Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - 442: Get Happier Without Losing Your Edge | Kamala Masters
Episode Date: April 27, 2022Can you become happier, more balanced, and practice equanimity without losing your edge? Guest Kamala Masters was one of the teachers at Dan’s first ever meditation retreat. In this ep...isode she dives into how to develop equanimity and shares her story of learning how to practice meditation during her everyday life while raising three children on her own. Kamala Masters has been meditating since the 1970s, first with Anagarika Munindra, who was Joseph Goldstein’s first teacher, and then with the Burmese master Sayadaw U Pandita with whom she twice temporarily ordained as a Buddhist nun. More recently, she’s been training with another Burmese master we’ve talked about here on the show, Sayadaw U Tejaniya. She is a Guiding Teacher at the Insight Meditation Society, and the co-founder of the Vipassana Metta Foundation, which developed the Maui Dharma Sanctuary.In this conversation we talk about: What is equanimity?The most common misconception about equanimityThe near and far enemies of equanimity The power and limitations of setting intentionsFull Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/kamala-masters-442See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
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This is the 10% Happier Podcast.
I'm Dan Harris.
Hey, hey, we're going back to one of my favorite subjects today.
It's a question I have spent a lot of time mulling and that people ask me about all the
time.
Can you get happier, more balanced, more quantamous, without losing your edge. Will it make you complacent
or a doormat? I remember how, when I first got interested in meditation as an ambitious
network newsman, I told my dad about my burgeoning interest. He was a, at the time, he was a hard
charging academic physician, and he told me that he had some colleagues who had gotten into
Buddhism and it made them, and I'm quoting here, like totally ineffective. You may have heard my spiel
about how becoming ineffective or passive or a dormat is a misunderstanding or a misapplication
of the lessons of meditation. The goal is not to be resigned, but to be more focused, more
emotionally agile, and to be able to surf your emotions rather
than drown in them.
In other words, to respond wisely to stuff rather than reacting blindly.
Anyway, I'm going to spare you my rant because you're about to hear a much wiser version
from somebody with vastly more experience than me.
Full disclosure, just by way of background here, when I first encountered Kamala Masters back in 2010 on my first ever meditation retreat, she was the victim of my rather unfortunate
penchant for judgmentalism.
I initially kind of dismissed her because her presentation, I thought, was kind of typical
touchy-feely meditation teacher, ee, whatever.
But that, of course, was just me being dumb.
And the more I heard her speak over
the course of that 10-day retreat, the more I realized both the depth of her practice and also
the steeliness underneath, which you will hear. Kamala has been meditating since the 1970s, first
with Anagarika Munindra, who was Joseph Goldstein's first teacher as well. And then with the Burmese master, Saida Upandita, with whom she twice temporarily ordained
as a Buddhist nun.
More recently, she's been training
with another Burmese master who we've also talked about
quite a bit on this show, Saida Utagenia.
She is a guiding teacher at the Insight Meditation Society
and the co-founder of the Vipassana Meta Foundation,
which started up something called the Maui Dama Sanctuary.
In this conversation, we talk about what is equanimity?
Is it accessible to mere mortals?
How do we develop it?
The most common misconceptions about equanimity,
the near and far enemies of equanimity,
the power and limitations of setting intentions,
what Kamala means by the phrase Dharma Ducktap,
which he means when she talks about karma,
the relationship between Mehta or loving kindness
and equanimity, and her rather compelling story
of being driven to the Dharma because of the hell realm,
that's her phrase, of raising three children on her own
in her 20s, and then how
she learned to practice at home during everyday life while raising those kids.
Quick note, you're going to hear some background noise from Kamala's home on Maui, including
some bird song, shouldn't be too unpleasant.
Also, and this may, for some of you, be less pleasant.
I do use a swear word in this conversation, and we're not bleeping it.
Back when this podcast was owned by ABC News, which in
turn is owned by Disney, I was not allowed to swear, but now that
I'm no longer an anchor man. I am starting to talk a little bit
more like I talk in everyday life. If that's not cool with you, or
if you're listening with your children, there is a clean version
of this episode over on our website, 10% dot com, also on the 10% happier app.
Before we jump into today's show, many of us want to live healthier lives, but keep bumping
our heads up against the same obstacles over and over again.
But what if there was a different way to relate to this gap between what you want to do and
what you actually do?
What if you could find intrinsic motivation for habit change
that will make you happier instead of sending you
into a shame spiral?
Learn how to form healthy habits without kicking your own ass
unnecessarily by taking our healthy habits course
over on the 10% happier app.
It's taught by the Stanford psychologist, Kelly McGonical,
and the great meditation teacher, Alexis Santos,
to access the course, just download the 10% happier app
wherever you get your apps or by visiting 10% calm all one word spelled out.
Okay on with the show.
Hey y'all it's your girl Kiki Palmer I'm an actress, singer and entrepreneur.
On my new podcast baby this is Kiki Palmer.
I'm asking friends, family and experts the questions that are in my head like it's only
fans only bad where the memes come from and where it that are in my head. Like, it's only fans only bad, where the memes come from.
And where's Tom from MySpace?
