Before you begin an exercise, it is a good idea to slow down, quiet yourself and center by concentrating your energy in your chest, abdomen, or on your breathing.
The following exercise, called "Loving Kindness Meditation," is an extremely powerful tool in opening the heart and developing compassion.
Visualize a lotus in your heart. Feel it open and send out rays of love-filled light. Direct this stream of love first to yourself, then to those around you, to specific members of your family, your friends, and to people you see casually everyday--the postman, the clerk at the supermarket. Feel the loving kindness from your heart overflow the room you are in and spread into your neighborhood, then the city where you live. It grows and swells until your loving kindness covers the state, country, continent, finally the entire globe. As you visualize the earth as a whole, bring it back into your heart where it becomes a lotus. Relax the mind, and rest in this state as long as possible.
After
you've used the light purification
exercise over a period of time, you come to feel that you're filled with healing
light which you wish to share with others. When you are standing next to someone--say
an impatient person in the grocery line in front of you--visualize that you
breathe in their energy which is dark and smokey. Bring it into your light-filled
being, and breathe it out clear and fine. Match your breathing to the distressed
person's, breathing in dark, breathing out light. Concentrate on doing this
whenever you are with others. By controlling the way in which their energy
is absorbed and processed, you will be able to remain centered yourself as
well as helping others in distress. It is surprising how this technique calms
others down.
To take in pleasure and push away pain is logical to the ego. The practice
of taking and sending, called tonglen in Tibetan--reverses this process. Pema
Chodron, a Buddhist nun, is the director of Gampo Abbey in Cape Breton, Nova
Scotia. She writes:
The slogan "Begin the sequence of taking and sending with yourself" is getting at the point that compassion starts with making friends with ourselves, and particularly with our poisons--the messy areas. As we practice tonglen--taking and sending--and contemplate the lojong (mind training), gradually it begins to dawn on us how totally interconnected we all are. Now people know that what we do to the rivers in South America affects the whole world, and what we do to the air in Alaska affects the whole world. Everything is interrelated--including ourselves, so this is very important, this making friends with ourselves. It's the key to a more sane compassionate planet.
That's one of the points about this tonglen practice of exchanging oneself
for others; that what you do for yourself--any gesture of kindness, any gesture
of gentleness, any gesture of honesty and clear seeing toward yourself--will
affect how you experience your world. What you do for yourself, you're doing
for others and what you do for others, you're doing for yourself. It becomes
increasingly dubious what is out there and what is in here.
If you have rage and strike out, rather than surrendering to yourself and
allowing yourself to see what's under all that rage--especially if you feel
very justified in striking out--it's really you who suffers. The other people
and the environment suffer also, but you suffer more because you're being
eaten up inside with hatred, causing you to hate yourself more and more.
We strike out because, ironically, we think it will bring us some relief. We equate it with happiness. Actually there is some relief, for the moment. When you have an addiction and get to fulfill that addiction, there is a moment in which you feel some relief. Then the nightmare gets worse. So it is with aggression. When you get to tell someone off, you might feel pretty good for a while, but somehow the sense of righteous indignation and hatred grows, and it hurts you.
On the other hand, if we begin to surrender to ourselves, begin to drop the storyline, and experience what all this messy stuff behind the storyline feels like, we begin to find bodhicitta, the tenderness that's under all that harshness. By being kind to ourselves, we become kind to others. By being kind to others--if it's done properly with proper understanding--we benefit as well. So again, the first point is that we are completely interrelated. What you do to others, you do to yourself. What you do to yourself, you do to others.
--Pema Chodron
Be Grateful to Everyone: A Guide to Compassionate Living, Boston: Shambhala,
1994.
Also see Pema Chodron's excellent book The Wisdom of No Escape, Boston, Shambhala,
1991.
When you spontaneously give your ice-cream cone to a little boy who has just dropped his, when you drop a coin in an "expired" parking meter so a stranger's car won't get a ticket, or whenever you do anything spontaneously kind or generous, you have committed a "random act of kindness." Imagine what would happen if everyday were filled with these acts? If there were a rash of such outbreaks worldwide?
When I graduated from college I took a job at an insurance company in this
huge downtown office building. On my first day, I was escorted to this tiny
cubicle surrounded by what seemed like thousands of other tiny cubicles, and
put to work doing some meaningless thing. It was so terribly depressing I
almost broke down crying. At lunch--after literally punching out a time clock--all
I could think about was how much I wanted to quit, but I couldn't because
I desperately needed the money.
When I got back to my cubicle after lunch there was a beautiful bouquet of
flowers sitting on my desk. For the whole first month I worked there flowers
just kept arriving on my desk. I found out later that it had been a kind of
spontaneous office project. A woman in the cubicle next to me brought in the
first flowers to try to cheer me up, and then other people just began replenishing
my vase. I ended up working there for two years, and many of my best, longest-lasting
friendships grew out of that experience.
Editors of Conari Press
Random Acts of Kindness
Emeryville, CA, Conari Press, 1993
Practice random acts of kindness whenever you can. You'll find you benefit as much or more than the recipient.
Compassion
easily flows toward our family and circle of friends, but Teresa of Calcutta
points out that this isn't enough: community is a global matter.
It is not enough for us to say: I love God, but I do not love my neighbor. St. John says you are a liar if you say you love God and you don't love your neighbor. How can you love God whom you do not see, if you do not love your neighbor whom you see, whom you touch, with whom you live. And so this is very important for us to realize that love, to be true, has to hurt. It hurt Jesus to love us, it hurt him. And to make sure we remember his great love he made himself bread of life to satisfy our hunger for his love. Our hunger for God, because we have been created for that love. We have been created in his image. We have been created to love and be loved, and then he has become man to make it possible for us to love as he loved us. He makes himself the hungry one--the naked one--the homeless one--the sick one--the one in prison--the lonely one--the unwanted one--and he says: You did it to me. Hungry for our love, and this is the hunger of our poor people. This is the hunger that you and I must find, it may be in our own home.
Teresa of Calcutta
Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech 1979
Think
of the kindest person you have ever known. Remember that person in detail,
recalling each act of kindness shown to you and to others. What is this person's
history? How did he or she become so kind? Engage in a dialogue with this
person about kindness.