Tara Brach - Part 2 - Compassion - Present Heart: The Universal Expressions of Love (2018-02-14)
Episode Date: February 16, 2018Part 2 – Compassion - Present Heart: The Universal Expressions of Love (2018-02-14) - Compassion - the tender resonance of heart - awakens as we allow ourselves to be touched by our shared vulnera...bility. This series reflects on four primary expressions of an awake, wise heart: lovingkindness, compassion, joy and equanimity. In each talk we explore the habitual patterning that blocks our full realization of these innate capacities, and the understandings and practices that nurture their unfolding. Your support enables us to continue to offer these talks and meditations freely. If you value them, I hope you will consider offering a donation at this time at www.tarabrach.com/donation/. With gratitude and love, Tara
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Greetings. We offer these podcasts freely and your support really makes a difference.
To make a donation, please visit tarabrock.com.
Namaste and welcome. So I'd like to wish you a happy Valentine's Day and begin with a brief quiz.
The first one is, what do squirrels give each other on Valentine's Day?
Any guesses? Forget me nuts.
Okay, one more. Only one more.
What does an octopus sing to his beloved on Valentine's Day?
I want to hold your hand, hand, hand, hand, hand, hand, hand, hand.
Okay, I gave it a good shot, right?
So appropriately, we're in the midst of a four-part series on awakening the present.
heart. And this is the first one. The first one that we did was on awakening loving kindness,
which is the seeing the goodness and responding to the goodness in life. The second is compassion,
which is what we'll be doing this class. And then we move on to joy and equanimity. And in the
Buddhist tradition, these four are called the Brahma Vajaras or the divine abodes, because they
really express the capacity and potential of our awakening heart.
So in thinking about each one of them, we look at, you know, really what's blocking this innate
capacity we have and what cultivates it.
So as we think of compassion tonight, I'd like to invite you to bring to mind someone you
know, or if you don't know anyone,
someone you know of, who you really consider as authentically compassionate.
And just take a moment to sense that person and what are the qualities that come to mind?
What is it that you feel in them?
What lets you know that quality of heart is there?
See if this description from Henri Nguyen resonates.
He says when we honestly ask ourselves,
which person in our lives mean the most to us,
we often find it's those who instead of giving advice,
solutions, or cures,
have chosen rather to share our pain
and touch our wounds with a warm and tender hand.
The friend who can be silent with us
in a moment of despair or confusion,
who can stay with us in an hour of grief and bereavement,
who can tolerate not knowing, not curing, not healing,
not fixing, and face us with the reality of our powerlessness is a friend who cares.
So we begin to sense, so what does it really mean to be compassionate?
I'd like to name three qualities and the first one is that compassion isn't something
where I can feel compassionate and when I talk about compassion right now I'm talking about
the full bloom of it where I can feel compassionate towards you but it shuts down here.
compassion is an all-pervading, wide-open state of heart that's really inclusive.
And one of the examples that struck me on this was a story of a Sikh master who gives his
two main disciples, each one of them a chicken.
And he says, go where no one can see and kill the chicken.
So the first one goes behind this hut, chops off the chicken's head.
The second one's wandering around for hours and hours and it comes back and the master says,
what?
You didn't kill the chicken?
And they said, no, it's because I can't find a place to kill the chicken where no one can see me
everywhere I go the chicken sees.
So this is the heart that is so open and attuned that it senses the sentience in all beings.
It doesn't exclude.
And the truth is as we deepen our attention to our own consciousness and vulnerability,
we're more and more alert to how all beings are sentient.
They hurt and they want to stay alive just like us.
So that's one quality which is this wisdom of interdependence
that the whole world is part of us and that our compassion is all inclusive.
The second quality is that then when we see vulnerability or tenderness, there's a natural
arising in our heart of care.
When we see that others are hurting, there's that responsiveness of care.
And the third is really that there's an impulse to help.
It's not a removed kind of empathy where I get it.
I can feel that, but there's this urge to help.
In one story about Zen Master Ria Khan, a thief visits his hut at the base of a mountain where he lives
and when he comes back, the thief finds that there's nothing to steal and so Ria Khan returns
and catches him there.
Here's what he says.
You've come a long way to visit me, he told the prowler and you should not return empty-handed.
