Understanding beauty preferences and standards as constructed mental patterns rather than objective truths, allowing their dissolution through awareness.
Buddhist psychology, central to Dipa Ma's teaching, identifies how mind creates all experience through mental formations—patterns of thought, preference, and perception. Beauty standards are among these formations: seemingly solid truths that are actually conditioned, impermanent patterns. This concept applies insight practice directly to beauty: observing how standards arise, what maintains them, and recognizing their emptiness. When we notice ourselves judging appearance—our own or others'—we can pause and investigate: Where does this standard come from? Who benefits from it? Is it actually true or a formation I've absorbed? This practice doesn't deny that preferences exist but recognizes they're constructed, not inherent. Different cultures' beauty standards prove this: if standards were objective, they'd be universal. Across cultures, this concept liberates through understanding that standards can shift when examined. Meditation on beauty standards helps people notice the moment preference becomes judgment, when observation becomes self-criticism. As formations become visible, their power loosens. This doesn't mean caring about appearance disappears, but it becomes lighter, more chosen, less compulsive. The practice is cognitive and somatic: observing mental patterns while releasing the physical tension they create.
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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