Using meditative stillness to differentiate between physical hunger, emotional hunger, and habitual eating impulses.
Dipa Ma emphasized stillness not as rigidity but as a clear, settled state from which wisdom emerges. In the context of eating, stillness creates the necessary pause to distinguish true physical hunger from the many other drives that masquerade as hunger: boredom, loneliness, anxiety, or simple habit. Without this pause, these drives remain collapsed together, and food becomes the automatic response to any uncomfortable feeling. By cultivating moments of stillness—through breath awareness, body scans, or brief meditation—practitioners develop the sensitivity to notice what is actually being sought. Is the body physically hungry, or is something emotional seeking comfort through food? Is this habitual eating at a certain time, or genuine appetite? Stillness allows these questions to be asked and answered authentically. Over time, this discernment becomes integrated into daily life, and the relationship with food transforms from reactive to responsive.
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