Category Archives: Travel

Traveler’s rite of passage

I finally flooded it!

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After 20 years living, traveling and working in developing Asia you’d  think I would have flooded a motorbike in a tropical rainstorm by now. Well, truth is I’ve tried but never succeeded. Until now!

This little alleyway is behind my office. When it rains it floods and today was the day that I finally found enough water to flood my bike!

The guy that followed me through was obviously a bit more skilled than me. I’m usually pretty adept  at maintaining enough momentum, but today the water got in and my bike promptly stalled!

Finally, I thought. Weird, but I kinda felt proud of myself.

 

Living in Bali

Outside the box…

There’s not much to say about this really. Its just a delightful memory.

Shortly after we moved into our new house in Ubud, Bali, in 2010 I got to take part in this craziness with my kids. Our furniture hadn’t arrived yet – in fact, come to think of it I don’t know that we had even bought any! So there we were, upstairs in this huge open room, surrounded by paddy fields and excited to be settling in.

A little water goes a long way on a tile floor! I think the kids discovered this game first. You toss a little water on the floor and then slide around in it. I just helped them get organized and maximize the experience!

Within about ten minutes we had covered the floor from end to end and graduated to a level where we were using the walls to kick off and glide in unison. I love my kids and such out-of-the-box activities always leave me feeling like I’ve done a really good job as a dad. I love their spirit if adventure and the crazy games we get to play together. In hindsight helmets would have been a good idea. But we survived.

Infinite love…

A simple meditation

I was pressed for time, but felt an overwhelming need to sit. I just wanted to be still. Just for a second. I needed to recalibrate before I went out into my day. I’d been busy and was “carrying something” – like a sadness or something. I didn’t really know. I just felt like I needed to sit and look inwards. I needed to make a quick journey somewhere else.

I have come to trust such sensations these days and so I honored it. I sat down. I set my timer for 5 minutes and plugged in to my music for assistance. My go-to meditation music right now is this mix from a yoga class taught at the Robot Heart camp at Burning Man.

I plugged in and breathed (my new headphones really help!), feeling instantly like I was in an elevator, descending floor by floor with every breath. Within seconds I saw my wife, Jamie, kneeling before our wood stove in our living room in Canada. I’m currently in Bali. I continued to focus on my breath and the vision and settled beside her.

I felt an incredible uprising of love. Tears filled my eyes and I just sat there, breathing, and being on another continent beside her. My vision was so powerful. I had the biggest smile and tears streaming down my face – just a brief moment in time, but one in which I was absolutely transported through time and space to the fireside of a small house in British Columbia. I was completely enveloped in love – looking straight into Jamie’s eyes and just smiling serenely. I had found my soul mate and I realized I was carrying loneliness and missing her.

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Infinity

I chose the weird photo above because when I came out of my meditation and opened my eyes I looked straight at this handle on the chest of drawers. Somehow it was as if everything else in the room was slightly out of focus apart from this one object. It leapt out at me and the message was clear: everything is infinite – including love. I guess I thought that because I interpreted the design on the handle as a symbol of infinity. I wonder, then, whether enlightenment is simply the experience of infinite love?

Who’d have thunk it?

I have known some dark places in my life. I have occupied states of mind profoundly different to  this moment described. So I know that when they come we must celebrate them. These moments of clarity and love that arrive so suddenly and with such intensity are often fleeting. But in this moment I know they are real and tangible and here to be cultivated. This is love in action and I am inspired by the practice I have developed and the relationships that I have discovered that have allowed such experiences to be part of my story.

 

Himalayan Odyssey

The Bowen Youth Himalayan Odyssey

 

This was a program I developed for Bowen Island Municipality in BC, Canada, where I worked as the Youth Services Coordinator for 5+ years. This is the story of how it came to be.

 

I remember being interviewed for the job in the local youth center. I’d just got residency in Canada and was excited to make my mark. My wife and I had just moved to the Island having returned to Canada to “settle” after many years of Himalayan travel and adventure.