Listen to Baby, this is Kiki Palmer,
on Amazon Music, or wherever you get your podcast.
Kamala Masters, welcome to the show.
Thank you for having me.
It's a pleasure I can hear the the Hawaii wildlife behind you as we speak.
Right.
We're lucky to have that.
Along with once in a while, you'll hear the helicopters with tourists, and we welcome
them too.
You were one of the teachers on the first meditation retreat I ever went on, which was
a Iraqi ride for me.
Oh, wow.
I didn't know it was your first one.
Right.
Yeah.
You've probably done a lot more since then
and a lot of practicing, I bet.
At least I've tried to.
But anyway, it's nice to see you again.
And thank you very much for doing this, really appreciate it.
Of course.
So we're gonna talk about equanimity
and I thought I would ask you an almost embarrassingly
basic question, which is, what is equanimity?
All right. Well, I'm harkening back to when I was walking in the room to get an
interview with Sayada Upandita, and he asked me the same question. So I'm going to
answer that as if I'm there in that room again. And my answer was that equanimity
is a spacious mind that can include everything but not be reactive to anything. And when
there is reactivity, it comes in two ways. When there is an experience arising and there is reactivity to it, whether it's an inner or outer experience,
the reactivity would be in two categories. One would be there would be aversion to it or any manifestation of a version, or there would be attachment to what's going on inwardly or outwardly,
and many versions of attachment also. So equanimity would be a balance in response to what's happening to our inner or outer experience, and that balance would be without reactivity, without attachment,
or without aversion.
So that's kind of a, in a way, it sounds so theoretical, but that's actually what one
experiences.
So for example, helicopters that come and go around our sanctuary here, I can see in my heart
mind something coming up in response to the sound, the outer sound. And it usually is a version.
It's a lot less now because used to being mindful of it, but there's room for that a version
for that aversion in the mind. And then what happens is that mindfulness comes to the foreground and is aware of that aversion. So in a way that aversion is allowed to come and go within this field of equanimity. So that's why equanimity really includes the understanding that it's spacious.
You know, there's a lot of room for things to arise and pass away with no reactivity to it.
Or if there is reactivity, mindfulness can see it, and it's not a problem. It just comes and goes.
Is that too theoretical? It's a great place to start. I'll ask, hopefully not to obnoxious,
very practical questions at some point,
but I do wanna say something about the Buddha.
You pointed this out to our producer, DJ,
before this interview when you were chatting with DJ,
you pointed out that the Buddha set the bar pretty high here.
He said that an Aquanimous mind would be like the sky.
Clouds can pass through airplanes,
anything can pass through,
and the sky's not freaking out about it.
So that's a, as I said, that's a pretty high bar.
That is a pretty high bar.
What's so high about it and beautiful about it
is that it leaves room for wisdom and compassion to arise.
When the mind isn't dealing with the reactivity part,
when it can see things like unwholesome states of mind,
arise and know that they'll pass away,
it leaves room for wise response
or compassion would be a wise response.
It leaves room for that to arise.
Actually, the Buddha did not give that
exact quote, but someone described the Buddha's teaching on equanimity to be that way. Actually,
the Buddha said it's like the sky, but the rest of it, like anything can arise. that part, I think it was a chansumedo that made that precise description.
Is this sky-like mind available to mortals, people who don't live in a meditation sanctuary
and don't do, you know, decades and decades worth of silent retreat?
Yes, I do see it. With yogis that I know of from, you know, there are even people who are
even more just beginner yogis that when they have something like a natural sense of what
we call cila or their morality or their sense of not harming is very high and natural.
There are more times when the mind can just see things
as they really are and not react
with an unwholesome mind state,
but I have to say that there could be a response
to what's going on.
So response, very different from reactivity.
Response would include being able to discern
what to say in the moment, what to do in the moment that would be effective, but not necessarily
harming. So it's possible, of course, if you know your mind when you practice mindfulness,
know your mind when you practice mindfulness, that's the key for us meditators to know our minds, to know and unhull some states arise.
And when they do arise, can we refrain from acting them out?
That's a lifetime of practice.
It could be and more.
So would I, it would be fair to to conclude that if I'm interested in having more equity, which I think
most everybody probably is, there are at least two ways to practice or to train this skill.
One would be to try to be more mindful, which meditation can help with and to have more
what you called seal or just sort of not being a jerk in your life.
And these are two tracks that can lead to the same quality of mind.
That's right. Yeah, you're laying it out very well because when we're mindful,
then we can notice what's going on in the mind.
And what the Buddha talked about a lot was a big part of our practice is to refrain from
doing anything that's harmful to others and harmful to our own karma extreme too.
And then also to nurture those qualities of mind that are causing harmony and goodwill
in the world. So there were many ways that the Buddha said that to refrain
from harming and to practice non-harming. Those two are the basis for sila, for beneficial action
and words in the world and for our own karmic stream. So when we have mindfulness, like you pointed out,
mindfulness knowing more what's going on in our own minds,
and then knowing if it's going to be harmful to refrain,
if it's going to be beneficial to nurture that.
So Sila is the next part,
and then also to recognize when the mind can be economist,
some people, of course, a lot of people, I think, have a wrong understanding
about equanimity.
