The Buddhist quality of physical tranquility that naturally facilitates smooth, effortless breathing and muscular release throughout the body.
Kaya passaddhi refers to the profound relaxation of the physical body that arises through meditation and ethical living. This is not passive collapse but an active state of optimal tone—muscles neither tense nor slack, perfectly calibrated for their functions. Dipa Ma exemplified this quality throughout her life of meditation practice, demonstrating how sustained contemplative work naturally dissolves chronic muscular tension and defensive bracing patterns. When kaya passaddhi is present, the entire respiratory system softens; the diaphragm releases its habitual gripping, intercostal muscles relax their protective tension, and breathing becomes naturally deeper and more efficient. This ease extends beyond moments of formal meditation into daily life, creating a baseline of physical comfort that supports respiratory health. For those with asthma, anxiety-related breathing problems, or chronic tension, cultivating kaya passaddhi provides a natural pathway to physiological healing. Dipa Ma taught that this ease emerges not from pushing or forcing but from the gradual dissolution of resistance that meditation naturally brings.
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