Please take my clothes as a gift.
The thief was bewildered.
He took the clothes and slunk away.
Ria Khan sat naked watching the moon.
Poor fellow, he mused.
I wish I could have given him this beautiful moon.
So you can feel a bit the freedom of a compassionate heart.
So like loving kindness, compassion often gets blocked.
And we're going to look at how so because I think deep down,
many of us judge ourselves as not really a compassionate person.
We might feel like we hear headlines
and there's a part of us that's appalled or horrified,
but our heart isn't really tenderized by it.
It's like we don't really feel it deep down.
So it helps to see
kind of in a bigger picture
the kind of universal conditioning
that we're subject to
that's been impacting humans for millions of years
that might cause us to be less than fully compassionate
so we don't take it so personally.
So a very brief romp through evolutionary history
is just to say that four millions of years
humans lived in small groups
and the way they survived was that other groups
were considered other and less than
and they actually had names for themselves that usually had something to do with human
and their names for the others, other groups were epithets that really had to do with less than human.
And so it was really part of social cohesion and to feel that we're the ones and others are not
and that a let...
And if others are unreal and less than, then you can attack them and you can be against them.
So, while they had the capacity for pro-social affiliate of emotions like compassion, it was
very, very restricted.
It was a very immature form of compassion.
And then we see that about 70,000 years ago, so this is millions of years, and about 70,000
years ago there was this cognitive revolution that happened where all our brain started spurting
all these different pathways and we began to communicate to each other and be able to be able to
to collaborate in ways that have now led to our current capacity to really collaborate
globally, you know, on economics and on law. And there's actually less violence now than
there has, if you look at the broad span over time. But to know that for thousand times
as long as this last recent period in history, humans were living in small little bands
and having others be bad.
So there wasn't that inclusive heart.
So we're catching up.
So we have these evolutionary poles.
We have all that old conditioning to make others bad
and not be attuned as that man was to the chicken, to the sentience.
And then we have this more recently evolved part of our brain
that has the mirror neurons and the equipment
to look at any being
and sense that that which is looking back at us is the same awareness, the same beingness,
that you are part of my heart. How could I hurt you?
Those are the pulse we've got going.
Our evolution is moving in the direction of the empathy, the compassion, the care.
In fact, one attachment scientist, Lewis Kozolina,
says that it's not the survival of the fittest, it's the survival of the nurtured.
And you can kind of sense it in our individual lives,
that the more nurturing and the more we know how to self-nurture,
actually the more integrated and mature we can become.
So evolution favors that direction,
and yet as we know, in a moment's notice,
we can have that override of our limbic sense,
system that has us become really into othering and not seeing who's here.
I always have been drawn to a story told by Fran Peavy, who's a social activist, describes
being on the Stanford campus when they were doing some sort of an experiment.
And there was this crowd of men that was gathered around a male chimp.
And the male chimp was running loose and there was a female chimp on a chain.
and they were trying to get them to mate.
And the male, of course, didn't need much encouragement.
He was going at it.
But this female on the chain was whimpering and scared and so on
and trying to avoid his advances.
So, Fran Peavy describes this wave of caring that went through her.
Then something happened she'd never forget.
She said, suddenly the female chimp yanked her chain out of the male's grass,
And to my amazement, she walked through the crowd straight over to me and took my hand.
Then she led me across the circle to the only other two women in the crowd,
and she joined hands with one of them.
The three of us stood together in a circle.
I remember the feeling of that rough palm against mine.
The little chimp had recognized us and reached out across all the years of evolution
to form her own women's support group.
It's the beginning of me too.
but the question that I think is really interesting
is what prevented the male onlookers
to feel that compassion at that moment
I mean here's this female on a chain and upset
in those moments there was an override
Olympic override there was a forgetting
that came from the less evolved part of the psyche
because they were seeking excitement
seeking engagement
was a male bonding kind of thing
affiliation dominance
and that masked the suffering in a fellow being.
It reinforced the much older conditioning of us versus them.
Does that make sense?
Just for those moments.
It's a trance and it's a trance that happens to all of us when we're stressed,
every one of us.
So this isn't about women being empathetic.
Women tend to be because they're more biologically relational,
but this is not a male versus female.
We all go into trance.
