Tara Brach - Part 2 - Radical Compassion - Loving Ourselves and Our World into Healing
Episode Date: January 16, 2025Drawn from Tara's book, Radical Compassion (2020), these three talks explore how the RAIN practice (Recognize, Allow, Investigate, Nurture) awakens the active, embodied caring that heals and frees our... hearts. Through the framework of this practice, we look at how we can reconnect with the gold of our true nature, navigating life's challenges with mindfulness and love. In Part 2, Tara explores: How unmet needs and emotional reactivity block authentic connection in relationships. The "limbic controller" and its strategies, such as blame, avoidance, and pretending, that create distance in relationships. The transformative power of the RAIN practice in healing relational patterns and fostering deeper intimacy. The importance of recognizing the "goodness behind the mask" in ourselves and others to bridge separation. Stories and reflections that illustrate the healing potential of Radical Compassion in even the most challenging relationships.
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Namaste. Welcome, friends.
So today's Part 2 on the series on Radical Compassion.
And I think of compassion as this felt tenderness for the suffering within ourselves, within others, in our world.
it's a natural capacity we humans have.
And yet, if we're honest, it's often abstract.
It's often more mental than real.
But here's the thing.
It's like a muscle cultivating compassion,
that the more you practice,
the more it becomes full and embodied.
And with that fullness,
there's a direct sense of connecting with others,
of opening, of caring.
it actually brings joy. Compassion brings joy. And there's research demonstrating this,
that when compassion is aroused, it correlates with the activation of pleasure centers in the brain.
It's not easy. It takes practice and intention because we have a discomfort opening to vulnerability.
We have a reflex to close off, to turn away. So it does take intentionality.
For instance, let's say we have a friend struggling with fear about something in their life,
it's a decision to deepen our attention and sense what it's like for that person, what it
is they're afraid of and how that might feel.
Or let's say there's a group we read about in the news that's suffering, it takes being on purpose
to say, well, what would it be like to be living with that?
say we sense into our own wounds or hurts, our loneliness, our fear. It takes a kind of willingness
to say, ouch, this hurts. But in time, when we get into the habit of deepening attention,
on purpose like this, our capacity, our sensitivity, our tenderness, our caring grows.
Okay, brief story. Last summer, my summer,
granddaughter Mia, she was five. We got to, we were gathering together for a family
holiday and she had multiple colored hula hoops and she would dance to music having
the hula hoops circling her waist and it was amazing, graceful, beautiful, wonderful.
And I said, well how'd you learn? And she said, well, I started with one and I was bad.
I was really bad, I couldn't do it every time I tried, it kept falling down. But I
I pursed my virons and I kept trying.
I could see her pride in this.
The point is that she really gave herself to it and she had some mastery and some real grace.
And whether you think of learning to hula hoop or cultivating the muscle of compassion as how alike they are,
it's a capacity. We all have it to respond to our world with tenderness.
and it takes pursing or virrence.
So I just want to invite you to consider, as we're in this three-part series on radical compassion,
what it really means for you to dedicate more deeply in your own life to the kind of attention
that wakes up your heart.
It brings so much connection, so much healing, so much grace to our lives.
Thank you.
Today I was sent by a friend an article about a palliative caregiver who works with children
who are dying in South Africa and he did a survey with them, a kind of informal survey and the
inquiry was really what makes life worth living and one of the main responses was nobody wishes
that they'd spend more time online.
That was the first thing.
The other one I want to name was, kindness matters.
If you see this article, it's quite beautiful, just registering that when we're really aware
that we don't have that much time, we don't want to be off in some virtual reality and
we do want to be in our hearts.
