Contemplating the goodness within ourselves is a classical meditation, done to bring light and joy to the mind. In contemporary times this practice might be considered rather embarrassing, because so often the emphasis is on all the unfortunate things we have done, all the disturbing mistakes we have made. Yet this classical reflection is not a way of increasing conceit. It is rather a commitment to our own happiness, seeing our happiness as the basis for intimacy with all of life. It fills us with joy and love for ourselves and a great deal of self-respect.
Significantly, when we do metta practice, we begin by directing metta toward ourselves. This is the essential foundation for being able to offer genuine love to others. When we truly love ourselves, we want to take care of others, because that is what is most enriching, or nourishing, for us. When we have a genuine inner life, we are intimate with ourselves and intimate with others. The insight into our inner world allows us to connect to everything around us, so that we can see quite clearly the oneness of all that lives. We see that all beings want to be happy, and that this impulse unites us. We can recognize the rightness and beauty of our common urge towards happiness, and realize intimacy in this shared urge.
Sharon Salzberg, Facets of Metta
Hi Karl, I hope it’s okay to comment on your blog…I do because I really relate to the ideas in here. The ideas in this excerpt are so powerful and took me a long time to understand/accept/realize. But beginning to do…to bring more kindness, accepting and understanding toward “myself”… that has lead to some special shifts. And once I realized that, just like myself, others are struggling too…that kindness just seemed to naturally extend to them too. The awareness that I developed from the ideas in the second image in this linked page actually changed my life…in a wonderful way…I look at others so differently now, especially those I might feel resistance to.. http://pocketperspectives.wordpress.com/2011/08/11/loving-kindness-may-we-all-feel-2/ (and there is a link in that post to Shantideva’s Prayer, full of more ideas that I’ve come to love and appreciate)