Listening to the body's direct messages about genuine needs versus conditioned wants as a practice of discernment within economic constraint.
Dipa Ma taught sustained attention to the body's subtle communications: hunger, fatigue, pain, ease. This practice develops profound discernment—the ability to distinguish between the body's actual needs and mind's conditioned patterns of craving or denial. For those experiencing health poverty, this discernment becomes economically crucial. When resources are limited, the ability to listen accurately to what the body genuinely needs prevents both harmful deprivation and wasteful spending. Does this body need rest or movement? Warmth or cooling? Nourishment or fasting? The practice of somatic attention develops confidence in one's own knowing rather than reliance on external experts or marketing. Dipa Ma's emphasis on direct bodily investigation as a source of wisdom becomes particularly powerful for marginalized communities whose bodies are often disbelieved or dismissed by medical systems. The body becomes a reliable teacher, and this embodied knowing becomes a form of power and agency in circumstances of economic constraint.
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