Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Non-Aversion to Suffering in Patient Care

Training practitioners to meet patient suffering without defensive reactions, enabling genuine compassion and preventing harm caused by emotional avoidance.

Dipa
Why It Matters

Dipa Ma's fearless observation of her own pain and bodily sensations without aversion offers crucial insight for medical ethics. Healthcare providers often unconsciously turn away from patients' suffering—through emotional distancing, over-medicating, or avoiding difficult conversations. This aversion, though protective of the practitioner's emotional resources, creates ethical breaches: the patient feels unseen, abandoned in their most vulnerable moments. When medical professionals cultivate non-aversion through contemplative practice, they develop capacity to be genuinely present with suffering without needing to fix it immediately or escape it. This matters especially in palliative care, chronic illness, and mental health. Dipa Ma's example shows that meeting pain directly with attention actually reduces suffering's grip. For patients, being witnessed without judgment is itself therapeutic. Across traditions, this principle appears: shamanic practitioners journey into the underworld without fear; Sufi healers embrace the patient's darkness. Medical ethics grounded in non-aversion creates space for patients to process their experience and find meaning. The paradox: attempting to eliminate all suffering through medical intervention often increases it, while accepting suffering with compassionate presence allows transformation.

Helpful guides
Dipa
Health & Body
Peri
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