It's as if we just kind of let ourselves be a doormat and just, you know, whatever happens,
we're not going to respond, but that isn't true. Because with equanimity, there's
more space for that discerning mind to come up like what would really be helpful?
And maybe it would be helpful to just be quiet now. And maybe it would be helpful to take a
stand on something and really speak with a loud voice about something but not causing harm.
So then we take action. So the third part of that equanimity is to take action
also in ways that would be either wise and or compassionate. I think you got it in the beginning.
I'm always looking for the gold star.
You said a lot of things I want to follow up on, including at some point, I want to get
you to sort of define what you mean by carim extreme.
But let me stay with this notion that doesn't make you a doormat and you're learning how
to respond wisely instead of reacting blindly.
And I'd like to kind of dwell in this zone for a little while because I think people will
hear you talking about non-harming, being kind, being compassionate, and nonetheless worry that, well, does all of this add up to weakness
or festivity?
Right.
I get that.
And that is what many people think.
It doesn't mean that we're just quiet.
It doesn't mean that we don't take any action.
Sometimes the action is really strong and sometimes it can shock people but maybe shock
them into kind of letting go of their own harmful activity.
But I'm trying to think about giving an example.
One time I was teaching a retreat and one of the helpers in the retreat is the Buddhist nun and we were going to buy gifts for our staff of the retreat.
So we went to the local shopping center here on Maui and we walked into the entrance. It's an open place and as soon as we walked in, I saw to my left, which was maybe about a hundred steps away,
a person approaching quickly, another person, and pummeling that person.
Just beating that person on the head.
And these were two young boys.
And so I kind of knew them in the community. And so the one youngster was
against the wall and started to kind of go down the wall. And the other one was hitting
on that youngster. And it seemed like one of them was kind of out of it. The one going
down the wall was a little bit out of it and that when hitting him was also quite agitated,
of course, there was no words. One was just pummeling the other. I looked at my non-friend and
everybody was just not doing anything. So I ran towards those two persons and I started yelling with all my
might. Get an officer, get somebody, get security, get over here and I yelled at the other
person, pummeling and I said, stop it, stop it, get away and I was telling the other person
with all my might, get away but I didn't want to go near.
And so the other person jumped off of pummeling him and I kind of ran for safety and that person ran away. So here I am just out of teaching a retreat in the shopping center. Something has to be done.
People are walking by, not doing anything,
and I'm the one that chouts with all my might, and then runs away for safety also.
So, I just want to give a graphic example of how we need to be sometimes.
I had taken this course in Model Mugging. I don't know if you know that.
Have you heard of that Model Mugging?
It's a course that was given here in the islands
where all of the people who taught
like any kind of martial art or many of them
were offering to youngsters in the community
a way to know how to defend themselves.
So I went to this model mugging course with my daughter.
She was 14 at the time.
So we both had to learn how to defend ourselves.
And that was probably about two or three years before this incident that I just talked about.
So I really learned how to shout at the top of my lungs,
to say, this is wrong, not just don't hurt me,
but don't hurt other people.
So that really came in handy.
So I'm a proponent of speaking loud, speaking up,
standing up for one's rights,
really saying what needs to be said. But maybe, you know, if we have
time, we could think about it ahead of time and saying the right words at the right time,
you know, all of those things at the Buddha taught, the five ways that we can do right speech.
And sometimes it takes a loud voice. So I'm all for that. You seem very calm, but when circumstances require it, you can
be forceful. I really can be. I mean, you know, watch out for Kamala because yeah, I can get really
on it because I had to raise four children and I had to speak my peace and do what I needed to do sometimes.
But I really tried without hurting people, but sometimes I failed.
I'm not with my hands, but with my words, not with my actions, but with my words.
Sometimes I would hurt people, but then you know, then you have time for reflection and
you know, maybe when those circumstances happen again,
you're more careful.
So I'm like Manindra says, my first teacher said, my path is not yet finished.
So I love that.
It's useful to hear you say that you retain the capacity to make mistakes because I can
imagine people might be listening to this and you're talking about
not being carried away by your anger or whatever emotion that arises in your mind. And immediately,
some of our minds might flash back on the last time we did get carried away, which might have been
like 15 minutes ago. So what kind of reassurance can you give us about the fact that we maybe, that our paths
are certainly not finished?
Well, yeah, we're human.
We're just human and we're always learning.
And I can see that in the beginning for me, when I just started the Buddha's path, I didn't know my mind as well. So because
I didn't know my mind as well, I would just lash out at something. I wasn't that bad.
I was a pretty good person, but you know, still those things happen. But as I came to practice
more and really knew what was harmful and follow the Buddha's teachings about if you
can see what's going on and you know it's going to be harmful, then see what you can do to
refrain. And then to nurture what's beneficial, of course. So knowing the mind more as I practice
more, then I knew how to take those steps. But when I didn't know the mind
as much, then I'd flood up a lot. And I'm still flooding up. But it's not as bad. So that's the
reassurance I can give you. It's not as bad. But some people get really surprised, especially,
you know, I'm a person of color. I'm a cisgender woman, and I can get stepped on sometimes.
