Practicing aware, intentional choices about food, medicine, and health behaviors as a form of autonomy and agency within economic constraint.
Dipa Ma's practice of mindfulness extends to every action, including consumption. For those experiencing health poverty, mindful consumption becomes both an ethical practice and a form of power-building. When external resources are limited, conscious choice about how one uses available resources becomes precious. Rather than mindless consumption driven by craving or shame-based restriction, mindful consumption means aware decision-making aligned with actual values and genuine needs. This might mean choosing nourishing food over processed alternatives when possible, taking one free medication dose consciously rather than hoarding it anxiously, or selecting movement practices that bring joy rather than obligation. This practice develops agency and self-trust in circumstances where poverty often strips both. Mindfulness transforms consumption from something passive or shame-laden into deliberate action reflecting one's values. Even with limited options, the quality of attention one brings to choices matters profoundly. This practice builds the psychological foundation for genuine health autonomy—the capacity to make choices aligned with one's own knowing rather than external pressure or desperation.
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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