Metta practice directed toward one's own body and surgical site, transforming the relationship from adversarial to compassionate.
Dipa Ma taught metta (loving-kindness) as a fundamental Buddhist practice. Applied to surgical recovery, loving-kindness meditation directed toward one's own body proves transformative. Many patients hold resentment toward their bodies for illness or the need for surgery, or toward the surgical site as something invaded and damaged. Metta practice systematically generates warmth and care toward the body exactly as it is: wounded, healing, vulnerable. The practice involves silently offering phrases of goodwill toward oneself: "May I be safe, may I be healthy, may I be at ease" while holding awareness of the surgical site. This practice is not denial of difficulty but compassionate honoring of the body's courageous work to heal itself. Dipa Ma's emphasis on direct experience makes this powerful: as practitioners sustain metta toward their own bodies, the nervous system receives the message that this body is worthy of care and protection. This shift from judgment and resentment to loving support has measurable effects on stress hormones, immune function, and subjective pain experience. The surgical body becomes trusted ally rather than enemy.
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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