So I don't back down when I know I'm not going to get hurt.
What guidelines would you have for us if we're thinking about how to be forceful without
being harmful?
Well, because I know sometimes anger still arises in my mind.
When I am getting ready to have a talk with someone or even to be in a group of people,
I try to prepare my own mind, I try to remember what my intentions are
and state intentions before I go into a meeting.
State them to myself like may I use words that are clear, beneficial and useful.
I mean that's what I always say at the beginning of a Dharma talk.
May I be clear, beneficial and useful.
And so I do that when I know I'm gonna go into a meeting.
And so I do always have that intention
because I've had to prepare for that so many times.
And then when I'm in the meeting,
I might say something to myself like when I'm hearing things
and I feel reactive, which I do sometimes.
Of course, I'll state my intention to myself.
Stay stable, stay spacious, stay clear, something like that. Just so I give myself short reminders.
And sometimes I don't have the wherewithal to do that because I'm triggered. That's the truth of how it is,
you know. So at least I try to say something like, I may not be right, but this is my perception
right now about this. And I feel a bit hotheaded. So I apologize in advance if it comes out kind of, you know, too strong.
So I really do try that to the best of my ability.
So having some forethought about it and some intentions
that we remind ourselves of can really, really help.
And then if they all go caflui, then I just forgive myself.
I'm just human. I'm not perfect. I can't do it right.
And I'm sorry if you're expecting me to be perfect because I am not. And I sometimes
use four letter words that just really fires people up sometimes. But I grew up in tough
communities. I had to learn that. But I am naturally kind of soft spoken, but don't
let that fool you.
Yeah.
Coming up, Kamala explains the power and limitations
of intentions, gives us a primer on karma,
talks about the relationship between equanimity
and meta or loving kindness,
and offers simple and practical equanimity phrases
you can use in your everyday life right after this.
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Just to go back to what you said about intentions, I'll admit that setting intentions I tend toward the judgmental and which is not one of my strong suits and I often dismissed the idea of setting intentions as a kind of new age cliche
but I've been disabused of that
dismissiveness on the score at the least and have found that just waking up first thing in the morning and saying like set the kind of same intention in my mind every day about like wanting to do good work that helps people
that I lose sight of the intention all the time, but it's useful as a pole star.
And along those lines I've sometimes thought I don't know if I've a big resistance to
pain, but I've sometimes thought about getting, you know, some words tattooed on my wrist,
like, you know, don't be an asshole or just to remind me not to be a jerk.
Right, right. Yeah, intentions are powerful though. The Buddha said karma is intention and it's
powerful. Intention is powerful. Imagine if we didn't have those intentions, the intention to know our own
minds, what it does, the intention to be kind, it would just go willy-nilly all over the place.
So, intentions are really powerful. I remember once being in Burma, done some practice there,
and met up with a beautiful nun who actually shaved my head on days where
my head need to be shaved, I had ordained as a nun. And when I went to say goodbye to her,
she was a very advanced practitioner and I felt so honored to be in her presence. And she was
also a medical doctor who's a nun. And I was giving her all my medicines and my umbrella
and other things that I wasn't taking home with me.
And I said, oh, I have this intention to give you these gifts,
but they're so small.
And she said, do not say that, Kamala.
Do not say that. Kamala. Do not say that's too small.
Intention is powerful. Intention is powerful.
And that went into me like, wow, like a beautiful, gentle, lightning bolt.
How important our intentions are in the world.
And those things that we think that are small,
the morning thing that you say or anybody says
about, may I be helpful today?
May I try to be as kind and calm as possible?
Those things are very, very powerful
because it goes into your mind stream.
And they're accessible, more and more accessible.
A question came up in my mind as I was listening to you talk
there in diversity discussions these days.
There's often a line drawn between intention and impact
because often people who look like me, white people,
or especially men are saying, well,
I didn't mean for that to be harmful
and people will sometimes point out, well, maybe't mean for that to be harmful and people will
sometimes point out well maybe they won't say it doesn't matter what you met but you had an
impact on the lesson so there is this big emphasis in Buddhism on intention being important
but I wonder where you come down on this debate between intention and impact.
Yeah I'm so glad you brought that up. And wanna go back to the Buddhist teaching
about how intention is karma or karma is intention.
And impact is a big part of karma.
So we have to get nuanced here
about this whole intention and impact thing.
When we make the intention, we have to remember that's only half
of the situation. And that is really important. That's only part of the situation. We do have
this intention to be kind to the best we can, but inadvertently because we don't know a lot of
things, even when we make those intentions, they land on people or
on situations that causes something.
So this is cause and effect relationship that we really need to understand.
This is karma.
We may have the intention, but how it lands in the world or on another person is something we need to pay attention to and make that part
of our lives to say, oh, there was this intention, that is true.
And I just want to point that out when I'm speaking to somebody that that's my intention,
but now I'm also learning that it has this impact on you, and that impact on you is so important
to me.
So I want to pay attention to that impact on you, and I don't want to make my intention
and excuse.
I'm learning that I don't always know how it's going to land on people.