I wanted to start that way because this is the second of a three-part
series on Radical Compassion. It's based on the title of my new book, which will be available
December 29th. This is my commercial moment. And the book and these talks is meant to give
some guidance in using the rain meditation, which is mindfulness and compassion, in working
with our inner life, whatever stuck places we have going on. Tonight it will be relational. How do we
wake up more with each other and the next week extended relational how do we really be part
of the healing in a pretty hurting world. So, as many of you that are listening live streaming
might know that if you are live streaming you can also, and missed one of these, you can also
get it by going on tarbrock.com where you can get any talk really and also you can link to
the book and so on. So, we begin with a holiday story that is really one of my favorite
illustrations of You'll See What. In this story, an old man in Phoenix calls his son in New
York and says, I hate to ruin your day but your mother and I are divorcing, you know,
30 years of misery or enough, I can't handle it anymore. The son screams at him, what are you
talking about, Pop? And he says, we can't stand the son.
of each other any longer. We're sick and tired of each other, so go call your sister in Chicago
and tell her and he click, he hangs up. Okay, so son calls his sister and she's immediately,
when soon she hears it, she says, okay, I'll take care of it. Then she calls her father in Phoenix.
She says, you're not getting divorced. Don't do a single thing until I get there. I'm calling
my brother back. We'll both be there tomorrow. She hangs up. The old man hangs up.
his phone turns to his wife, okay, they're coming for the holidays and they're paying their
own way. So I start with this as, because so much is flying around for so many people around
the holidays and what comes up is on some level we become, the light of awareness shines
on where the different tensions are. They may not be as extremely manipulative as that,
but we get the idea. So in a little bit, we're going to be, I'll have you do
a reflection, and there's a several in this doc, on just looking at your current relationships
and in some way with that lens of, you know, how is this for me?
And one of the lenses we'll use really is if I was at the end of my life looking back.
And I find it very powerful to use our lifespan as a lens.
I often quote another palliative caregiver who after sitting with,
with thousands of people reported that the greatest regret of the dying was I didn't live
true to myself. I lived according to others' expectations, maybe according to my internalized
judgment, but I didn't live aligned with my heart. And then when there's a little bit
of a deeper digging, like what does that mean aligned with our heart? It really means, you know,
we were at the end of our life looking back, how would we want this relationship to be?
How would we want to be, what kind of presence and connection we want here? Are we really
embodying what matters to us? And to me what's valuable is that this isn't just the dying
that have regrets about their life. You know, I talk to a lot of people and I can sense
right under the surface, there's a disappointment that this life isn't really unfolding
the way I want it to be.
I'm not the way I want myself to be.
It's not just the dying, that sense of being unaligned.
So, how do we want to live?
And one of the ways I language what I find when I really explore with people is the language
of radical compassion. And what I mean by radical compassion is that we're embodied. In other
words, we can't really be compassionate if it's this idea in our mind. Like we hear about
people out there that are having a hard time and we go, oh, that's really too bad,
I feel I'm so sorry. Versus the kind of compassion when our hearts are tender and they're
resonant and we're actually caring and we act or we want to act.
So radical compassion means we're embodied and the caring is active and radical compassion means
that our hearts are all inclusive.
It's not like we feel a whole lot of compassion for this person, but this person doesn't
deserve my care.
It's not like that.
It's a very open, inclusive quality of heart.
And I'm spending a little time on the definition because I think we need to reclaim the
word compassion.
It's floating out there, it's a lot like love, it's very mushy.
And yet if there's ever a time in the world's history that we need actively cultivate
compassion and caring and stretch ourselves, widen the circles beyond where habitually we
pay attention, it's now. It'll be what allows us to care enough to act for our earth
that is suffering so much, for those that are most vulnerable, and live to do ourselves right
in an immediate way tonight and tomorrow with the people that we are interacting with.
So we need to reclaim it and in that spirit, let's reflect for a moment, invite you to
sit comfortably and do a bit of a relationship scan and perhaps bringing to mind one, two,
or three people that matter to you and you want to live true to yourself and start with
just one and use the vantage point of at the end of your life looking back and see if you
can do this without judging with real interest with curiosity.
And just sense, well, what am I aligned?
Am I feeling like I'm living in that way where I'm embodied and present and responsive and caring?
Sometimes the inquiry, well, what's between me and loving fully?
