| DANA ~
A Metta Practice
Dana: generosity of spirit; the art of
giving without thought of reward. Just as the earth extends her
generosity each moment and asks nothing of us in return, so, too,
do each of us have the capacity to act, speak, and think with an
open-hearted and giving spirit. We can give openly to one another
- friends and strangers as well as to the 10,000 things of which
we are part. Practicing and finding fulfillment in such unconditional
giving over time might reverse the pattern to consume and take so
much from earth, from one another, and from other nations and peoples.
Dana is a practice that also might reverse a culture of entitlement.
Practices:
- Plant something, a tree, an herb, a flower, a row of vegetables.
If you have no yard, nurture and sing to a potted plant. Do so
regularly.
- Volunteer for or donate to an organization with a similarly
giving spirit such as an animal sanctuary, a food pantry, a community
garden, a program such as Habitat For Humanity, or the Green Yoga
Association.
- Send someone an anonymous note of praise, a poem, flowers or
unsigned card. (We might call this gesture the "Amelie effect"
from the delightful French film Amelie produced a few years ago.)
- Build or put up a bat box (In the Northeast, tens of thousands
of hibernating brown bats mysteriously died this winter).
- Give someone who needs it a free Yoga class, or hold a regular
free or by-donation Yoga class.
- Extend the same unconditional generosity that you give to distant
acquaintances or plants or bats to the people most intimate with
you who may otherwise "push your buttons."
- Catch yourself thinking that you are entitled to receive something
in return when you offer someone or the earth or the universe
something - be it a gift or a prayer.
Jeff Davis, Green Yoga Association Council member and friend of
Metta Earth... with his web site www.centertopage.com
Reprinted from "Prana" the Green Yoga Association e-newsletter.
www.greenyoga.org
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