One powerful way to evoke compassion
is to think of others as exactly the same as you. “After all,” the Dalai Lama
explains, “all human beings are the same—made of human flesh, bones, and blood.
We all want happiness and want to avoid suffering. Further, we have an equal
right to be happy. In other words, it is important to realize our sameness as
human beings.”
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Showing posts with label compassion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label compassion. Show all posts
Friday, 6 January 2017
Friday, 5 September 2014
Compassion
When
someone is suffering and you find yourself at a loss to know how to help, put
yourself unflinchingly in his or her place. Imagine as vividly as possible what
you would be going through if you were suffering the same pain. Ask yourself:
“How would I feel? How would I want my friends to treat me? What would I most
want from them?”
When
you exchange yourself for others in this way, you are directly transferring your
cherishing from its usual object, yourself, to other beings.
So exchanging yourself for
others is a very powerful way of loosening
the hold on you of the self-cherishing and the self-grasping of ego, and so of
releasing the heart of your compassion.
Thursday, 5 June 2014
What is compassion?
What is
compassion? It is not simply a sense of sympathy or caring for the person
suffering, not simply a warmth of heart toward the person before you, or a sharp
clarity of recognition of their needs and pain, it is also a sustained and
practical determination to do whatever is possible and necessary to help
alleviate their suffering.
Wednesday, 25 December 2013
Sunday, 10 November 2013
Compassion
Evoking
the power of compassion in us is not always easy. I find myself that the
simplest ways are the best and the most direct. Every day, life gives us
innumerable chances to open our hearts, if we can only take them. An old woman
passes you with a sad and lonely face and two heavy plastic bags full of
shopping she can hardly carry. Switch on a television, and there on the news is
a mother in Beirut kneeling above the body of her murdered son, or an old
grandmother in Moscow pointing to the thin soup that is her only
food. . . .
Any one
of these sights could open the eyes of your heart to the fact of vast suffering
in the world. Let it. Don’t waste the love and grief it arouses. In the moment
you feel compassion welling up in you, don’t brush it aside, don’t shrug it off
and try quickly to return to “normal,” don’t be afraid of your feeling or be
embarrassed by it, and don’t allow yourself to be distracted from it. Be
vulnerable: Use that quick, bright uprush of compassion—focus on it, go deep
into your heart and meditate on it, develop it, enhance and deepen it. By doing
this you will realize how blind you have been to suffering.
All
beings, everywhere, suffer; let your heart go out to them all in spontaneous and
immeasurable compassion. -Rigpa
Thursday, 17 October 2013
Thursday, 5 September 2013
Suffering
When someone is suffering and you
find yourself at a loss to know how to help, put yourself unflinchingly in his
or her place. Imagine as vividly as possible what you would be going through if
you were suffering the same pain. Ask yourself: “How would I feel? How would I
want my friends to treat me? What would I most want from
them?”
When you exchange yourself for others
in this way, you are directly transferring your cherishing from its usual
object, yourself, to other beings. So exchanging yourself for
others is a very powerful way of loosening
the hold on you of the self-cherishing and the self-grasping of ego, and so of
releasing the heart of your compassion. ---Rigpa
Monday, 5 August 2013
Considering others...
Considering
others to be just the same as yourself
helps you to
open up your relationships and give them a new and richer meaning. Imagine If
societies and nations began to view one another in the same way; at last we
would have the beginnings of a solid basis for peace on earth, and the happy
coexistence of all peoples. -Rigpa
Saturday, 6 July 2013
Tuesday, 21 May 2013
Suffering and Compassion
The times when you are suffering can
be those when you are open, and where you are extremely vulnerable can be where
your greatest strength really lies.
Say to yourself: “I am not going to
run away from this suffering. I want to use it in the best and richest way I
can, so that I can become more compassionate and more helpful to others.”
Suffering, after all, can teach us about compassion. If you suffer, you will
know how it is when others suffer. And if you are in a position to help others,
it is through your suffering that you will find the understanding and compassion
to do so. ---Rigpa
Friday, 5 April 2013
Compassion
Visualize someone
to whom you feel very close, particularly someone who is suffering and in pain.