Can be really helpful here to take your time with one, two, or three people, sensing if you're feeling you're living true to yourself.
And if there's some sort of a gap, what's between me and loving fully?
Me and sensing a feeling of belonging or care or intimacy here.
As you reflect you might ask yourself, well, is there a gap because I am stressed and
I get preoccupied and I'm just not present?
And keeping your eyes closed, if that one resonates, just raise your hand.
Am I feeling a gap because I get stressed and preoccupied and I'm just not as present as
I want to be, I'm going to say it again, just raise your hand.
Yeah.
That got about a third.
Is there a gap between me and lovingfully because I have some fear or anxiety that's
just in my body, you don't have to keep raising your hands anymore, I'm just going to throw
out some.
It's because I'm just afraid.
I'm afraid that if I open up the other person will in some way hurt me or I'll be
rejected.
Maybe that's between you and loving fully.
Or is it because there's some blame, there's some anger or blame going on that there's
some resentment you're carrying towards the person and that gets in the way?
Or is it maybe because you're in some sort of a depression and your energy is just
it's not there.
Just sense what might be between you and really loving fully and you might consider as you're
reflecting that when our own needs for safety, our love, our understanding are not met, it puts
us on a kind of survival brain functioning.
We go into a fight-flight freeze on some level and that actually blocks the more recently
evolve capacities for compassion. So say that again, if you have unmet needs yourself for
safety, love, understanding, that can trigger your survival brain in a way that cuts off compassion.
It's not your fault, it's just what happens.
So we'll be returning to explore how you can wake up more of the heart with these people
that you might have brought to mine.
But what we find for most of us, and it's really important to explore this and reflect without
judgment because if you add judgment to it you're actually further blocking compassion
and love for other people if you judge yourself.
But what we do find is that what gets in the way is some version of what I'm going to call
our limbic controller. There's some part of us that's emotionally reactive and trying to control
things. And we have different ways of trying to control things. One of the ways that we try
to control things is we try to manage other people and get them to be a certain way.
And that always gets in the way. If we want somebody to be different, if we're managing
them, if we're trying to get them to be a certain way with us in those moments, we're
moments were not letting them be who they are. In one story, a young man invited his mother
over for dinner and during the meal, his mother kept noticing how her son's roommate was
really beautiful and she was suspicious that her son had a relationship going with this roommate
and so she was really curious and she watched them interact over the evening and became
even more convinced something was going on and her son read her mind and said, hey, I just
want to reassure you that Carrie and I are just roommates. I just want to let you know that's
how it is. So, a week later, Carrie comes to John, the son, and says, you know, ever since
your mother was here for dinner, I haven't been able to find that beautiful silver soup ladle.
Do you think she did something with it? And he said, well, I don't know, but I'll email her.
So he writes this. He says, Dear mother, I'm not saying you did or did not do anything
with the soup ladle, but it's odd that it disappeared after dinner. Do you know anything
about this. So later he receives an email from his mother and it reads, Dear Son,
I'm not saying that you do sleep with Carrie and I'm not saying that you don't, but the fact
remains that if she was sleeping in her own bed, she would have found the soup ladle by now.
Love your mother. So this is what I mean by the limbic controller, just an example,
and but that we, every one of us has patterns,
in our relationships based on our survival brain that actually create distance.
And one of the most common, I'm going to name some and I invite you to again just listen
and sense what resonates for you.
I'll name them and just to know that if you become aware of them then you have choice
as to whether or not you're living them out.
But if you're not aware of them you're identified with them.
are the controller and you don't have a choice.
And this goes very much to what Victor Frankel described when he said, between the stimulus
and the response, there is a space and in that space is our power and our freedom.
That you'll keep repeating the same relational patterns that block intimacy until you
see your particular version of the limbic controller.
Does that make sense right now? Okay. So, some of the versions of it. One of them is that,
and this is a bit of a kind of a freeze response which is that we bury and don't show what's
going on and we pretend. We offer what we think is going to be most acceptable to others.
