Why It’s Important to Cultivate Boundless Equanimity
How to work with, and open up, our own preconceived biases. The post Why It’s Important to Cultivate Boundless Equanimity appeared first on Tricycle: The Buddhist Review.
Teachings Meditation Month 2024
How to work with, and open up, our own preconceived biases.
By Scott Tusa Jan 03, 2024Photo by Aaron Burden on UnsplashWe can approach boundless equanimity both as a practice toward our own thoughts and emotions as well as a practice toward others.
Boundless equanimity is so important, because if we don’t apply it toward our practice of lovingkindness and compassion, there’s a high risk that we’re going to be biased toward different kinds of beings, preferencing those [who] we care more about, those who [we] are more connected to, and ignoring and sometimes practicing the opposite of love, toward those we dislike, or [who] we’re indifferent toward.
[Another reason why] it’s important to cultivate boundless equanimity, and one [reason] I find [especially] helpful, [is when you] start to notice that it’s actually painful when we’re nonequanimous.
When I’m having an emotion that I dislike, it’s painful because usually I’m resisting that emotion or I don’t want to be with that emotion. There’s pain in that resistance. It’s the same in a certain kind of relationship or situation where I’m disliking a person’s actions, or I’m disliking the situation I’m in. For example, if it’s too cold, too hot, whatever it is, this also forms a sense of pain.
The way I sum this up is that, essentially, bias is a form of pain, or suffering. It’s a form of dissatisfaction. In the Buddhist traditions, we would call it a form of dukkha. This is why it’s important to open up our biases and practice equanimity on a daily basis, if we can. At the very least, we can try it to see if it can affect us in a helpful way.
Excerpted and adapted from Scott Tusa’s Meditation Month video, Cultivating Boundless Equanimity. Watch the full video here and learn more about Meditation Month here.
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