Examining how Dipa Ma's cultivation of inner stillness applies to contaminated water systems, recognizing stagnation as disease requiring both acceptance and action.
Dipa Ma taught that stillness is not passivity but clear seeing. Applied to water quality, this means observing stagnant, contaminated water without denial—acknowledging it as a real crisis while cultivating the mental clarity to respond skillfully. Stagnant water systems mirror stagnant social structures that perpetuate inequality in access. The practice here involves sitting with discomfort, understanding the psychological patterns that allow communities to normalize unsafe conditions, then generating the fearlessness needed for systemic change. This is contemplative activism: we must be still enough to see clearly, but awake enough to act.
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