Cultivating compassion toward yourself and others to soothe the nervous system and transform stress into connection.
Chronic stress often includes self-judgment and inner criticism, which keep the nervous system in mild threat mode. Dipa Ma taught loving-kindness (metta) as medicine for this pattern. By systematically directing kind wishes toward yourself—"May I be safe, peaceful, healthy, free"—you signal the nervous system that you are worthy of care. This dissolves the primitive fear that sustains stress. Extended to others, loving-kindness further relaxes the defensive nervous system posture. Neuroscience confirms that compassion activates the vagus nerve and oxytocin release, directly calming threat-detection. Rather than white-knuckling through stress, loving-kindness transforms the emotional tone of difficulty. Your nervous system learns that kindness, not harshness, is the path through challenge. This practice directly addresses stress caused by internal conflict and isolation.
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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