There’s a wide range of instructions for Buddhist practices on the Lion’s Roar website. Whether you’re looking to learn how to work with Zen koans, practice walking meditation, or try out a little mindful eating, we have a number of helpful guides written by Buddhist teachers from various traditions. At the end of 2020, I looked back at the year’s traffic on our website and saw that Pema Chödrön’s instruction for tonglen practice was our most popular practice of the year. Tonglen meditation, or “sending and taking,” is an ancient Buddhist practice to awaken compassion. With each in-breath, we take in others’ pain. With each out-breath, we send them relief. It can be done both as a formal meditation practice or on the spot in a moment of need. Considering the events of 2020, it’s no surprise that so many found themselves turning to this practice. As Pema writes in “How to Practice Tonglen,” this practice “awakens our compassion and introduces us to a far bigger view of reality,” allowing us to “use what seems like poison as medicine.” Below you’ll find two different instructions for tonglen meditation, as well as a personal account of how this practice can help us to strengthen our inherent capacity for compassion. “Breathe in for all of us and breathe out for all of us,” writes Pema. “We can use our personal suffering as the path to compassion for all beings.” —Lilly Greenblatt, digital editor, LionsRoar.com |
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