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rjdownes@mac.com

Introductory Description: 

I have been studying and practicing the Diamond Approach for 20 years.  It moved me to the depths of my soul so much so that I was also called to teach the approach.    

What have you learned as a result of studying the Diamond Approach?: 

I have learnt more than I can possibly account for - the study is never ending and revelations continue.  I and we are always becoming and being our nature, so as Anohni sings: Everything is New.  

Primarily I have learnt that inquiry is a practice that increasingly becomes a place where I can give myself to myself as I am, a profound and deep acceptance that is possible because the teachings and practices return me to my fundamental nature as the obscurations to that nature are worked with and tended to.   

I have also learnt that as we digest our early life experiences, cultural impressions and oftentime trauma,  we get to see ourselves and one another more clearly.  

What would you like your potential students to know about you as a teacher of the Diamond Approach?: 

I love this work, the teachings, the practices and where they take us.  
It isn't always easy, a spiritual path is not a path of ease and comfort, it requires truth seeking and with that the need for wisdom and deepening kindness in the face of the obstacles to the truth of our ultimate nature. 

I am particulary drawn to how social structures beyond Mommy and Daddy impact the soul, how oppression and discrimination shape us and can distance us from our nature.

What attracted you to the Diamond Approach?: 

A friend was describing their experiece of the approach and it spoke to me. On my first retreat I heard myself say: "this work embraces me".  The depth of the understanding of the soul and all the structures that limit access to our ultimate nature made sense to me, it spoke to me and offered practices and teachings that facilitated increasingly over time, freedom to be, moment to moment.   There are so many teachings within the approach that have assited me in approaching myself and others with more depth and understanding.  The teachings on hate in the approach are fundamentally liberating as well as the humane and wise teachings on narcissism and the wound of value that so many of us carry.   

What is most important for people to understand about the Diamond Approach?: 

it is not a superficial path, it really is a nooks and crannies kind of path, looking into all the troubles of what it is to be human and how we might live more fully as our nature.  

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