This is the person somebody else will like and approve. And we, we, it can be the ways
that we accommodate or whatever, but we're bearing the real feelings we have either about
that person or about our life and pretending in some way.
And this is very much seen in a classic story of a woman who approaches her psychology
professor and asks him, you know, what is a Freudian slip?
What do they mean by it?
And he's curious and he says, well, what makes you ask?
And she says, well the other day I was having lunch with my mother.
and I meant to ask her to pass the solve,
but instead I said, you damn bitch, you ruin my life.
Now, on purpose, I'm giving you kind of wacky examples,
but we all do this stuff.
That's a very common one is we don't say what we mean,
and then it comes out sideways.
So it's just an example.
Another example is that a limbic controller is grasping,
where we have our expectations or demands,
We in some way feel special or important and we very quickly get into feeling victimized,
disappointed, let down, we're the one that the other is not treating right.
And that's sometimes called the Pursuers.
I want you, I want you to be here, I want you to be a certain way, I want you to spend
more time with me, okay?
So there's that one.
And of course pursuers always need avoiders.
We also have some of us whose limbic type is more of the avoidance.
It's like I need space, don't see.
suffocate me, don't cross my boundaries, being unavailable, being guarded, being mistrusting,
withholding, disinterested, defended. A woman is in a job interview and the interviewer
asked, tell me, what do you think your biggest character defect would be? And her reply is
honesty. And the interviewer said, honesty, I would consider, I wouldn't consider that a defect
And her replies, I don't care what the hell you think.
It's that.
It's like, stay away, okay?
And then another major version of the limbic controller is aggression in the sense of blame.
And that's where the ongoing notion is you should be different.
You are not the way you should be.
And most of us have that as part of us, that we have a judgment going on and how another should be different.
And when we do, it creates a huge distance.
Ram Dass, many of you've heard of, it's kind of an icon of the generation, a spiritual icon of my generation anyway.
And he wrote this, he said, one of the greatest things that happened in my relationship with my father,
was when he was approaching death.
I finally allowed him to be who he was instead of trying to make him into who I thought
he should be.
And he stopped trying to make me into who he thought I should be and we became friends.
And it's sad to say that we might have to get towards death to start getting the wisdom
that knows that if we're interacting with someone and that's what's going on,
that you should be different, then we're creating.
then we're creating that distance.
So you might have been listening and went, wow, check, check, check, check, you know,
and have multi-talented controller there going.
And we all have some ways of trying to control in relationships.
I often describe it as we get born into a challenging world and to navigate, we put on
the space suit that in some way protects us and defends us and has ways of navigating
to try to survive and the challenges that we get identified with our strategies.
We become the blamer or we become the pursuer or we become the avoider and we forget
who's really looking through the mask of the spacesuit.
We forget who's here and we forget who the other is.
They appear as an ego space suit too.
So the inquiry here is how do we wake up from that identification and loosen the grip
on our habitual strategies?
How do we do that?
And it takes real courage.
I mean each of them can be deconditioned and we're going to explore rain as kind of the solvent
because rain is really mindfulness and compassion which helps us not to get rid of the
strategy. I mean, you might still find blaming goes on or you might still find yourself always
wanting to create some space, but you won't be as identified. There's more flexibility,
there's more creativity. The first step though is what we're doing now which is slowing down
and beginning to pay attention to notice the strategies. So I'd like to invite you to reflect
again if you will. And if you can bring to mind again
one or two of the people you were reflecting on, start with one, and begin this time with
your sense of wanting to be awake, the heart aspiration to wake to wake up in relationship,
to live true to yourself and sense with this person as you did earlier that that question
you know what is between me and really being fully embodied and engaged.
in caring. And you might sense where there is some of that limbic controller. It's really
the different kinds of fight, flight, freeze. And again, not to judge because to the degree
you have a spacesuit activity going on, it's because there's some unmet needs. It's natural.
