Cultivating balanced mind through inevitable complications or slower-than-expected recovery, drawing on Dipa Ma's teaching of equanimity.
Recovery rarely follows a linear path. Dipa Ma's teaching on equanimity (upekkha)—the capacity to remain balanced amid changing circumstances—becomes invaluable when patients face unexpected complications, slower healing, or disappointing setbacks. Equanimity is not indifference but wise non-reactivity: acknowledging disappointment while maintaining perspective and continuing to support healing. This involves recognizing that some outcomes lie beyond one's control, distinguishing between what can be influenced (adherence to physical therapy, emotional processing, nutrition) and what cannot (the exact timeline of healing, initial surgical swelling). The practice involves meditation on the nature of impermanence: all conditions change, discomfort shifts, complications resolve or are managed. Dipa Ma taught that equanimity arises not from suppressing emotion but from seeing clearly into the nature of change and interdependence. For surgical patients, this means meeting frustration with acceptance, adjusting expectations while maintaining hope, and understanding that setbacks often contain necessary teachings about what the body truly needs.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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