Equanimity is love — even-minded love

100 Days of LovingkindnessIt's easy to forget that upekkha, or equanimity, is love. The word "equanimity" doesn't sound very loving. It's coldly Latinate, lofty, and remote, and doesn't roll off the tongue easily. Few of us are likely to use the word in everyday conversation. The adjective, equanimous, is even worse! Even the Anglo-Saxon equivalents, "even-minded" and "even-mindedness," don't convey any sense of love, or kindness, either. But upekkha is a form of love.

Perhaps we should render upekkha as something more like "equanimous love" or "even-minded love."

Upatissa, the author of the first century meditation manual I've been sharing with you as we explore the "immeasurable" meditations of loving-kindness, compassion, joyful appreciation, and now even-minded love, describes upekkha like this:

As parents are neither too attentive nor yet inattentive towards any one of their children, but regard them equally and maintain an even mind towards them, so through equanimity one maintains an even mind towards all beings. Thus should equanimity be known.

Any parent who has more than one child is familiar with this scenario! The other day my daughter asked me: "Who do you love more, daddy? Me or my brother." And then she kindly added, "It's OK if it's not me." I think she assumed that her addition would pave the way for me to tell her the "truth" that she wanted to hear (or feared hearing) — although the truth is that of course it's simply not possible for me to quantify and compare the love I have for each of my children.

My kids are in full on dispute with each other at the moment. My four-year-old son is going in for a tonsillectomy tomorrow. He's terrified of the prospect, naturally, and this is leading to him acting out in various ways, like having temper tantrums and meltdowns, and this has led to him doing things like hitting his six-year-old sister. This in turn has led her to "punishing" him by trying to exacerbate his anxiety — reminding him of his operation at every available opportunity, and sometimes going into graphic detail about how sore his throat will be afterwards, asking what kind of knife the surgeon will use, etc. And that leads him to get revenge by breaking her stuff. It's a classic tale of spiraling vengeance!

So in the midst of any particular situation of conflict — he's just broken her special bracelet, or she's slyly reminded him of his operation by "helpfully" reminding him that he'll get to have ice cream afterward — there's no possibility of taking sides. I realize that both are suffering, and I want both to be happy. My son hurts his sister and I realize that both are having a hard time. Yes, he needs to be told that he can't act this way, but fundamentally he also needs sympathy and to be helped in dealing with his anxiety. My daughter torments her brother and again she has to be encouraged to act less like a tiny torturer and more like a helpful big sister, but she also needs support because she's suffering from having to cope with his anxiety and the behavior that springs from it.

So I can't take sides. I don't mean that I "shouldn't" take sides. I'm incapable of taking sides. I can't say "this child deserves happiness more than the other." That just makes no sense.

So if you really, deeply, recognize that all beings want to be happy, and that they want to be free from suffering — when you realize that each being's happiness and suffering is as real to them as it is for you and for any other being — there can be no sense of welcoming one person being happy at another's expense. There is sympathy for all.

The thought may have crossed your mind — and it certainly crossed mine — OK, so Bodhipaksa says he can do this with his children, but his children are still his children, and is it even possible to have this kind of even-minded love for strangers, or for people we're not related to, like other people's children? Don't we have an inbuilt bias, because after all we have a great history of affection and of relatedness with those we're close to — friends, family — that we don't share with strangers? It's a good question. But when one of my kids is involved in an altercation with a child from another family — and this happens almost on a daily basis — I don't see my own children's happiness as being any different from, or important than, any other child's. So in sorting out any dispute I try to maintain an awareness that the kids on both sides are suffering and want happiness. Sure, I'm going to put effort into protecting, feeding, and clothing my own children and not with the neighbors' kids — but that's a separate issue. That's to do with the nature of the relationship we have, and the resources available to me. It doesn't mean that I think my children's happiness is more important to them than the neighbors' kids' happiness is to them.

four brahmaviharasIf you like my articles, please click here to check out my books, guided meditation CDs, and MP3s, including The Heart's Wisdom, which includes all four brahmavihara meditations.

This quality of even-minded love is inherent in all the other practices. It's very similar to the final stage of the lovingkindness, compassion, and joyful appreciation practices, where we cease focusing on individual relationships and simply imbue the mind with those loving qualities, so that any being the mind touches, whether it's because we encounter them in our lives or because we meet them in our thoughts, is touched by a loving quality. In the final stage of these practices there is a quality of even-mindedness, where we let go of our likes and dislikes. Happiness is desired by all, and suffering is something that all wish to avoid. Our likes and dislikes, our social connectedness or lack thereof, can obscure this truth, but it's a truth nonetheless. And so the practice of equanimity is to see past these obscurations in order to recognize this truth.

So upekkha is love. It's even-minded love, where we maintain an even mind towards all beings as we wish them well. It's not a cold or distant state. It's simply where we drop our biases and value all beings' happiness and wellbeing.

PS. You can see all of our 100 Days of Lovingkindness Posts here.

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