Every one of us when we're stressed
and it closes off our hearts.
This is the way Einstein puts it.
He says we have an optical delusion of separation
when this happens.
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 person,
and by widening our circles of compassion
to embrace all living creatures
and the whole of nature in its beauty.
So this optical delusion of separation
when we're being run by our more primitive parts of our brain.
So what I'd like to do is look more closely
so we can in our lives catch on to,
oh, okay, this is trance.
I'm not fully here so we can wake up to it and just see where we get blocked.
And we get blocked when we have unmet needs and in some way they get tripped off.
And the first major area we close down our compassion is when we feel in some way endangered,
right?
There's so many ways that we can, if we feel threatened, we're going to in some way fail or
our health is going down or we're going to lose esteem or lose possessions or money or whatever.
As soon as that happens, that survival brain kicks in and we become less attuned.
Now the major one for most of us is when we're afraid of failure.
I think about that a lot, that there's a sense of how often we're anxiously preparing for
something so we don't fail.
often we're trying to get to an appointment on time or trying to make sure our children
or partners taking care of whatever it is but there's that stress and there's a deep fear.
There's not enough time.
And I can say for myself when I am feeling that, when I feel like I'm trying to get to
the next thing and check things off the list, I'm not in an open-hearted place.
I hear news and it's not like my heart becomes a tender and resonant.
because when we're busy we tighten.
One of the best examples and research on this that I think about often
was the Good Samaritan study that was done at Princeton.
How many are familiar with that? Can I see?
Some, yeah.
I found it so fascinating.
So the seminarians were given a practice sermon
and half of them were given the story of the Good Samaritan
and the other half were given another random Bible story.
and they're supposed to go to another building to give the sermon and be evaluated on it.
But on the way to that other building, there's a person in a doorway who's moaning in distress.
So the real question was, would they stop?
And it was determined, and this is what they found out,
how much time they thought they had before they had to give their sermon,
determine whether or not they would stop to help this person.
And if they believed they'd be late, they didn't stop to help,
even if the sermon was about the Good Samaritan.
Isn't that amazing?
That's how deep in our brain, the fear of failure closes down our heart,
the fear of being laid even.
So that's one area is when we feel endangered in some way.
Another area is when we're fixated on seeking out satisfaction or pleasure.
And there are times that are, you know, the mammalian brain,
We're like a squirrel going after acorns and we just, our view does not include others, doesn't include anything else.
We're not really attuned.
It's like moments when you're watching an engaging show and your child asks you for something.
You're aiming towards ending the evening with that rewarding bowl of ice cream but then you get a distress call from a friend and it's like we're not as available in some way.
or somebody has a request for charity or time
when we really wanted to spend money or time on ourselves.
In this story, one morning Sam wakes up with a start
and her partner asks what's the matter and she says,
well, I just had a dream that you gave me a pearl necklace for Valentine's Day.
What do you think it means?
You'll know tonight, Tony said.
That evening Tony comes home with a small package and gives it to her.
Delighted Sam Ophins it only to find a book entitled The Meaning of Dreams.
That didn't totally illustrate my point, but I couldn't resist.
So we've got the first two areas we've named, we close down when we're endangered,
we close down when we're riveted on seeking gratification.
And the third way that we close down is when we're trying to attach to another person.
And that's when we have this agenda that we're trying to get someone,
to like us, not to leave us, to think certain things about us, whenever we're with each other
and there's some strong agenda of wanting something from each other, we actually aren't present
to tune into vulnerability and be tender. The agenda gets in the way. It's like that story of
the older woman in Miami sitting on a park bench and a very disheveled man and tattered clothing
sits down next to her and she asks him well how are you doing and he goes well I'm just out of prison
25 years oh what were you in for murdering my wife and then she goes oh so you're single
you get the idea like our attention gets narrowed when we're going for something we have an
agenda again not a perfect example but so these
These are the areas that when we're fearful of something, wanting something, trying to control
relationships and it happens a lot of the time, we're actually not available.
And then even when we do extend to others, it's not wholehearted.
It's self, you know, it's maybe out of duty or obligation or just to feel good about ourselves.
So I'm coming back to this is the reason we hear.
hear stories in the news, we even see things, more comes to us information-wise than ever in
history and because of stress in these three areas, our responses more mental than it is
visceral and heart.
