Sunday, December 22, 2024

You're With Us On This Journey

 

12.20.2024

You’re With Us On This Journey

 
Buddhist teachings and practices offer an approach to finding peace within ourselves; they also inspire us to help others work with the myriad internal and external sources of conflict and confusion all of us face.

At Lion’s Roar, our mission and daily work is rooted in that inspiration. Our immediate goal is offering the dharma to help people relieve the suffering in their lives — in small ways, moment to moment. Our long-term goal is no less than reducing the suffering of the world at large, ultimately realizing a more compassionate, harmonious society.

Over the course of forty-plus years, Lion’s Roar has grown from a small community newsletter to a nonsectarian, nonprofit Buddhist media organization reaching a diverse audience of Buddhists, mindfulness practitioners, and spiritually aware people around the world. In 2024, our publishing has reached over 2.5 million people, many of whom are encountering the dharma for the first time. We have a wonderful team here, who work hard to bring this content to life. But we also have you to thank for our impact. Thank you for continuing to support Lion’s Roar, and thank you for playing a part in creating a wiser, more compassionate world.

As always, we aim to go further — to offer dharma to any and all who might benefit. At this time of year, we all encounter requests from many worthy causes, so I want to thank you in advance for considering ours. If you value our work, you know we have something precious to share with the world. By donating to Lion’s Roar, you join your resources with ours in pursuit of sharing Buddhist wisdom and supporting practitioners — and the dharma — worldwide.

Below are three teachings on the heart of generosity that each reflect why we’re so grateful for yours. Working to open the gateway to wisdom teachings, we face many challenges, but with your support we’ll meet them — and offer a path for millions of people, for many years to come.

—Ben Moore, Publisher, Lion’s Roar

Generosity’s Perfection


Giving up, giving in, just plain giving—Sharon Salzberg says that’s the truly transformative experience.


If we practice joyful giving, we experience confidence. We grow in self-esteem, self-respect and well-being because we continually test our limits. Our attachments say, “I will give this much and no more,” or “I will give this article or object if I am appreciated enough for this act of giving.” In the practice of generosity, we learn to see through our attachments. We see they are transparent, that they have no solidity. They don’t need to hold us back, so we can go beyond them.

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Generosity Comes First


In any presentation of the paramitas, dana, or generosity, always comes first — Nikki Mirghafori explains why.


Gratitude and generosity form a circle. When we feel the abundance of our life, our hearts feel spacious. Numerous studies link gratitude to happiness and well-being. Through gratitude, we can “train” ourselves to be more generous. In a study conducted at the University of Oregon, neuroscientist Christina Karns observed the fMRI measurements of participants who kept a gratitude journal and found that over time, they derived increasing joy from giving. Pragmatically, the research suggests that at a minimum, one can proactively choose to practice giving to others in ways that increase one’s own joy. How neat is that?

The Heart of Generosity

 

For December, Lion’s Roar features teachings on a powerful practice: compassion. Here, Gina Sharpe offers a short introduction to generosity, explaining how it can be the beginning of the end of suffering.


The heart of generosity — giving, sharing, and caring for others — breaks this cycle of attachment and the resultant suffering. Through generosity, we let go of self-centeredness and our mind/hearts open into loving-kindness, compassion, and tenderness. We experience our interconnectedness—how we rely on the generosity, caring, and hard work of others for our well-being. These realizations are direct antidotes to dukkha. Aligning our actions with them brings us true happiness.

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