Tonglen

This is a simple introduction to Tonglen, a Buddhist
meditation of sending and receiving. This is a powerful meditation to do
when you are you are feeling helpless, or frustrated, despairing or lonely.
It gives the space to process the uncomfortable feeling without wallowing in
it or without resorting to the usual strategies: pushing it down, ignoring
it, or covering it over with something more pleasant.
How to Practice
Here's an example of how tonglen works.
You are feeling helpless and frustrated and don't know
what to do next. All the usual strategies have failed and you are left with
just this lousy, miserable, helpless feeling.
The first step is to take a breath and relax. Let your
thoughts settle down as much as possible.
Allow yourself to feel the sensation of helplessness.
This can take courage. We may worry that the hurt will never go away, or
that paying attention to it will invite more hurt. But that's not what
happens with this meditation. As you feel the helplessness, you may feel it
as something dark or suffocating. It may feel heavy or twitchy or buzzy. Be
clear that this is not a pity party. Instead it is simply being present with
what is happening.
Then turn your attention outward. Remember that around
the world in this very second are thousands of people who are feeling this
very same sense of helplessness and suffocation. As you think of them, allow
your natural compassion to rise for them. You know first-hand how difficult
the feeling is, so compassion rises effortlessly.
Continue for a while, alternating between willingness to
experience the difficult sensations and compassion for those many others who
are feeling the same thing. When you are done, allow that compassion to
expand to include every being who is hurting in any way.
Adapt it to your own circumstances.
Notes:
Our natural state is to be openhearted and compassionate.
So this meditation helps us knock down a bit of the tough shell we throw
over our hearts when we are hurt and helps us to allow our inherent kindness
out. This meditation gives us courage. It can show us what our usual
strategies are to avoid discomfort. It can also show us that being present
with our experience ends up feeling better than running away from it.
Tonglen can also be done as a regular meditation on the
cushion. The Buddhist author Pema Chodron has many books and articles and
tapes out that cover tonglen practice in much more depth than I have done
here. One example is the book "The Places That Scare You". Look for her
teachings on the web, as well. As Pema Chodron says, "As a species we should
never underestimate our low tolerance for discomfort." Tonglen is a simple
practice to help us past that.
Final Notes:
There are no right or wrong ways to do a meditation. The
instructions are guidelines; adapt them to who you are and to your needs at
that particular time. Be curious about the process itself.
Remember most meditations become richer the more you
practice them. They reveal more of themselves. It can take practice to
remember to do a meditation when you need to, and it can take practice to go
through the steps. But that's why it is called practice, and for most of us,
we practice for the rest of our lives.
Meditations like these are a regular feature of my free monthly Ezine, Starry Night.
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