So accessing an authentic quality of compassion isn't easy.
It requires a real presence.
unless we're mindful, our stress conditioning continuously overrides the circuitry.
I find it really interesting what the Dalai Lama said about this.
He said, I don't know why people like me so much.
It must be because I value Bodhita.
Bodhita is the awakened heart mind.
He says, I can't claim to practice it, but I value it.
What he's saying in my understanding,
because clearly he practices and he emanates it, but he means that he's, it's not, it's not
across the board, he forgets to.
But he says, he's saying I care about caring.
That's why people like me.
I heard this quote a long time ago and it was one of those quotes that has just stayed
with me because I can really relate to that.
I clearly my, I'm not always sitting with this wide open, tender, inclusive heart.
but I care about the awakened heart
and that caring keeps drawing us
even though we go into trance and get over, you know, the Olympic hijack and all that,
we keep on evolving because we care about caring.
And you wouldn't be here, each one of you that's listening
unless there was something waking up in you and knowing that caring
that's this is what matters.
So, it gives us motivation when we sense that's where we're going.
We're evolving towards that awakened heart-mind and that matters to us.
Because then we can begin to notice without slamming ourselves,
oh, okay, I've been in trance, but I care about caring.
That was a bit of what happened for one woman who describes an experience with her mother
I want to share with you.
She was very dedicated in noticing and witnessing when she went under the line, you know,
and she went into trance.
And she describes being with her mother when her mom told her about having breast cancer.
And she said, you know, immediately she went to sadness, guilt, anger, future-tripping regret.
In other words, she's overwhelmed by the shock.
Because this is stress.
She says, as it usually does, my mom.
mind immediately went into planning mode. So just track the story. So instead of like, oh,
you know, the resonance, she's right there planning. That's a stress reaction. What needs to
happen? What are your treatment options? How soon we can get the lump removed? So you get the idea.
And she just thank God for this work because this work meaning training and mindfulness,
noticing going into trance because despite of a complete head spiral, I still have the
presence enough to ask myself an important question. What am I noticing now? And in that moment
I was able to see something I would have missed otherwise. My mother didn't want to talk about
any of those things. As I was weighing her options, she sat in the high top chair in my kitchen
staring blankly into a cup of coffee. I was trying to be strong for her sake in mind but suddenly
became clear that wasn't what she needed. She was scared and needed to be scared.
I debated whether to give her a hug, which sounds terrible I know, but I was barely holding
it together and scurring around, making dinner, pouring over doctors' paperwork and staying
busy was my way of avoiding total collapse.
Being pressed and allowed me to shift to her way.
I took a breath, walked across the room, and wrapped my arms around her.
It was an awkward sideways hug but it was also a long, necessary one and then something happened.
Slowly she started rocking side to side like a mother rocks a child, except the child was now
the caretaker.
It was a sweet, tiny moment I'll never forget and one that I surely would have missed if it
were not for the power of mindfulness.
This is Emily Bennington.
I'd like to reflect here, invite you to reflect, because this is really us beginning to bear
witness to these evolutionary poles.
to see her pull towards getting busy, her pull towards moving away from where the pain was
and was able to counter that conditioning.
So let's just take a look in our own life's for a moment.
We'll close your eyes if you will, take a moment to reflect.
So you might bring to mind someone who's dear to you and who's currently facing difficulty,
someone you'd like to relate to with more compassion.
And take a moment to remind you of what lets you know you care, that you want to be the friend
or partner or sibling or whatever it is who truly listens, not fixing, who has that kind
presence.
Just remind yourself that you care about caring.
And then without judging, notice how you go into trance with this person.
Notice the pull of your stressed brain that might get lost in worrying or obsessing or
getting things done or proving something or distracting, trying to control what's happening.
Just notice your version of it.
sense what you want to look out for, what you want to be alert to next time.
If you can witness this without judging, in other words, to keep feeling that sincerity that
you care about caring, you will be more alert, that that care will carry you to your future
self, the more awake heart mind that's possible.
We're going to move now into how we can cultivate compassion.
Because most of us, when we come into presence to be with another person for whatever's going
on, what we're going to find first is that the first place we need to bring compassion is
to our own hearts.