The beginning of rain is to recognize and allow so you might even sense a situation with
one person and just recognize and allow what goes on inside you.
No judgment.
So for some you might be recognizing, okay, so there's some grasping and some disappointment.
I feel let down.
I feel hurt.
And for another you might be recognizing allowing that you feel a bit suffocated, too many demands
that you need some space.
Or for somebody else or maybe some blame.
Okay, I feel some blame.
This person should be different.
They're hurting me.
They're not really living up to something.
Or you might feel that you're afraid if you really are who you are, you'll be rejected.
Recognize and allow.
That's the beginning of rain.
To just name or notice what you're experiencing.
Carl Jung says, what is not brought into consciousness comes to us as fate.
So, this is the power of recognizing and allowing in a relationship that you begin to bring
into consciousness what wants attention.
Now you can open your eyes when you're ready.
So the next steps with rain is the eye of rain which is investigate.
And I want to give you some examples because I'm going to of course bring you back at the
end to do the whole process.
The investigating is often misleading because when you're investigating what's going on, it's
not a conceptual mental process.
Investigating is primarily getting more somatic.
Investigating means that if you found that you felt hurt by somebody or felt blame, you
get into where you feel it in your body.
And then you can investigate in a sense, you know, what is the unmet need and so on?
I'm going to give you an example because investigating if you really get into your body
then leads to the end of rain which is nurturing.
And once you have recognized and allowed and investigated and nurtured, you'll find that
the sense of identity is shifted.
You're no longer organized around the limbic controller so much.
But I'm getting ahead of myself.
So let me give you the...
I'm going to actually share two stories.
And the first one is one that taught me the most about the power of reign in relationships
and it was really early on.
This was when my son Narayan was a junior in high school.
And some of you might remember this somewhat because I've had this in radical acceptance
but I'm going to unpack it a little bit more now.
The setup here is that he's a junior.
He's entirely unmotivated around academics.
He's a total party creature, smoking a lot of pot, video games, and he's completely immersed
in Magic the Gathering.
Some of you might be familiar.
How many are familiar with Magic the Gathering?
Can I see by hands?
Okay.
My response to all of that, I'm perpetually judging him, angry, the limbic controller was the,
aggressive, you should be different.
I don't like this change.
kind of that was where I was completely in that.
And so I was really upset with him for not coming through as the disciplined son that I thought he should be.
And I had a kind of one of those moments I'll never forget of being outside his bedroom,
hearing the sounds of one of the games that I couldn't stand because they were all totally violent video games.
and having this desire to take a huge boulder and go in there and just smash his
video, his screen, computer screen with it.
And then realizing in a flash, he's a junior, he's going to be gone in a couple of years
and then feeling my heart go, wow, am I going to be in this chronic standoff of the
angry let-down mother and the son who's kind of wanting to not have me too near him
because I'm angry at them a lot. So, that's when I started to do a lot more, okay, let
me be with what's inside me. The first step in bringing rain to relationships is to bring
it to your own reaction to whatever your own limbic controller is doing. That's the first step.
So I brought it inside, I recognized and allowed that I was angry and judging and then I started
investigating, which is where we left off here. And the layers were, I felt the squeeze
in my heart and it was fear and the fear place was afraid that his whole future would be
sabotaged and so on. And then underneath that I felt that hollow, achy place of shame.
It's my fault. I didn't, I didn't discipline, I was too lenient, too permissive, didn't
set boundaries early enough, which may have been true.
But he and I talk about that now that he's a parent.
And then, so then I was feeling that shame of falling short, deficiency, that achy, hollow
place.
And then it went into grief, this sense of just this, ah, this crashing feeling of the grief
of the distance that was, you know, developing between us.
And I had this experience I sometimes call like a soul sadness, which is just a sense.
seeing the landscape of life and realizing how sorrowful it is to be caught in a pattern
like this and distanced.
And so that's what led to nurture.
I'd investigated in my body the layers and then after feeling that soul sadness I sensed
I always ask the question, I invite you to use this as part of your investigating.
