Cultivating balanced response to all experiences to stabilize the nervous system's baseline and reduce emotional volatility.
Equanimity—Dipa Ma's central virtue—is the balanced, non-reactive response to all experiences. Neurologically, equanimity correlates with a stable, regulated baseline in the autonomic nervous system and a calm, engaged default-mode network. When practitioners cultivate equanimity, they reduce the oscillations between hyperarousal and hypoarousal that characterize dysregulated nervous systems. The anterior insula and anterior cingulate cortex—regions associated with equanimous observation—strengthen through this practice, improving emotional stability and reducing reactivity to external triggers. For brain health, equanimity means reduced cortisol spikes, lower inflammation, and improved cognitive flexibility. Rather than chasing pleasant states or fleeing difficult ones, equanimous practitioners meet all experiences with the same calm attention, allowing the nervous system to settle into baseline ease. This stability builds resilience: the brain becomes less hijackable by emotion, more capable of wise response, and less vulnerable to anxiety and mood disorders. Dipa Ma's equanimity was active peace—neurologically, a brain at rest in its own wisdom.
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