Very often in many situations there is discomfort, pain, suffering right here and if we try to
skip over it, our compassion will be abstract. It will not be authentic. So that's why it's often
said in Buddhism that the heart of Buddhism is compassion and the heart of compassion is compassion
for ourselves. It's not selfish. It's just that if something's going on and you're having a reaction,
first take care of yourself or you won't be able to open your heart to others. So there's a basic
understanding that authentic healing requires self-compassion, that we have to have that capacity
to attend to our own life with kindness. That wakes up those mirror neurons that can attune
to others. I'm right now writing a book about the acronym R-A-I-N which is to recognize, allow,
investigate, and nurture. And that nurture piece, there's no real freedom if we don't
have a tenderness towards what's going on. It's absolutely essential. So the process
of compassion and self-compassion is very simple. We have the courage to recognize,
oh, suffering is right here. And if we really connect with it, this really is suffering.
Ouch, the heart gets tender. But what happens usually, what happens when you're
hurting, when you're having a hard time? How do you usually relate to yourself?
It's really interesting to watch.
For many of us, we relate to ourselves often how our caretakers related to us, which could
have been anything from ignoring or judging you're too sensitive, or trying to fix or get
rid of something, which is a big one.
Or others have it worse.
You know, why are you complaining?
Others have it so much worse.
Or we might tell ourselves, it's your fault.
You got yourself into this.
But you see how each of those is something other than directly just going, oh, suffering,
ouch.
It's not until we stay and just get it that this hurts that our hearts will start opening
to ourselves.
Any notion that we don't have it so bad that others have it worse takes us away from that.
And again, if there's no self-compassion, those mirror neurons that need to be activated to
be empathetic towards others are not there.
So I'd like to give you an example of how it can work.
Because when there is self-compassion, we naturally extend.
And this is a story that really struck me because it was a man and a woman got married and
their family became those two and her son, so who's a stepfather.
and what came up, the child was eight years old, had a lot of tantrums, it was difficult, it was rude,
and this guy is finding himself not liking his stepson, feeling anger, feeling rage.
So whenever there was an outbursts and the child acted out and he felt a lot of aversion,
he tried to hide it from his wife because he figured she had her own challenges
and the last thing he wanted was her to feel like, you know, I don't like your kid,
that kind of thing.
But it was really corroding their relationship.
So we decided to work with Rain.
Rain is basically mindfulness and compassion.
And the recognizing was recognizing and allowing his reactivity, okay?
Angry, feeling judgmental, feeling rageful.
and then making that U-turn rather than blaming the child really deepening the eye of Reyn is to investigate
and he found under the anger and under that I don't like you feeling he found fear, you're
ruining my life and you're going to ruin and you're ruining your mother's life and you're
ruining our relationship and then he also felt shame for that.
So that's what he found underneath when he was investigating.
And we talk some about how many parents, and this isn't just stepchildren, biological
children, at times don't like our children.
You know, it's hard to name it, but when things are really unpleasant we react.
And children can get in the way of us meeting our own needs for safety, for gratification.
So, through the eyes of his wisest self, his future's
He kind of witnessed the situation and saw the stuckness of here he is in a marriage
where he's feeling like the way this child is is really threatening, the relationship
and so on.
And rather than being harsh with himself, he said, okay, this is hard.
Just this is hard.
That's simple.
You know, self-compassion and start with words like, you know, it can be as big as I'm sorry
and I love you or it can be simply it's okay or it can be this is hard but some kindness
directed inwardly.
And when he let himself acknowledge this is hard and soften towards himself, he was able
to start talking to his wife and it actually opened things up for her because she felt
like she was failing and she was really miserable too. So they were able to be vulnerable
together in it, hold each other which then allowed them to be a lot more creative and flexible
and less reactive with the child who obviously if he was having tantrums and acting out was
having a hard time so they could they had space for it. The reason I tell you this story was it
wasn't until he was going, ah, this is hard, that his heart opened so he could be with his wife
and be with his stepson in a way that allowed some tenderness and creativity and change.
We have to start with what's going on inside him ourselves. If he had instead say,
wait a minute, I'm the adult, I shouldn't be feeling this. He would never have gotten to
an authentic place of change. Does that make sense? Self-compassion first.
