Applying metta (loving-kindness) practice specifically to yourself during perimenopause, counteracting the shame, self-criticism, and rejection many experience.
Dipa Ma was renowned for her boundless compassion, beginning always with loving-kindness toward oneself. Perimenopause often activates self-rejection: anger at your body, shame about symptoms, frustration with emotional volatility, grief about aging. These reactions fragment your being and intensify suffering. Loving-kindness (metta) practice involves deliberately cultivating warm, accepting wishes toward yourself: "May I be safe. May I be healthy. May I be at ease. May I accept this body and this season of life." This is not spiritual bypassing or denial; it is a deliberate antidote to the internalized cruelty that makes menopause feel like a personal failure. By directing metta toward yourself during perimenopause, you create internal safety that allows your nervous system to calm, making it easier to rest, heal, and navigate symptoms with grace. Loving-kindness recognizes that your changing body deserves tenderness, not punishment or rejection.
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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