 

Bowen is a small, quiet forest-covered island off the coast of Vancouver. The population of just over 4000 is extremely family-oriented. People move out of the city to raise their kids there. Its safe – like, really safe – in fact the only reason most people put up a fence around their property is to keep out the marauding deer. Nobody locks their doors because there’s no property crime. But despite the trees and tranquility and healthy social fabric of the community, for many local teens there seemed to come a point where they needed more. It seemed there was a generation of teens drifting around in the woods, unobserved and unobservable. BC is saturated in marijuana and other drugs, most of which are cheaper and easier to obtain than alcohol. The upshot of this was a sub-culture of drug and alcohol abuse amongst a minority of bored and marginalized teens. Or at least that was mainly what the adult population seemed to talk about when they spoke of Bowen youth; they were concerned and the Municipality (i.e. me) was supposed to do something about it.

 

So as the manager of the local youth center and local outreach worker I dived into the fascinating Bowen youth sub-culture. They were, like in most other Canadian communities, an extraordinarily creative and fun loving bunch. I made connections and did what I could to offer mentorship and recreational opportunities and at some point in this process I decided to go for gold, to develop a Big Hairy Audacious Goal, as they say and decided to take a shot at the community’s perception of teens. It was time for a counter attack; for teens to be given an opportunity to voice a different message about who they were and what they were capable of. We were going to the Himalayas.

 

Over the following four years I developed what became known as the Bowen Youth Himalayan Odyssey (BYHO). In short, it brought together local teens in an audacious goal to journey to the top of the world. I worked with a maximum of 12 students every year and slowly, with their help and the help of West Vancouver youth workers and colleagues from Capilano University and Vancouver Coastal Health, I developed a series of leadership initiatives and fundraisers that got British Columbian teens to the Himalayas.

 

By year 3 of the BYHO, the trip to Sikkim (in Himalayan India) had become a central feature of youth service provision on Bowen Island and something much talked about by local teens and the community.

 

I’ll post details of specific events and activities in subsequent blog entries.

Monkey Mind

Monkey Mind is an article I wrote for Inspired Bali magazine. A personal story about some of the catalysts for learning in my life.
Ben Tamblyn in the Himalayas with monk friends
I was born and raised in a quaint seaside town, surrounded by the glorious rolling hills of southern England. Despite the idyllic setting, I proved a “handful” as a child, a “bright spark” with a wild and reckless spirit in dire need of structure. Thus, at the age of 11, I found myself at a private boarding school for boys, one of the best in the south, wearing a blazer and tie and signed up for rugby and cricket. Think Harry Potter without the spells.

Not surprisingly, the additional structure of a traditional British boarding school did little to reform me. I remained a charming but “deviant young man” who persistently challenged authority and disturbed the status quo. I broke the rules that didn’t make any sense to me as often as most of my peers handed in their homework. I got more detentions and spent more time in the Head Master’s office than any other kid in the school and quickly got a reputation as the school prankster and troublemaker.

Being the charming rule breaker became the prevailing face of Ben, an image I rarely shook off. Despite showing promise in theatre, my creativity went largely unnoticed and was channelled–in its entirety–into mischievous pranks and random acts of disobedience.

But somewhere in the middle of this period of happy delinquency, the universe began to spin differently. Shadows loomed on the horizon that I was ill-equipped to meet.

At 14, my parents divorced suddenly and tragically, within 18 months my mother had died of cancer. I was utterly devastated. I felt as if my world had been torn apart and I was completely unequipped to deal with my emotions. I was no longer simply dealing with ADHD (undiagnosed)and an inability to concentrate and conform; I was now desperately trying to survive in an ocean of anger and grief. Mr Deviant became Mr Dark and my exploits escalated rapidly, leading to my expulsion from school at 16.

Emboldened by anger and a reckless disregard for life, I began a war I simply couldn’t win. Suddenly, it was me versus Life. Or God. Anything really. It really didn’t matter. Nothing mattered anymore–except that I couldn’t allow myself to feel. I rapidly descended into a permanent state of anesthesia. Every high I survived was a miracle. Relationships fell apart and now, more alone than ever, Mr Dark became Mr Dangerous as stolen cars went up in flames and pharmacies, homes and accounts were emptied. I raged against life in a desperate mission to avoid my grief.