As you breathe in, imagine you take in all their suffering and pain with
compassion, and as you breathe out, send your warmth, healing, love, joy, and
happiness streaming out to them.
Now, gradually
widen the circle of your compassion to embrace first other people to whom you
also feel very close, then to those about whom you feel indifferent, then to
those whom you dislike or have difficulty with, then even to those whom you feel
are actively monstrous and cruel. Allow your compassion to become universal, and
to enfold in its embrace all sentient beings, and all beings, in fact, without
any exception. -Rigpa
Friday, 29 March 2013
Sunday, 3 June 2012
What is compassion? It is not simply
a sense of sympathy or caring for the person suffering, not simply a warmth of
heart toward the person before you, or a sharp clarity of recognition of their
needs and pain, it is also a sustained and practical determination to do
whatever is possible and necessary to help alleviate their
suffering. TJS
Friday, 3 June 2011
Are you compassionate?
It's a misunderstood word; Compassion. The key to understanding compassion is to see it as a verb. Compassion is not a feeling it is a doing. How will you help? TJS.
What is compassion? It is not simply a sense of sympathy or caring for the person suffering, not simply a warmth of heart toward the person before you, or a sharp clarity of recognition of their needs and pain, it is also a sustained and practical determination to do whatever is possible and necessary to help alleviate their suffering. -Rigpa Quote of the Day
What is compassion? It is not simply a sense of sympathy or caring for the person suffering, not simply a warmth of heart toward the person before you, or a sharp clarity of recognition of their needs and pain, it is also a sustained and practical determination to do whatever is possible and necessary to help alleviate their suffering. -Rigpa Quote of the Day
Thursday, 6 January 2011
How we think of others...
One powerful way to evoke compassion is to think of others as exactly the same as you. “After all,” the Dalai Lama explains, “all human beings are the same—made of human flesh, bones, and blood. We all want happiness and want to avoid suffering. Further, we have an equal right to be happy. In other words, it is important to realize our sameness as human beings.” Ripga Quote of the Day.
Wednesday, 1 December 2010
Compassion
When we come into contact with the other person, our thoughts and actions should express our mind of compassion, even if that person says and does things that are not easy to accept. We practice in this way until we see clearly that our love is not contingent upon the other person being lovable. ---Thich Nhat Hanh
Wednesday, 5 May 2010
Kindness
The Dalai Lama has said:
“There is no need for temples; no need for complicated philosophy. Our own brain, our own heart is our temple; my philosophy is kindness.”
“There is no need for temples; no need for complicated philosophy. Our own brain, our own heart is our temple; my philosophy is kindness.”
Monday, 8 February 2010
Compassion
A human being is part of a whole, called by us the ‘Universe,’ a part limited in time and space. He experiences himself, his thoughts and feelings, as something separated from the rest—a kind of optical delusion of his consciousness. This delusion is a kind of prison for us, restricting us to our personal desires and to affection for a few persons nearest us. Our task must be to free ourselves from this prison by widening our circles of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature in its beauty.
ALBERT EINSTEIN
ALBERT EINSTEIN
Tuesday, 24 November 2009
Living Compassion
We may say, and even half-believe, that compassion is marvelous, but in practice our actions are deeply uncompassionate and bring us and others mostly frustration and distress, and not the happiness we are all seeking.
Isn’t it absurd that we all long for happiness, yet nearly all our actions and feelings lead us directly away from that happiness?
What do we imagine will make us happy? A canny, self-seeking, resourceful selfishness, the selfish protection of ego, which can as we all know, make us at moments extremely brutal. But in fact the complete reverse is true: Self-grasping and self-cherishing are seen, when you really look at them, to be the root of all harm to others, and also of all harm to ourselves. -Rigpa Quote of the Day
Isn’t it absurd that we all long for happiness, yet nearly all our actions and feelings lead us directly away from that happiness?
What do we imagine will make us happy? A canny, self-seeking, resourceful selfishness, the selfish protection of ego, which can as we all know, make us at moments extremely brutal. But in fact the complete reverse is true: Self-grasping and self-cherishing are seen, when you really look at them, to be the root of all harm to others, and also of all harm to ourselves. -Rigpa Quote of the Day
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