DharmaQuest of the Naga: Service to the Path

With Adam Foizen and Michael G. Burbank

August 12 - 15, 2021

Contact: frontdesk@menla.org
845 688 6897

    Deep in the heart of the Catskills lives an ancient being that dwells deep within the mountain ravines and clear cold waters, a great Naga known locally as MahaNaga. This shape-shifting water serpent inhabits our beloved Pantherkill Valley and summons you to complete her DharmaQuest here at Menla. When MahaNaga first inhabited this land, she used her divine abilities to do battle with the unruly local spirits of the wilderness, installing 16 relics atop rock cairns throughout the valley to tame them and bring peace and harmony to the local landscape.

    Sometime in the late 20th century, however, the ancient foe of the Naga–the Garuda–destroyed MahaNaga’s cairns, spread invasive overgrowth over the trails, and temporarily subdued her. MahaNaga thus lay dormant until 2005 when she awoke from her slumber and caused damaging floods on Menla’s campus. During his inaugural visit in 2006, His Holiness the Dalai Lama recognized her presence and asked us to make offerings of milk, chant mantras, and perform fire pujas to supplicate her, which we’ve been doing since then… but now MahaNaga calls out to us to help her restore the 16 cairns and definitively re-establish peace among the spirits of our land.

    MahaNaga seeks twenty adventurers to team up over the course of a long weekend to scour our hiking trails in search of the destroyed cairns using special tools. Each party will look for the components of 8 cairns with a special capstone that contains one of the 8 auspicious symbols of Buddhism. Adventurers will utilize the blessed instruments of purity to restore the trails to their former glory. Once all the cairns have been built and the surrounding trails are brought into balance, harmony will be restored between the Garuda and MahaNaga. She can once again resume her full protection of the world of humans.

    Adventurers should be fit enough to climb a steep hill, clear brush and have keen senses to detect the Cairn components. MahaNaga has provided sustenance each day with delicious meals on the quest and off it. Adventurers will rest in the evening each day while MahaNaga gathers strength and may just have a few extra surprises up her sleeve.

    Join Menla Director Michael Burbank and Events Coordinator Adam Foizen in our forests to help fulfill the DharmaQuest of the Naga: Service to the Path for a 3-night stay August 12-15 2021.

    Book today!

    *This is a game and as such is a work of fiction and not to be taken as literal Tibetan lore.  Any resemblance to Tibetan lore is purely for context and meant to honor the history and culture of the Tibetan people.


    Schedule

    Thursday, August 12th

    • 3 – 8 pm Check-In
    • 6 – 7 pm Dinner
    • 7:30 pm Initiation by Fire (bonfire) and Water (night swimming) in the big field

    Friday, August 13th

    • 8 – 9 am Breakfast
    • 9:15 am – 12 pm Cleansing and reconstruction of the Cairns (Middle Path Trail)
    • 12pm Sustenance of the Naga
    • 12:30 – 4 pm Cleansing and reconstruction of the Cairns (Middle Path Trail)
    • 6 – 7 pm Dinner
    • 7:30 pm A Game of Throws presented by Ye Olde Game Warden

    Saturday, August 14th

    • 8 – 9 am Breakfast
    • 9:15 am – 12 pm Cleansing and reconstruction of the Cairns (Medicine Trail/Naga)
    • 12pm Bagged lunch on the trails
    • 12:30 pm – 4 pm Cleansing and reconstruction of the Cairns (Medicine Trail/Naga)
    • 6 – 7 pm Dinner
    • 7:30 pm Haunted Tales by Resident Ghost Enthusiasts (Bonfire) 

    Sunday, August 15th

    • 8 – 9 am Breakfast & Check-Out
    • 9:15 am – 12 pm Service to the Path and Offering to the Naga (TBD) 
    • 12 – 1pm Lunch & Departure

    * Please note that the schedule is subject to change at any time

    About the Leaders

    Adam Foizen

    If music be the food of love, than Adam is like a bread bowl. Supportive and a strong exterior but a chewy container for delicious liquids. He also is a man of many talents, like writing third person bios about himself. He believes that an education is priceless and plans to be a lifelong learner. […]

    Learn more about Adam Foizen

    Michael G. Burbank

    Michael G. Burbank has been a student of Robert Thurman and HH the XIV Dalai Lama for over 25 years, since his undergraduate years studying Eastern religions and cultures at Columbia University in the 90s. In February of 2002, he was invited to help the Thurmans and Tibet House start the newly acquired Menla retreat. […]

    Learn more about Michael G. Burbank

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