Hospitals and jail cells replaced the Head Master’s office and by the age of twenty Mr Dangerous was burnt out, bankrupt and very nearly dead. I found myself living in the shadows–armed, tweaking, terrified and with my mind and body in ruins.

Some time in 1993, I found myself in a local Magistrates Court facing charges. I was given a 3-year suspended sentence and offered an ultimatum: rehab or jail. I chose rehab and “graduated” about ten months later. I’m prouder of my graduation from that clinic than any other “school” I have ever attended.

I remember my arrival on the clinic grounds. I was about 40 lbs (almost 20kg) underweight and scared witless. Three weeks later my detox was ending and I found myself in a counselor’s office smoking a cigarette.

The counselor saw my potential. We connected and for the first time in my life I had a mentor. I felt safe and over the ensuing weeks, my rage subsided and was surpassed by a broader, deeper range of emotions, all of which terrified me and erupted in wild, unmanageable bursts. But it was time to get real and with help from my mentor and my newly found community, I began a journey into the truth about Ben.

After nine and a half months of intensive therapy, I left the rehabilitation center and returned to the “real world”, clean for the first time in years. I was 21 years old and back from the dead. I felt inspired and ready for a lifelong journey of recovery that was only just beginning.

Ultimately, rehabilitation was an opportunity to get the kind of education I’d so badly needed as a young child. I learned how to feel and process emotion which included, perhaps most importantly, the utterly terrifying and profound process of grieving. I learned techniques for stilling my mind, re-discovered the great outdoors and ignited my long-abandoned spirituality. For the first time in years, I felt excited about life and began to appreciate my own potential.

At the age of 23, I finally graduated from high school. I trained as a youth counselor and worked in front line drop-in centers. I discovered a passion for rock climbing, an activity that took me on expeditions around the world and formed a natural precursor to the yoga I practice today.

My early experience of grief and addiction fostered a deep curiosity about life and a thirst for adventure. I was drawn to Tibetan Buddhism and stories from the Himalayas and shortly after finishing high school, I joined an aid expedition to Mustang (a region of Himalayan Nepal) where we delivered medical supplies to Tibetan refugees. I fell in love with the mountains and the people and returned every year for almost 15 years. I became an aid worker and anthropologist and lived in the monasteries and remote villages of Nepal and Sikkim seeking wisdom, refuge and companionship. I felt a particular affinity with the communities of displaced Tibetan monks who became like an extended family of brothers that reminded me of long-past school days.

No single place on earth held more mystery (and thus more answers) for me. Here, amidst the biggest hills on Earth, I sensed infinite potential for adventure and self-discovery. I was enraptured by the magnitude of the mountains and moved by the carnage of poverty and the extraordinary tenacity of the people who welcomed strangers with their familiar “namaste”.

On one fateful visit in the late 1990s, I went to Nepal with the intention of taking my vows and becoming a Buddhist monk. I sat with my friend, Tenzin Jampa, a respected monk in the local community. We drank salty tea and discussed my intentions. He said he would speak to the Rinpoche (the revered incarnate monk and head of the monastery). The next day Tenzin and I met again. With his arm around me and half a dozen random young monks squashed into our room in close attendance, Tenzin explained to me with a huge grin on his face, “Rinpoche says you have monkey mind!” and then, as if to clarify, “in here, monkey mind no good!” Monkey mind is a commonly used expression in Tibetan Buddhist monastic circles to describe the western mindset. It refers to our endless curiosity: always tinkering, analytical and –most importantly–eternally busy.

As I looked into the round, grinning face of my shaven-headed friend in his maroon colored robes it dawned on me–with almost a sense of embarrassment–that my attraction to Tibetan Buddhism was in part an attempt to transcend that which I had not yet mastered–or even fully appreciated. In short, sat there amidst the flurrying robes and incense and itchy carpets I realized that my monkey mind.