Using meditative stillness as a deliberate practice of resistance against the exhaustion economy that demands constant productivity from impoverished bodies.
Dipa Ma's mastery of stillness offers a radical counter-practice to the precarity economy that demands constant hustle from low-income individuals. The pressure to always be working, moving, earning—what affects poor and working-class bodies disproportionately—creates chronic activation of the nervous system. Stillness becomes an act of resistance: a claim that one's body has value simply by existing, not only through productivity. Dipa Ma taught that profound inner development happens in absolute quiet, in the willingness to be still when the world demands motion. For those experiencing health poverty, the ability to practice stillness—to simply sit, breathe, and be present—becomes both a form of defiance against extractive systems and a genuine path to nervous system healing. This practice reclaims time and attention as one's own, outside commodity structures. Stillness becomes both medicine and rebellion.
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