ like: If you were asked by a child to tell that child what the most important thing you have learned in your life, what would you say? For what do you want to be remembered? And What do you feel about the underlining meaning and purpose of your life?   

Not your traditional Man Cave mindset, as the stereotype is one of more emotional distance. No, Marty, Ken, Joel, Bill, Sean, Scott, Eric and Rick were genuine guys looking for the deeper resources of their own personal and professional life’s experiences. They hoped to incorporate some meditative techniques to meet the challenges that even successful business owners in today’s world still need to negotiate - insomnia, scattered thinking, taking a fragmented approach to daily life that can leave one wanting, even in the face of material abundance. So we did some meditating, we did some Seeing Hearing and Feeling within, a concentration practice that can increase one’s ability to focus, to relax, to gain insights into the nature of life and increase one’s love of self and others.

We talked about the benefits that flow from developing meditative skills, so as to have more of a foundation for keeping up this practice that enhances all areas of life. It’s an honor and a privilege to actually Do a spiritual practice with regularity and devotion in this world and enjoy the immense rewards thereof. It’s even more of a distinction to pass on aspects of spirituality that can be radically life-changing to others. Of course, along with hoping to give this group some of the building blocks of a good foundation, there was the need to mention the steep learning curve that can be the challenging side to embarking on a new meditative path. The good news is any of the members of this group or anyone else interested in rooting down with their practice can join the November Retreat weekend for an exploration of practices that empower the creation of more positive and meaningful lives, both at work and home.