A few years ago, before going on a week-long retreat in a foreign country, a friend of mine was particularly nervous about the journey ahead. She asked her teacher for advice, and they simply responded: “Sit back like Kuan Yin, and watch what comes to you.”
The bodhisattva Kuan Yin is regarded in Buddhism as the embodiment of compassion, as “she who hears the cries of the world.” Originating in India as the male bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, Kuan Yin has since adopted many names, identities, and forms. Sometimes the bodhisattva appears as a female, male, or androgynous being. She adopts a multitude of names across Asia: Kannon, Guanyin, Quan Am, or Chenrezig. As Kay Larson writes, “Avalokiteshvara responds to an infinitude of circumstances by acquiring new qualities, putting on new robes, and accepting new names.” In the face of change, Kuan Yin gracefully adapts.
In Buddhist iconography, Kuan Yin is often depicted seated in a posture of royal ease, leaning on her left arm, one foot up, with her elbow resting gracefully on a bent knee. She looks perfectly at peace, despite the vow to save all sentient beings she has taken.
I met my friend on the retreat she was so nervous about. Both of us were many miles away from home and thrown into an experience unfamiliar and at times uncomfortable. We quickly became friends, and ever since she’s been someone I know I can turn to when I’m in need of some serious compassion. I can’t help but think that her intention to “sit back like Kuan Yin” when we met has something to do with the loving quality of our friendship.
The articles in this Weekend Reader look at who Kuan Yin is and what her example means in this often tumultuous world. Kuan Yin shows us that when times are tough, we can bend rather than break. We can maintain grace and ease in the face of change. We can surrender to circumstance and adopt whatever identity serves us best in the moment, clinging to nothing too tightly. May we learn to see her limitless compassion as our own.
—Lilly Greenblatt, Digital Editor, Lion's Roar |
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