Now, I'm filling out all these words, Dan, but we can do that
in a on the spot way too, you know, and just say, oh, I realize now that that landed in your heart
in a way I didn't even think about. So what can we do about this? And to let that person know,
So, what can we do about this? And to let that person know, which I have had to do in my own life,
to let that person know that I'm sorry.
And recently I had to do this with somebody fairly close to me
in the colleagues that I have in the Dharma,
that I'm really sorry that it landed and it affected you this way. It wasn't my intention, but it landed on you
this way. And I'm really sorry for that. And that's really sincere. So when you have to get really
nuanced about all of this with this intention and impact thing and really point out the importance of impact when we're speaking to somebody who was impacted
by what we did or said.
And I'm at fault at that.
I do that wrong a number of times
where I don't think ahead sometimes
what would the impact be on that person?
Because maybe I'm just so in
the moment or something just happened and I don't have time to think about it or I don't
have time to put what I call the Dharma duct tape on my mouth and just not say anything,
you know, it's going so fast. So we're going to make a lot of mistakes in mistakes, meaning hurt people and not have
it intended.
So, yeah, the big question nowadays is for me is, how can I bring just as much importance
to understanding the impact?
As the importance we have given to understanding intention and motivation.
It's a new world. Yes, in many ways. So maybe the
bottom line of what you're saying is that it's not an either or both matter, intention, and impact.
Absolutely. Yeah. Let me go back to karma because I think long time listeners of the show or
anybody who's spent any time in who Discircles will completely understand what you're talking about there. But I just do want to represent the newer listeners to the show or anybody who's spent any time in Buddhist circles will completely understand
what you're talking about there.
But I just do want to represent the newer listeners
to the show because hopefully we're adding new listeners
all the time and they may say,
well, what's this?
Carmic stream stuff.
What is this?
Are we like far out into the metaphysical soup here?
Or what exactly do you mean when you use terms
like carmic stream?
I am by the way,, faning skepticism.
I am completely personally comfortable with the term,
but I do want to represent those who might not be.
Oh, yeah, of course.
Well, sometimes we think of karma as the cause
and effect relationship and like what the cause might be
that we said something or did something
and how it affects somebody out there.
It does affect outwardly, you know, our words and that affects people, but the person or
the mind, mind heart that holds that energy is inward.
The effect of that is also inward. When there are intentions that are fulfilled, intentions, words and actions that are said
or done, there is a result of that in our own hearts and minds, not just out there, but
the result of that, it's called resultant karma.
There's a word for it, karma, wipaka, that
happens within our own hearts and minds that we carry, and that carrying is our own
karma extreme, so that the actions and words and even thoughts that were harmful, there will be a result of that within us.
And the result of that is feeling pleasant, unpleasant, or sometimes neutral.
So the result of that is how we feel inside. We feel the result of that.
The result of that might be felt outward too, but the karmic stream I'm
talking about is what we feel inside when say we've harmed somebody. So let me give an example.
If I shout to like my grandchildren and of course maybe I'm with the intention of not
harming of making sure that they don't get harmed, And that's my intention. Like, don't touch that. It's hot. That is not
kind of unhulsome karma. That is wholesome karma. And when I see that my grandchild is shocked or
like maybe even hurt that I raised my voice, it's not like that's going into my mind stream
as a resultant of unhulsome, karmic action, that would not be unholsom. But if I was
harming a child, you know, like punishing a child and hitting the child and whatnot, and
then somehow that registers in my own heart and mind. Maybe sometimes a person isn't even
aware that it's registering. Of course, a lot of times that we
aren't aware that it's registering, but that goes into our own heart and mind as part of the process
of this human being evolving in this world, so that becomes part of our own mind stream. And it comes out in pleasant and unpleasant ways.
I'm making it very simple, not that I'm thinking I'm working
with the simplistic minds here, but it would take a long time
to talk about karma.
Karma 101 is very welcome here.
So making it simple is totally fine.
Let me go back to, we were talking earlier about things you can do to shave down the odds
that you're going to not act out of equanimity in stressful situations.
We talked about intentions.
One other possible technique I wanted to run by you that I've played with a little bit on my end
is meta practicepractice,
or loving kindness practice, where you might bring to mind somebody difficult and, as frustrating as
it may be, send them some good vibes in your meditation practice as a way to hopefully impact
how you deal with them in real life. Does that land for you?
Yeah, that's a good one. That's a good one to continue on because I can't imagine that
a good number of the listeners have done some meta practice. So it can be really useful. The way I
would recommend it though is to say we have a situation and we know that this person is difficult
for us. I try to reward that. It's not that this is a difficult person. It's that we're having difficulty
with that person. So it would be better to start as we do with the meta practice. Start out with
somebody that's easy first to go there first. And especially if we've been hurt in some kind of
interaction with that person to go to ourselves first and send meta to ourselves. Because oftentimes I find
with myself and with other students that are doing meta practice that going right to that
person is like just kind of saying the words and not really feeling them. So starting out where we
can practice some meta for ourselves and bring up somebody that we're easy with to do that, then do that.
And sometimes if you just need to do it right away, to picture that person
and have people around that person that you care for.