So what is this hurting part inside me need?
And what I needed was to trust the goodness of my own love that I really loved him and to trust
him, to trust his goodness.
And that's really what I needed.
So I just sat there as I often do with my hands on my heart, just feeling how much I do love
him and just reminding myself you love him and he's lovable and he's good and it's
going to be okay, you know, that kind of thing.
And as I let that feeling spread through me of loving him and trusting that loving, there was
an opening and a tenderizing and more space and I was no longer inside the identity of the
controlling mother.
I was in a more spacious place.
It didn't mean those tendencies were gone.
I had to redo this many, many times, but it started shifting the identification so that when
I started trying to speak with him, I was able to bring in more of my basic appreciation
for him, you know, for his sense of his mastery and his games that he played and his loyalty
and love for his friends and whatever it was and set boundaries.
So this is an example of reigning relationship because I feel like it gave me back many
moments with him before he graduated.
I'm so glad I didn't stay stuck in that standoff.
And just to give you a kind of follow-up, now we're like 20-some years later, he's 32
or whatever now, it's like 18 years later.
He's much more disciplined, he's graduated from the program he was in, he's working, he's
a father, he's okay, and he still plays Magic the Gathering, so it's okay.
So, this is an example of, and what I want to emphasize is a shift in identity where the
limbic patterns are there but they don't hijack.
It's possible when you do rain that they don't hijack.
Now sometimes there is the kind of herd or conflict that requires a really deep inner
work and it takes time and it takes support. It takes support from others and it takes many,
many rounds. And I want to share with you a story because of a guy that I worked with
some years ago where it wasn't like something like with my son who was being a, you know,
here's a typical teen. This is a man who, photojournalist, I actually went to college with him
and heard from him years later after many years of not hearing from him.
He, African-American photojournalists who married a Caucasian woman, white woman, her mother
completely disapproved of the marriage.
You know, you're too different, you're going to ruin each other's lives and so on.
And when they'd visit, his mother would ignore him or else be rude.
And it was awful.
So, he was increasingly feeling withdrawn and angry and hurt and it brought up this very old
wound in him of, I'm invisible, I'm not okay, I'm not worthy.
You know, he was the black man who was not good enough for her daughter, which the
quote was what he described it to me.
And his wife said, we don't ever have to visit them again.
I don't want to put you through this.
But he actually wasn't willing to give up on the relationship, partly because,
one of his teachers, a Tibetan teacher, one of his key teachings was never give up on anyone,
which I thought was interesting. So, he made it his practice and it was a hard practice,
but at home he would recognize and allow how angry and hurt he felt. Then he'd investigate
and feel in his body and felt where it went back to because he was, you know, in childhood he
was very neglected, a lot of losses, a lot of feeling of being not okay. So he felt this twist
in his body when he'd go into it of defective personhood. That's what he got in touch with,
a twist in his body, in his gut. And then when he asked what he needed, it was, you were
a value, you're worthy. And his way of doing it was he would, you know, imagine some light
kind of coming into him and he just hear the words, you know, you are valuable, you're
worthy being.
Over and over and over again this process until he found that sense of more space, more openness,
more realizing he was not the self and the story that this mother was triggering or his
old story.
He felt his value, what I call the goal.
So, he went back, the next holiday he went, but he brought his camera because he needed a way
to be more safe and the camera gave him a place to be one step removed but still there.
And so it was Thanksgiving and they took all sorts of photos and when they went again
over the holidays, the Christmas holidays, there was a gift exchange and by the, but by the
By the way, each of these visits, the mother was rude and distancing and didn't want
to take them to a restaurant because she was afraid she'd see her friends.
It was terrible.
So there they're having their exchange and this is what I want to tell you about, the gift
exchange.
The mother gives him socks which are the wrong size and a box of candy and he's a health nut
so that that didn't work so well.