If we can embrace our own suffering, then we can begin to widen out.
So the widening out, we're going to look at now, how do we cultivate that compassion for others?
And what I really want to look at in the last 15 minutes that we have is how do we take compassion
from a fleeting state that we sometimes experience, just a little tenderness, to being a trait?
an enduring expression of our being.
And there are three steps really
to really installing my friend Rickanson
who's psychologist and many of you probably heard of him
is the one that really has gotten me inspired
about this potential to really cultivate
from a state to a trait, how we really install compassion.
And the first is that, you know, when we witness vulnerability to really feel it and, you know,
let ourselves be touched and when the tenderness comes, when the real visceral tenderness comes,
feel it for 15 seconds, 20 seconds, but let yourself marinate in the feeling of tenderness.
We don't pause.
Let yourself really feel it.
and then in some way extend, whether it's through prayer or action, but extend,
because the completion of compassion is some extension of our being.
The site that's correlated with compassion and the brain is right near the motor cortex.
We're meant to reach out and help.
It's very interesting.
So let's look at those.
The first step is to begin to see that they're suffering or vulnerability.
we don't usually see.
When we're in our stress trance,
we don't look at each other and go,
oh, look, you're having a hard time.
We typically don't see very deeply.
What stops us?
Well, either we're living and stereotyping people,
a certain type,
in which case we're just seeing the type,
but we're not seeing behind the mask,
or else somebody's acting out in a way
and we're seeing the way they're defensive or aggressive,
but we're not seeing what's behind it.
We're not seeing how it's covering vulnerability.
James Baldwin says,
I imagine that one of the reasons
that people cling to their hate and prejudice so stubbornly
is because they sense that once hate is gone,
they will be forced to deal with their own pain.
Now, when we run in to someone who's acting hate,
hateful. Do we look deeply enough to sense, oh, there's pain behind that hate? Most of us
don't. We recoil. Do you know what I mean? So it takes a commitment to really look and
see what's going on. And then we, if we look, we'll feel tenderness and then we can extend
ourselves in some way that is meaningful in that moment.
One of the examples I love of this of really the expression of compassion, I heard in a
Krista Tippett interview with Ruby Sales and Ruby Sales is an African-American social
activist, older woman now, very active in civil rights.
So here's what she says.
She describes getting her locks washed
and she says, my locker's daughter came in one morning
and she had been hustling all night
and she had sores on her body
and she was just an estate drug.
So something said to me,
ask her, where does it hurt?
And I said,
Shelly, where does it hurt?
And just that simple question
unleashed territory in her
that she had never shared with her mother.
And she talked about having
been incested. She talked about all the things that had happened to her as a child and she
literally shared the source of her pain and I realized in that moment listening to her and talking
with her that I needed a larger way to do this work. What Ruby Sales is talking about in a larger
way is cultivating this capacity to see the vulnerability, let ourselves be touched and
reach out, where does it hurt? Where does it hurt? Such a beautiful question. As we begin to get
more tender and to look and to respond, it's contagious. The people around us, they get touched
and then they act that way more. Just the way there's limbic contagion, you know, when people
are angry or upset, there's compassion contagion. I remember experiencing a bit of it
it was 2008,
because I remember it was kind of during that recession period
and I was going up to New York
to give a talk on something
and one of my great fears in the world is getting lost
and I was driving to Union Station
and somehow rather 3.95 got all botched up
got completely lost, late for my train,
afraid I would be late for my train.
I went to a gas station and parked
and was trying to find someone that give me
instructions and an elderly gentleman
and kind of overheard me and could sense all my angst,
and he interrupted the guy that was trying to explain to me,
said, come on, hon, you just follow me.
And he just drove and I followed him right to you in station.
And in those moments, I felt the sense of the world being a friendly place.
Now, it's not always friendly on some levels,
but deep down there is love.
People have that capacity.
and I just felt the field of loving.
I get on the train and I was really excited.
I was reading, I don't even know what I was reading,
but I was reading something I was excited about.
And this young man next to me started talking to me
and it turned out he had lost his job because of the recession and so on.
We talked a long time.
And there was something about just dropping the thing of wanting to read
and just being there.
And I figure he probably went back to his wife and his kids.
and he was probably more open.
