Sun shines for all. My dream... as was shaped from an actual dream in childhood...floating high above the sky, watching life on earth, as one. Photographer - photojournalist based in Athens Greece
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Showing posts with label ελαιόδεντρο. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ελαιόδεντρο. Show all posts
Sunday, March 10, 2019
Picked By The Moment (Gypsy Buddhas Under The Olive Tree)
Wednesday, February 28, 2018
Season Of The Olive (Meditative Olive Picking in Eressos, October 2017)

(For the Greek version scroll to the bottom) As I’m climbing down the tree I find myself alone on the field. The rest must have moved further. This gives me a chance to stand and feel the silence, listen to the sounds of nature under the golden October sun. Then I start to walk towards where the others should be, when the sound of a conversation blows in my ears. What I see behind the rich leaves and branches makes me still, catching myself enchanted. It is a very simple spectacle but then I feel it contains something special and archaic. Two women are sitting next to each other on a piece of cloth on the ground picking over olives and stories to share between them. That simple. I don’t know them very well, except that I know that until yesterday they didn’t knew each other. And today they sit side by side chatting as if they belong to the same village, tribe. They are not even from around the area, they both have come from different countries. But their exuberant bodies remind me of those ancient figurines of Aegean/Mediterranean depicting the great mother Goddess. I realize that I’m witnessing a scene that could be taking place in any time in history, from today to the origins of civilization, a scene symbolic to our connection with nature and people.
Then I conceive the idea that every time one picks olives in our times, at least in these places where it is still done by hand, one goes millenniums back on the course of civilization, to where humankind were making the transition from hunting gathering to cultivating the land.
Writing this, as a winter have passed in which I raised my hands to pick up olives at four different places in the country, I realize that to a scene like this, I couldn’t be a witness but in a few places that have been left. One of them being this blessed place: Lesvos, Eressos, Osho Afroz meditation center.
This kind of labor has a different and special quality in a meditation center. Anywhere else the point would be the product, the day’s pay, profit. Here the point is meditation (and the theme is love). Of course it has to do with the center having oil and olives for the next season but the thing is whatever happens is centered around the meditative process. This gives a special quality to the labor and opens a space for deep human conditions to be expressed. People come to pick olives not for a day’s pay. Actually they’re going to pay a small amount of money to participate. They don’t even get to try the olives and oil, unless they come again next season. So why would they do it anyway? If it about meditation, why don’t they just come to sit and meditate? For me that I have a piece of land and work on it, questions like these are raised.
And after twelve consecutive years of coming to Afroz, October of 2017 is my first time in the olive picking-basically because it is the first time that it doesn’t take place in November. Experiencing the way in which one would choose to pick olives for meditation, I found out some extraordinary things. Basically it is picking up how to weave meditation into the day, but I’ll get to more details.
Agricultural labors like this always had the way to bring people in the present moment, as well as bringing them close together. It is not by chance that works like these were traditionally accompanied by singing. To sing, not only breaks the monotony of a repeated job, making it more pleasant, but it also provides rhythm to it which connects the people, bring them in a state of flow, thus making work more easy. Also, because the brain has a limited amount of functions that it can operate at any given moment, basically two, then working and singing together leaves no room for the mind to wonder around in thoughts. Since thinking habituates past and future but not present, the work/sing combination serves as a tool of being in the present moment, of emptying and decompressing the intellectual.
So, in this piece of land in the edge of nowhere, their space found people from all these countries: Greece, Israel, Spain, Ireland, Estonia, Germany, Rumania, Denmark, Turkey (and I may be forgetting some). No wonder that this humble peasantry turned into a multicultural happening. Α playground where each people’s qualities are unfolded and where you can see clearly the cultural conditioning but start to sense the individual behind it. Where you come to sense a deeper source of humanity that connects as all, and learn, not only about other cultures but, through mirroring to them, your own self.
