Rest that overcomes the fear of stopping, taught as a direct Buddhist practice essential for breaking depletion patterns.
Many depleted people cannot truly rest because stopping triggers deep anxiety: about productivity, worth, or loss of control. Dipa Ma's integration of fearlessness with stillness addresses this directly. Fearless Rest as Practice means systematically reducing the terror that accompanies stopping, making genuine recovery possible. This is not positive thinking but embodied work: meditating into the sensations of fear that arise when activity ceases, discovering they are survivable. Through Buddhist mindfulness practice, practitioners learn that the fear of rest is typically larger than rest itself. Dipa Ma taught that this fearlessness is cultivated through repeated, gentle exposure to stillness while maintaining clear awareness. As fear's grip loosens, the body's capacity to actually recover—rather than pseudo-rest while mentally agitated—increases. This practice transforms rest from a guilty luxury into a courageous act of reclamation.
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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