Sunday, June 30, 2013

Learning to Feel Compassion for Ourselves

Learning to be compassionate to ourselves may be the biggest challenge of all as we strive to be more kind in our lives. One way we can be more compassionate to ourselves is by getting in touch with our pain. The Tibetan nun, Pema Chodron, offers us a meditation tool called Maitri  that can help us do just that.

Maitri (prounounced “My Tree”) enables us to develop an attitude of unconditional friendliness toward ourselves…warts and all. A key part of Maitri is a meditation practice that puts us in touch with our pain, whether it’s physical or emotional. Many of us run away from our pain as soon as we feel the first twinge. I usually look for what I call a “light switch solution” that will enable me to self medicate and instantly turn off whatever is bothering me.

Maitri meditation is counter intuitive: it invites us to actually befriend our pain rather than running away from it. Here’s a simple way you can use meditation to get in touch with what’s bothering you. First, find a quiet spot with no distractions and assume a comfortable posture. Then try to quietly visualize your pain or anguish as a separate entity; perhaps see it as a person and give it a name. Then have a conversation with it. Ask it some questions, such as “Why are you here?” and “What do you need from me?” and “What will soothe you?” Then sit back for a few minutes and listen with your heart to what your pain has to say. You can repeat this meditation more than once…in fact many times. And after you have spent enough time getting to know your pain, you may decide it’s time to invite it to move on, like a visitor who has overstayed his welcome.

Here's a ink to a video featuring Pema Chodron talking about Maitri: