Courtesy of Stuart Miles/freedigitaphotos.net |
of Compassion
Last May I attended a talk given by Matthieu Riccard, a
Tibetan Buddhist monk. After his sharing about compassion, he welcomed
questions. Another attendee began her question with a comment. She said it was
easy for her to show compassion for those people she loved. She asked how she
could show compassion for those who did not have the same life philosophy she held.
How could she be compassionate to those involved in mountaintop removal and
other environmentally unkind actions? These were people with whom she had no
personal connection. How could compassion be her response to their behavior?
After a brief pause, Matthieu responded, “Compassion is not
a reward for good behavior.”
Those words reached out to me twining deeply into my
essence. With that reminder something shifted inside of me. I listened with the
ear of my heart to that shift and felt compassion with a new awareness. For me,
compassion no longer was an option. It was a choice. But, more than that,
compassion became a right for others and myself and a privilege to share. In
that aha moment, I recognized the path of the bodhisattva. It is down this is the path that those who
are committed to sharing compassion for all and everything venture.
Although compassion is heart-based, the head, our mind, is integral
to sharing our compassion. Questioning how to form an appropriate compassionate
response creates a holistic approach to being compassionate. When our response
is the result of engaging our head and our heart, we are more likely to be
bringers of compassion. If we do not approach sharing compassion holistically,
we run the risk of our compassionate response being the impetus of enabling
another to cause harm.
I ponder the shadow side of compassion this week. What
happens when we alleviate the suffering of others in ways that empower their
self-righteous indignation? What happens
when the reactions fueled by this indignation they cause harm? Sharing
compassion is a not as simple as it may seem. It’s the balance. The goal is to
alleviate another’s suffering while negating their desires to be hurtful or
harmful. In a sense our compassionate response triggers their compassionate
response and healing.
No answer to this pondering about compassion…just an open-ended
question. I would welcome your response to the question of how to be
compassionate in ways that are loving, gentle, and honest without empowering
the other to be compassionless.
Welcoming Your Response,
Vanessa
www.healingwillow.com