He gave her some framed pictures that he had taken.
during Thanksgiving. And one of them had captured a moment of affection with her husband,
and the other when she was cradling her new granddaughter. She opens these pictures, and I mean,
everybody's kind of watching her and she starts sobbing because he had seen her in a good
way. He had seen her goodness and captured it and something in that just and he told me that
as he was doing rain for himself, that inner process, that he started looking at her and
he could just see her as a fearful person. But when he could really get that, he didn't feel
so angry at her. And now he saw her in a good way. So here's what happened. A thaw began,
but it didn't happen quickly. There was many rounds of him encountering her tightness
and so on.
But he had a way to take care of himself
and he had a way to see past her mask
and that actually over time
helped her to see past what she was seen in him.
I'd sharing this story because
as much as our unmet needs are personal,
there's also a whole societal thing playing
when we run into distance that we often don't compute, the unseen biases that are playing
between us, the ways that different ones of us have felt devalued historically, not just
in our personal life but through the society.
So it takes a lot of attention to be able to bring rein inwardly and then look through
eyes that can start seeing those realities both on an individual and on a societal level.
So we're exploring tonight our relationships that inevitably are torqued because of unmet
needs.
And I'm inviting you to pause and find that space where you can have more freedom and choice
by seeing how your strategies are contributing to distancing.
The key piece here is that we need to do this in an incredibly non-judging way because
every one of us plays out these strategies.
We also need to do in a way where we're ongoingly practicing seeing the goodness behind
the mask because our habit is not to see that.
Share a story. I heard some years ago. This is a physician described an elderly patient
who came in each week, but one week they had to switch the time and it was earlier
in the day and he was very edgy. He wanted to leave the appointment as quickly as he could
and she asked how come and he said well he had to go and visit his wife who was in a nursing home
and he wanted to be there on time to eat breakfast with her.
And so the physician asked him some more questions and inquired about his wife's health.
And this man told the physician, well, she has had Alzheimer's for a number of years.
And then the physician said, well, will she be upset if you're a bit late?
And he said, no, she doesn't really know, she doesn't any longer know who he is, who he is.
And then the physician was surprised and you still go every morning and she doesn't know who
you are.
This is what she wrote.
He smiled as he patted my hand and said, she doesn't know me, but I still know who she is.
These practices of radical compassion are not something we do once in a while.
It's a daily way with the people we're with, with whoever you were identifying, to say,
am I able to see past the mask?
Can I see the goodness that's there?
How am I in this moment creating distance, that that kind of honesty and then to be very,
very kind towards what we see?
It's not our fault.
Scott McClanahan says, one time a man left home.
He had argued with his mother and father the day before he left.
They spoke horrible words to one another and he left without saying goodbye.
He had been gone many years and even spent time in jail.
Years later he finally got out of jail and he wondered if his mother and father were even alive
and if they were ashamed of what had been said and where he had wound up.
He wrote them and told them he'd be coming home on a specific day the following week.
If they wanted to see him and were not ashamed,
they should put a blanket on a clothesline and he would know to come inside.
If the blanket was missing, then he would know that he was not welcome.
He would know how to turn back.
He told them he hoped they were in good health.
The man arrived by rail the next week.
He was nervous when he stepped off the train.
There was no one there to meet him.
He walked up the worn path towards the home place and thought about the past.
He thought about the time in jail.
Thought about how ashamed his parents must have been.
Thought about the horrible words they spoke.
He was just about to turn around when he saw a blanket in a tree.
He kept walking and he saw another blanket.
He kept walking and he saw another blanket.
Then he turned towards home and the house was covered in blankets.
The yard was covered in blankets, the clothesline was covered in blankets, the path to the door
was covered in blankets.
His parents were standing there and they were welcoming him inside.
So each of us has ways that we create walls to protect our heart when we're hurt.
And the path of radical compassion is to begin to shed or dissolve some of that armoring.
Rumi writes,
Very little grows on jagged rock
Be ground, be crumbled
So wildflowers will come up where you are
You've been stony too many years
Try something different
Surrender
So we're going to close with a meditation
That's a blanket's rain meditation
Because really think about it
What if we all were putting out blankets really in our lives?