And if you take away the things that characterize our era, the dynamic of what is experienced and witnessed could be 100, 1000, 2000 years ago. It’s not only that I am fascinated by the mere fact of it that I know I’m repeating this, but also because I find that it connects us with something deeper and higher than our tiny ego selves, with the earth, the culture, the invisible thread through time, space, collective soul.
I usually hear people complaint that even though they’ve been on vacation, they haven’t rested enough. Maybe what they don’t suspect is that it happens because their routine and automatic reflexes follow them wherever they go. Like every time they open their electronic devices to fill their vacant time, entertain their feeling of loneliness or escape some uncomfortable feeling. Also because, even in their vacation, they carry the mindset of I have to see sight too, I have to hunt for memorabilia, I have to look happy online, I have to check all the boxes on my list. You may ask, this doesn’t happen in a meditation center? It certainly can happen anywhere, it’s about handling the experience, not the about the actual location. What the actual meditation center does is open up the space in which one can meet with himself, in all its dimensions. It’s having the opportunity to reflect in a mirror, to be in an energy where it’s safe to stick to yourself, not having to get distracted, to try to escape anymore.
Or you may watch how when people start to relax, something wonderful and rich makes appearance from the inside. Like this woman from north Europe, that when she arrived looked to me a bit closed to herself. A morning before the olive group started that I talked with her, I found out she is a professional dancer. I thought I couldn’t have figured it out. But day by day, as the olive picking gained up rhythm, I started glimpsing how she unfolded and flowered in the process, I watched the spirit of dancing taking form and processing her, not by some kind of intricate dancing, just by the way her body were manifesting the trivial movements that the labor required into a dancing poetry.
Now, you give me this kind of witnessing and you’ve got me enchanted. And something more. In our times, where materials matter so much, where things are in a sale/buy bid, where we mostly come in contact with things (and ideas) manufactured rather than from nature, picking up olives has a special quality. It shows us in a hands on level how nature can feed and nurture us, almost with nothing, just by being present, showing up and let ourselves in its flow.
In my expedition to understand all these things, I concluded to a series of reasons (not that their needed but it’s good if you want to write an article) in why people from high organized societies (to the level of sterilization as we like to say here) would choose to have their holydays picking up olives in a Greek island. Here I go: in order to retrieve their hands from electronic keyboards and screens and indulge them deep in the “dirt” of the earth’s soil (the one that scientists recently are discovering is full of anti-depressant bacteria). To come in contact with the ways and rhythms of nature and the natural level of relating with people. To have the opportunity to experience the tangible result of their work-instead of it being an abstract figure on a screen. And the opportunity to look their working partner straight in the eyes, without boxes, excuse and filters. So, to communicate directly, with honesty. To feel the joy of sharing company around a big table and a plate of food that really tastes as a reward for the day’s labor, and go to bed fulfilled, with this sweet tiredness and dignity of an honest day of work. Thus, to feel part of a team in a different quality of working. To take part in a process where they’re not been asked anything specifically or absolutely, except from the invitation to be present and let thigs unfold. To feel part of the meditation center and of how we do things the Greek way (this is a must actually). To experience meditation out of the box of spirituality, into the real level of everyday life, in practice and with the friction of life’s circumstances.
It’s very interesting how nature is abundant in wisdom and lessons given in the most simple way. For example, the fruit of the olive tree has to be crushed for its green gold to manifest. The tree itself has to be trimmed deeply in order for it to live, develop in a healthy way and thrive with fruit. Until it got trimmed it was heavy, blocked, then it sprang free to open up for the sun, the wind, to allow fluids of earth focus on its fruition. Isn’t this what happens with us humans too? For all that we create, achieve, fight for, isn’t there a time coming that we need to let go? To let them be crushed so that we shower on the extract and move on with life to a new level? And when something appears to be a setback in life, couldn’t it just be new space created for some fresh way of being, a confirmation that life has a lot more to give, lessons, experiences, a way to come now, here?
