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Archive for November 21, 2023

Shin Terayama: A Radical Healing, A Remarkable Life

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November 21, 2023

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Shin Terayama: A Radical Healing, A Remarkable Life

So, you are still alive and when you are alive, give love, unconditional love! That’s enough.

– Shin Terayama –

Shin Terayama: A Radical Healing, A Remarkable Life

“From his hospital bed one night, Terayama had a strange dream. He was looking at his body in a coffin. He was 47, and did not yet know he had cancer. That soon changed. After surgery, chemo and radiation, with his cancer now out of reach of medical cure he went home to face death.” A few mornings later, I had a very strange sensation in my body. When the sun came up, the sunlight came into my heart, very strong energy. It was amazing.”” After his spontaneous remission, Shin Terayama would go on to become the Executive Director of the Japan Holistic Medical Society. More in this 2018 interview. { read more }

Be The Change

Shin Terayama left our world earlier this month, at the age of 87. He inspired healing, joy and compassion to the very end. Take a moment today to notice the fact of your aliveness, and to remember your capacity to give love.

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Sympathy, Empathy And Compassion

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

Awakin.org
Weekly Reading Nov 20, 2023

Sympathy, Empathy And Compassion

–Jay Litvin

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2671.jpgPity, sympathy, empathy, compassion. Each is received at various times by one in distress. They are the responses engendered by our misfortunes from those we encounter. And each feels different when received. Each has a different effect on those who are suffering in the midst of psychic or physical crisis.

Of the four, compassion has a unique quality, a quality so different from the rest that it connotes a certain spiritual as well as emotional characteristic. Perhaps for this reason it is often cited in spiritual/religious texts as a virtue to be sought and developed.

The recipient of compassion feels its superiority immediately. Unlike pity, it has no condescension. Unlike empathy, it does not require a past or present similar experience on the part of the giver. And while sympathy is a wonderful virtue, it connotes less spontaneity and variety than compassion; one would not normally associate laughter or frivolity with sympathy, for example. And there is also a certain distance or separation inherent in sympathy, one sympathizes with the other. A very wonderful quality, still, sympathy stands at a different level than compassion.

While sympathy is a tender response to misfortune or difficulty, compassion is a way of life.

The dictionary offers the following root for compassion: Com (with) – pati (to suffer), to suffer with.

But there is another definition, one that does not limit compassion as a response to suffering, but rather to life itself, making it a quality that one would live with in every situation, with every person, rather than only with one who is in distress.

Com-passion: Com (with) – passion (strong feeling, enthusiasm); to be with another in strong feeling and with enthusiasm.

Compassion, then, does not require sadness, sorrow or even the desire to help, though it could include all these things. It simply means being fully present with someone no matter the circumstances of his or her life. Compassion suspends judgment and takes each circumstance equally — each as a moment of life to be lived in its fullness. It . All possible emotions and feelings and behaviors of which we are capable are inherent in every moment, in every circumstance.

And so, compassion comes with no preconceptions. It has no attitudes. It has no special face or tone of voice. It is not bound by rules of behavior, decorum, expectations, though it may be guided by all of these things.

Compassion is prepared to meet others wherever they are, recognizing that the circumstance or challenge they now face is as much a part of their life as any other part of their life. Compassion can laugh or cry, joke or commiserate, be curious and inquisitive, chatty or silent. Compassion is not afraid to be fully present, hopeful, or lighthearted. Compassion does not turn away. It is never afraid to see beauty or find humor or share a fractured heart.

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How do you relate to the notion that compassion does not require sadness, sorrow, or even the desire to help? Can you share a personal story of a time you experienced compassion as a moment of life to be lived in its fullness? What helps you grow in compassion as a way of life?

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