It goes on and on.
And it's so much of a happier way to live.
And what's interesting with the science is
that although with compassion we're training ourselves
to look at where the suffering and vulnerability is,
the actual experience of compassion
lights up the parts of the brain
that are related to positive emotion,
it actually feels good
because it has to do a good.
it has to do with belonging and connection.
It's the world we want to live in.
We care about caring.
There's a little saying that to be kind, you must swerve regularly from your path.
So whatever this conditioned path of I want to get this done and I want more of this
and I want this is my agenda with you to swerve and just pause and look and see who's here.
really look and see
what's it like for you right now
to let ourselves be touched by vulnerability
to feel that tenderness and feel it
really feel it
I invite you
next time you have a taste
of that tender caring
to literally 15 to 30 seconds
get to know it
as it's described by neuroscience
are negative experiences that we have
go deeply into our implicit memory.
We can recall them.
This is the negativity bias.
It's evolutionary, right?
The positive ones like tenderness and caring,
like feeling creative, like feeling happy.
We get whiffs of them,
but they don't have the stickiness.
They don't go into our implicit memory.
So there's states that come and go.
What makes a state into a trait is when it arises, pause, and really take it in.
Oh, this is the tenderness of compassion.
Really feel it.
Feel it in your body and your cells.
And then it gets stickier.
It goes into your implicit memory.
And if you keep repeating that, over time the state of compassion becomes a trait.
You really sense it as who you are.
are. So that's the invitation and we'll practice a little bit right now with that, if you will.
You want to just adjust how you're sitting and close your eyes for the last few minutes.
When we talk about a state to a trait, when we talk about cultivating compassion, really
talking about a shift in identity, a shift from a sense of a self that's very self-centered
and really operating off a fear, grasping,
to a sense of enlarge beingness
where the world is part of our heart
and our actions are on behalf of the world.
And the Dalai Lama described this shift in identity
as really the hope of the world.
And so we practice and you might bring to mind again
as you did earlier,
the person you'd like to feel some more compassion towards.
that you'd like to be less entrance more there
and feel your intention
towards compassion,
towards awakening into your future self,
your awakened heart-mind, really manifesting that compassion,
who you can be.
And bring this person to mind in a close in way
so that you can deepen your attention
and sense, well, what's it like for this person right now?
You might imagine if you could really step inside this person for the next minute or two.
You know, looking out from this person's eyes, what's the world like right now?
What are they believing about the world?
About themselves?
About what's disappointing or what feels threatening?
feels hurtful for this person.
Where does it hurt for this person?
You have their body, their face, their experience, just feeling inside the vulnerability that
this person might be feeling and really what the most vulnerable place in them needs.
What is this person need?
What will be most healing?
As you sense yourself now just widen back out and sense this person's a part of your
heart, but feel your own vastness, feel the presence that's here and really calling on your
most awake heart.
And sense that you could in some way give this person right this moment what's most needed
energetically.
If you could put a hand on their cheek or their heart or hug them and really send the
message that would most be healing to hear, it might be simply the message.
the message of I'm sorry and I love you but you might mentally whisper their name and send
that message or Ticknaut-Han says I care about your suffering darling I care about your suffering
imagine this person really being able to receive and feel that tenderness let it fill you
really let the sense of tenderness for this person fill you get familiar with it what it's like
the caring. This is your deepest, most awake heart. You might sense this heart space is wide open,
that it's including all the beings that struggle just the way this person that's dear to you struggle.
All the beings from different countries, different ages, races, religions, perhaps species,
that might struggle with the same kind of suffering.
So you're feeling that tenderness really includes them all and us all.
You might listen to the words of this poem,
Just Like You, Walk gently on this earth with purposeful steps.
You share the space with seven billion human beings
and countless other precious life forms.
Just like you, they all want to be happy.
just like you they all need love
we're not going to survive
unless we walk gently on this earth together
until we touch something in others
that feels just like the shards of our own pain
the fluttering warmth of our own joy
until we sow their wounds into our hearts
and seal it with our own skin
walk gently on this earth
walk gently on the earth
walk gently on the earth.
Namaste and thank you for your attention.
For more talks and meditations
and to learn about my schedule or join my email list,
please visit tarabrock.com.