You know, just in some way blankets for ourselves, forgiving ourselves for our strategies
and our ways of navigating that are imperfect and certainly blankets for others
because others too are doing the best they can and it's imperfect.
So we close with a brief meditation bringing rain.
into a relationship and as you might close your eyes and let yourself go inside a bit
and take a few breaths and feel yourself right here, bringing a person to mind where
you'd like to have, where you'd like to live more true to yourself, have more compassion,
more loving kindness.
And as you did before, feel that intention and let you just you do that.
And let yourself recognize and allow what happens.
You might have a particular situation with that person where you can tell you just don't
really show up where you feel blame or resentment or hurt, distance, bringing that situation
to mind and just take some moments to recognize and allow what's going on, see the dance
or the dynamic and for now just let it be as it is.
Allow doesn't mean you like it, it just means that you're honestly acknowledging, okay,
this is something that plays out.
You're creating a pause, a space for it.
This is the beginning of bringing into consciousness as Jung says what otherwise creates
our fate.
and begin to investigate it by sensing, you know, really what's the worst part of it, what
really comes up for you and feeling it in your body, checking your throat, your chest,
your belly. If it's fear, anger, hurt, anxiety, just sense what's contracting you.
If you can feel your body, you might put your hand where you feel it because as you
begin to bring your hand to the throat or the chest, you can feel you.
to your heart, you're actually beginning to deepen your contact with what's there and
you're starting to nurture a bit at the same time.
It's very, very powerful.
So just sense what's going on inside you and gently place your hand on your heart or
your throat or whatever feels connecting.
You might ask yourself how long this has been going on, this feeling, and what's the
most challenging part of it?
What is it you're most afraid of or what's most disturbing about it?
And ask yourself what this part of you most needs to relax, to open, to feel safer.
Is it forgiveness?
Is it love?
Does it need to feel reassured in some way?
You might sense what's the message that this part would most find healing?
experiment, mentally whispering some words to that part of you that might be comforting.
It could be as simple as it's okay sweetheart or this belongs or I'm here and maybe that part
needs to hear those words from some greater source, a person that you trust or love or perhaps
a spiritual figure, you can imagine that too.
that words and light and energies coming into your heart and into wherever you most need comfort
and from the space of compassion, presence, you might sense how the old strategy, the reaction,
the offensiveness or the blame, how it's not so personal.
It's kind of its olympic strategy that you and
and many others have like waves in the ocean, but you're more than that.
And since not so identified, sense the larger sense of your being, who you really are.
And if you look through the eyes of your most awake heart, you can begin to look at the other
person now, the person you want to be closer to.
And in the same way, begin to recognize maybe what's going on for them.
What are you noticing?
What is their behavior like?
You might begin by recognizing and allowing whatever you're noticing about them.
Oh, they seem tight or they seem withheld or they seem disappointed or hurt or angry or
distracted, stressed.
So recognize and allow and you might deepen your attention and investigate and sense,
well what might be really hard for them.
What's it like being this person?
Where does it hurt?
So you're beginning to see past the mask, see their fears, their unmet needs.
It's this person needing love, needing to be seen, to be understood, to feel forgiven,
to feel cared about.
And then the end of rain is to sense your own heart offering some care and whatever.
And whatever most resonates, whatever way most resonates right now, sending a message,
a mental whisper of a message to them that you care, and perhaps imagining, sensing some
creative way how when you're together you might let them know you see their goodness and
that you care about them.
I bring your attention to your own heart right now and sense who are you when you're
opening to caring when you're letting yourself love without holding back.
Who are you?
This class and radical compassion and the same themes in the book are all about deepening
our intimacy with ourselves, with each other and with our world.
We close again with Rumi.
little grows on jagged rock.
Be ground.
Be crumbled so wildflowers will come up where you are.
You've been stony for too many years.
Try something different.
Surrender.
Namaste and blessings.