So do that in a group. So you are including that person.
But this is what Minindra taught me to surround that person in a group. So you are including that person, but this is what Manindra taught me to surround
that person in a group. And that is actually very doable for me.
Surround them with some human shields that, that, yeah.
Well, sometimes I even make the recommendation, surround them with your own benefactors
or put your benefactors behind you.
They're different kind of tricks that we use.
I would love to hear you say more about
how we can develop equanimity generally
as a quality of mind.
Are there specific meditation techniques
that you think really work to build our capacity
for equanimity?
There are, you know equanimities, one of the four Brahmavi horrors, one of the
defined abodes, or those practices, say Metta, Metta's one, then compassion,
sympathetic joy, equanimities, the fourth one, and there are equanimity
practices, but I just want to go to kind of like a daily level
way that you can practice it. Say we're in a situation, you're one to one with somebody or
you're in a small group and one self is feeling reactive and we feel it in ourselves. So what we
might do is offer equanimity to ourselves first because we know we need to do something about the situation
and mostly we need to start right here. So one of the things that I do and still do is I remember
equanimity and in the beginning days I would have to use an actual phrase that says I open to things as they are, or may I open to this situation with balance?
I'll just use a word balance,
it's set of equanimity, equanimities
to packed with misunderstanding sometimes.
So may I open to this situation with balance
so that, you know, I can see all sides basically
and I'm using open and balance in that. So I would normally send it first to myself.
It's an option when you say, may I open to this situation with more balance? And then you might even say
something, say you're in this situation, you might even say something to yourself like, may I know
what to say or when to be quiet? I mean, all of those things
occur to me without words, but you might need to put words to it because what you're
really trying to handle is your own mind here, not necessarily the other person. So that's
what you can do in the moment. It doesn't really help most of the time to try to send meta to that person in the moment.
If it helps, great! Go for it! If it helps to start sending meta to that person because your
own mind is developing meta and you're doing the best you can to offer it. So, of course,
if that person's right in front of you and you think I'm just going to send Meta to this person. At least offering Meta will take the place of whatever judgments or you know coming up
or whatever comes up. So Meta helps in that case. But actually the first course of action
could be making your mind kind of more open and balanced, you know, so that you can just take
a breather in there and you don't have to do anything.
Actually, it was really helpful for me to take a course in equanimity from a Tibetan teacher.
And in that particular course, you needed to practice equanimity first before practicing meta,
before going on to the others. So I can see experientially how that can be so.
After the break, Kamala provides formal meditation instructions
for equanimity practice and tells a personal story
about a really challenging time in her own life
during which she was so busy that she couldn't even sit down
to meditate every day and how nonetheless,
she learned with the help of a great teacher to go very deep in her practice.
Keep it here.
If I heard you correctly what you were describing there is a sort of a daily...
You put in the context of a kind of a daily thing that you can do.
Would you be willing to describe in a little bit more detail
if we wanted to do eclinity practice formally?
How would we do that?
What does that look like?
What are the instructions?
Well, usually it would start out in our traditional
it would start out with doing meta first,
but you could go directly to eclinity.
So one step to take is to,
I'm gonna put a little spot for Sharon.
Sharon teaches equanimity beautifully,
Sharon Salzberg, and I have equanimity online
at Dharma seed also.
The way I teach it is I would teach meta first
to develop a heart of meta for yourself,
and then go to the individual beings
as we go through oneself,
then a factor dear friend, neutral person,
and then difficult person.
And then all beings,
all beings is really helpful for a lot of people.
So that then when we go from meta,
usually when I teach equanimity, I do the first days of meta,
and then we go on to equanimity,
where we are developing equanimity with meta already in our
hearts. So we're not going to do the meta practice. Now we're going to do the equanimity practice and
actually equanimity, you know, it has these individuals that we go through. Equanimity starts with a
neutral person because with that neutral person, we can more easily develop equanimity towards that person. Because with that neutral person, we can more easily develop equanimity towards
that person. So the phrases are different. The equanimity phrases are, they're more
like statements, they're not offerings, they're more like statements of understanding.
So in equanimity practice, we're understanding how to be equanimous within us so that we can understand with equanimity that person we are relating to.
So one understanding would be pleasure and pain arise and pass away.
This is how it is and there are other things like gain and sorrow arise and pass away.
This is how it is in life. So in that way, these are phrases that have to do with wisdom,
where we're coming to understand their deep meaning. So we start off using particular phrases,
and maybe we use a phrase like, may you have balance in your life, and then maybe we go on to a benefactor. And we use a phrase like
birth and death, our part of life. These are phrases that are very wisdom oriented. They're not like
sending equanimity to that person. They're very oriented towards understanding that this is the way it is right now. So say now next you go to a person
that's close to you and then you remember something about that person that they're going through that
could be very difficult and then you remember that situation that person and then you will say a phrase like,
this is how it is in your life right now.
This is how your life is unfolding.
May I open to how it is in your life right now?
