Tannhauser
angry insecure male
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What are some concrete, practical tricks that we can do to become more compassionate and empathetic of other people?
And I mean specifically practical tricks, not intricate philosophical meditations and abstract narratives. Let it be the assumption that such things are futile.
One thing I read in a book about Buddhism: picture the life time of the other person. In particular them being born, then them as small children, etc. Finally, them taking their last breath as an old person. It is powerful to do that with someone you dislike or even hate.
edit: this is the actual quote:
from Buddhism Without Beliefs by Stephen Batchelor
And I mean specifically practical tricks, not intricate philosophical meditations and abstract narratives. Let it be the assumption that such things are futile.
One thing I read in a book about Buddhism: picture the life time of the other person. In particular them being born, then them as small children, etc. Finally, them taking their last breath as an old person. It is powerful to do that with someone you dislike or even hate.
edit: this is the actual quote:
Start with the friend. Imagine her as a newborn baby, covered in blood. Slowly follow her as she grows from a toddler to a child to an adolescent to a young adult to the moment you first met her. Try to picture what her hopes and longings were before she even suspected your existence. Think of her now as someone who values her own ideas and feelings in the same inscrutable way you hold on to yours. Then look into the future and watch her age, fall ill, grow old and die.
Turn to the enemy and stranger and do the same, until three human beings sit before you: equal in birth and equal in death.
Does this perspective affect the way you feel about each person? Are you able, even for a moment, to witness these people in all their autonomy, mystery, majesty, tragedy? Can you see them as ends in their own right rather than means to your ends?
from Buddhism Without Beliefs by Stephen Batchelor