The practice of witnessing pain without judgment or resistance, a cornerstone of Dipa Ma's teachings on transforming suffering through direct awareness.
Dipa Ma taught that pain becomes suffering primarily through our mental resistance to it. By observing bodily sensations with bare attention—noticing temperature, texture, pulsation, and movement without labeling them as good or bad—we interrupt the reactive loop that amplifies pain. This foundational Buddhist practice trains the mind to remain present with discomfort rather than contracting against it. For chronic pain management, this transforms the relationship with pain itself: instead of fighting sensations, practitioners develop equanimity toward them. Dipa Ma demonstrated this through her own recovery from severe illness, showing how sustained mindfulness practice can coexist with physical limitation. This approach reduces suffering even when pain persists, offering relief through acceptance rather than elimination alone.
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