And so you're always in your phrases developing
that kind of wisdom that's going to align
with how it really is in life
and this is what brings equanimity that we're not reacting to it that we're aligning in ever-deepening ways
to the unfolding of life
Yeah, I think that's what you mean when you say these are wisdom phrases because they direct us to the truth
however uncomfortable and hopefully in a way that allows us to relax into it.
In terms of the instructions, I just want to repeat them back to you just to make sure I've got it.
From what I heard, you would advise, you know, if we've got the time to start with some meta or loving kindness practice.
So we might sit in a reasonably quiet place, close our eyes, bring to mind an easy person, envision this person or your dog or cat,
send them the classical phrases,
which are often, you know, maybe happy, maybe safe,
healthy, live with ease, move on to yourself,
a mentor, a benefactor, a neutral person,
a difficult person, or a person with whom
you're having difficulty, and then all beings.
So once the mind is tenderized with a little bit of love and warmth, then you could move to this equanimity practice that you described, which would be,
again, to call specific people to mind, maybe an easy person yourself, and then go from there.
And to say phrases that direct your mind, and perhaps maybe as somewhat of an offering the mind of the person who's
your meta-targa or your equanimity target in the moment of gain and loss are inevitable.
Birth and death are inevitable to put us into in this mind state of this is the way things
are.
Right.
You were really good at mentioning all of that, Dan.
Yeah.
So you reviewed it.
Well, and you might even use the last phrase, which is sometimes hard for people to get.
The last phrase has to do with karma, the actual traditional phrase, which is,
all beings are owners of their karma.
Their happiness or unhappiness depends upon their actions and not upon my wishes. All beings are owners of their karma.
Their happiness or unhappiness depends upon their actions and not upon my wishes.
So I have shortened that phrase when I'm working in the equanimity practice with my own children, for example, to say all beings have their own
journey. That's it. Because inwardly, I do understand that now my children are grown and
seeing them go through a lot. And I could never really control their journey as much as I tried,
you know. And to say, you have your own journey.
And also included in that is a meta.
I could say that you have your own journey
and all beings have their own journey.
Included in that is a deep understanding in my heart
that I'll help you as much as I can.
And I know that the unfolding of your life
is really beyond my control.
So that's karma too, understanding of karma so got woven together.
How does that work? Are you able to achieve some sort of equanimity when it comes to your
own children? More. I have not been always equanimous with my children. That's true. I just have blown my top sometimes, but I never really harm them physically, of course.
And I know that's hard.
You know, that it's really hard.
It's really frustrating.
I raised three children on my own when I was in my 20s.
It was a hell realm.
It's what sent me to the Dharma.
So I really understand that it's not easy
and we're going to blow our top
and we're going to say things that we regret
and hopefully we can overcome it and ask for forgiveness.
But we're just human.
That could be an equanimity phrase.
Remember that we're all just human.
It sounds to me also like a self-compassion phrase.
Absolutely, yeah.
When it comes to these four Brahma-Viharas
or divine abodes,
I'll admit that as they died in the will skeptic
when I first heard that term divine abodes,
I was a little like this sense, little grandiose,
but now I'm a dedicated
practitioner of the meta-loving kindness, in particular, Karuna or compassion, equanimity,
Upeca, and what's the fourth, the Moudita sympathetic joy. I do my best to, I don't want to overstate
my level of facility with these qualities, but I certainly try, but just to say at the beginning,
I was a little skeptical. And one thing that's interesting in the Buddhist tradition
is that these qualities each have
what are called a near enemy and a far enemy,
meaning that there's the opposite of equanimity.
And then there's also this near enemy,
which is something that masquerades as the real deal,
but is a pitfall.
Can you talk about the near and far enemies of equanimity?
Yeah, short thing on the far enemies,
which are called far enemies, because you can see them from a far
and they're predominant, and they are attachment and aversion.
Those things are easy to see, you know, when we're just kind of
having judgments, and we know when we're attached to our point of view or we really hate
the other person's point of view and other things too. So that is the far enemy. It comes in two
pieces and the near enemy has a lot to do with delusion. The far enemy with attachment
aversion, the near enemy with delusion because the near enemy is passivity where you just feel really
passive. You don't care. You don't even know it, but it's like you're not connected. You're
really not connected with what's really happening. And so you kind of have a shield on you and
there's passivity or you say, yeah, I'm cool with this, but you're not really cool with
it. Kind of hiding behind all the layers of delusion that all of us have.
And that passivity is like doing nothing if you feel just really passive about it.
Some people say they feel numb about things that are happening with others or in the world,
and I can understand there's so much.
So there's a numbness, there's a kind of disconnection. People say that to
when they can't feel what's really going on. So that's when you get to be a doormat and people
just can step all over you without, you know, you don't say anything about it. But equanimity is
not passive. It's active. It can be responsive, but it knows when
it has wisdom. It said that equanimity is very closely related to wisdom, to knowing
basically knowing what's beneficial, what leads to the end of suffering.
Another thing about equanimity is I've been taught is that it allows you to come close
to other people's suffering, to keep your cool so that you can be useful when people need
you.
Because if your mind is balanced, you're not freaking out in the face of somebody else
freaking out, then that could serve you and other people really well.
That's right.
That's right.
That's why I believe it was taught first, you know, in that Tibetan practice.