Thank you for reading this article. I hope you found it interesting and useful. If so, feel free to share it and to subscribe to my blog in order to receive notifications. The most important of all, use what you learn to bring light and love to yourself and the world! E.S.
Tuesday, November 4, 2014
OLIVENESS (Season of the Olive picking)
You have seen it all around the place. You may have noticed it, if you've slept under it, made love, meditated, enjoyed it's shadow and the beautiful rest of it's dreamy aura.
For us Mediterraneans olive trees were always here. So maybe I haven't experienced the moment of epiphany when I see it for the first time but I have experienced my attention been captured by it. Travelling or walking around the landscape, finding myself looking not at trunks and branches but at sculptures of different shorts. Is it just the mind trying to create a meaning and a form out of shapes that seem to come from a dreamworld- a woman who cries, a dancer fully in his dance, a granma telling fairytales-or the tree is telling a story?
One as biological generators and transformers of the earth's ingredients and sun's warmth into the Gold, the oil, the basis of mediterranean diet and the good health of its people. It's the narrative as a symbol of peace and of victory from the ancient Olympics to the modern world and everything in between, like the culture that has been unfolding around it, the mentality, customs, biology, the wrinkles in the faces of people living by it, all that grew up in human history along with the growing of the tree. Looking around Greece's harsh landscapes, at olive trees climbing up steep hills, you must have wondered how on earth were these people of times with no cars and machines were able to manage. Take a look at very old photos of people of that era, notice how, slightly, their phisiology is defferent than ours. This difference is what these people were eating, how they were moving about their lives, what was their perception about the world. The olive tree with it's strangely shaped trunk wwas shaping the world. In Greece use to say about those times: “people survived on bread and olives”.
Yes, it's olive picking season in Afroz and Greece. We're so lucky that we have not only peaceful and wellcoming safe Buddha field but also one that keeps connecting with the cycles of the earth. I photographed Swaha in September, early picking some olives to prepare them for the table- because last year's pick was consumed out before the end of the visitor's season. He didn't want me to photograph his face at that moment but that's ok, we don't want to scare people off! And anyway, every olive tree has identity just to let it go when each olive drop is getting crushed by the stones losing her ego in an ocean of oil. In the same way, the hands that pick the olives don't need to have a face, just the wrinkles of experiencing.
So, you lucky people who have decided to join us in Afroz for the olive picking, rejoice! And those of you that are thinking about it, prepare your suitcases, or your spirits for the next season.
In anyway, to talk about the rest of the photos also, September, Octobre, November is a wonderful time to come to Lesvos and Afroz. You really feel the noise of summer withering away into silence. It can even feel like when one thinks so much about something, struggling to find an answer that is hiding the harder the trying. And then one gives up just to suddenly find it effortlesly. This is how I felt after doing so much process in Afroz for the whole summer, feelling that things inside mw were so stirred up and then one morning I go out of my hut and find myself in the middle of silence, looking up into a crystal blue sky with clouds dancing in slow motion their way to emptyness and everything feeling so much in place and time...
One as biological generators and transformers of the earth's ingredients and sun's warmth into the Gold, the oil, the basis of mediterranean diet and the good health of its people. It's the narrative as a symbol of peace and of victory from the ancient Olympics to the modern world and everything in between, like the culture that has been unfolding around it, the mentality, customs, biology, the wrinkles in the faces of people living by it, all that grew up in human history along with the growing of the tree. Looking around Greece's harsh landscapes, at olive trees climbing up steep hills, you must have wondered how on earth were these people of times with no cars and machines were able to manage. Take a look at very old photos of people of that era, notice how, slightly, their phisiology is defferent than ours. This difference is what these people were eating, how they were moving about their lives, what was their perception about the world. The olive tree with it's strangely shaped trunk wwas shaping the world. In Greece use to say about those times: “people survived on bread and olives”.
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