We can always bring it along. You know, when
even we can make it be part of meta, too. Say, for example, somebody's difficult in
our own hearts, and we're doing our best descending meta to that person, I offer you my good will,
and things are just as they are. Just adding that equanimity phrase to it just says,
doing the best I can, and things are just as they are right now.
It's important to add that right now to that phrase because it changes all the time.
So I've noticed.
Yes.
Yeah.
I do want to pick up on a phrase you used earlier.
You said something about in the face of difficult circumstances or people, the job is to
handle your own mind.
And I just think that's worth amplifying because that's a massively empowering and I think
even liberating thing to teach people, which is that you can't take responsibility for everything
that happens with somebody else, but you can take responsibility for your own mind.
Absolutely, yeah.
And if you really put our thoughts around it,
it's like the impact that we can make with our energy.
First of all, needs to be with ourselves
to look what's going on in our own minds
because that's what really can change.
We really have the possibility
of making change in the world, of course, but mostly the potential for change happens in here
in our own hearts. As doing those simple things, I've repeated several times to know what's beneficial
and to nurture that, to know what's not beneficial and to
refrain from that. And so when we can even know that much, we can act with a lot of power in the
world. When going back to Manindra, he would say, I heard him say several times in different
instances about how when there is a purity of the mind, even in the moment, you know, when there is no hatred,
no greed, no delusion, or a lessening of that, the mind is very powerful. What it says, what it does
can have a great impact around us. Just the transmission of having the person like that in our presence,
even the having a person like that is very powerful.
So we can have a greater impact if we pay attention to what's going on inside.
Before I let you go, I want to, when you talked about raising three children on your own,
and that bring you to the Dharma, I suspect there are some people listening who are like, well, tell me more about that.
How did you become such a deeply respected and experienced teacher in this very demanding
discipline while raising three children?
How did you get your practice time in at home?
I practiced at home a lot because I couldn't go to retreats, but sometimes I could, and
told you my first teacher was Maninjiji, and a lot of you in the audience may have heard this story
if you've listened to talks before. It's about how I learned how to practice at home, which was
so important, because practicing at home in my daily life, walking through the hallways, opening doors,
washing dishes, helped me when I went to my first retreat,
be able to have continuity in my practice.
So it was a continuity that really helped me.
When I first came to the Dharma,
I brought Muninder to Maui to teach a retreat.
And so he did, and he came home with us and the the three children or did I have four at the time?
No, I had three. So anyway, he said, do you sit every day? I said no, I can't sit every day
And he said, well, what do you do? And I just right away I said mostly what I do is wash dishes
So he said, okay, let's go to the sink
So he stood right beside me as if we were under the bodhi tree and he taught me how to
wash the dishes.
Like just when feeling the warm water, just no feeling, feeling or warmth or what are you
thinking now?
He would ask me, I'm worrying, worrying, worrying, okay, note worrying.
We did all that.
And then he said, do you do walking meditation? And I said, no, he said, well, where do you walk?
And I said, usually from the dining room to the bedroom and back for,
he said, let's go there.
And we went there and he taught me how to do walking meditation every time I stepped in that hallway.
So that's how I learned.
And that's what I did for a long, long time.
I took his advice and I did it.
And then when I would go to sit, as soon as they gave the instructions,
the mind would just take it in and I would just say,
Oh, okay, I'll do that.
So I would just go to the breath, just be there.
When it goes to something else, notice that, okay, come back to the breath.
Okay, I was so desperate.
I wouldn't do anything.
When I went to my first long retreat, it was a very, I could see that. Yeah, I can practice,
you know, I can really practice sitting down and being quiet. And yeah, it was really helpful
to do that practice at home every day practice.
I think that story is going to be potentially extremely helpful and empowering for anybody
with little kids at home or anybody who feels that their life is too busy to do any sustained
level of practice.
We could just do it walking wherever we have to walk already and while doing whatever
chores we have to do already.
So it's really helpful.
I'm glad.
Two final questions for you.
One is, is there something I should have asked, but didn't?
I mean, I really wanted to be helpful to everybody.
And I think I tried to be as down to earth,
helpful as possible.
Well, now it's my turn to give a gold star
because you absolutely were.
And that leads me to my final final question,
which is, I assume people having listened may want
to learn more from you.
So do you have a website or any resources you've put out
into the world that you would like to direct people to?
Yes, they can go to Dama Awareness,
or they can go to the website,
the Pasinameta on Maui.
I and my partner Steve Armstrong do every Wednesday
sitting with people every Wednesday and it's helpful. And then I my retreats that I'm doing
are on that website. We'll put a link in the show notes for people listening. Okay good.
Kamala, thank you so much. Really appreciate it. You're welcome. Thank you Dan. I appreciate
the work you're doing Gold Gold star for you too.
Thanks again to Kamala Masters. Great to have her on the show. This show is made by Gabrielle Zuckerman, DJ Kashmir, Justine Davy, Samuel Johns, Kim Baikama, Maria Wartelle, and Jen Poehant.
And we get our audio engineering from the good folks over at Ultraviolet Audio. We'll see you on Friday for a bonus.
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