Compassion, when one starts to look for it, whether in the gestural
curves of a stele of Vishnu or in the
graceful teaching mudras of a Bodhisaatva,
exists in many places in and around the Dallas Arts District. Compassion
is, when one starts to look for it, everywhere.
One of the first places that inspired the Study of Compassion is one block away at the Cathedral Shrine of
the Virgin of Guadalupe. Just off to the right of the main entrance, next to a
life-size statue of the Virgin, is a small vestibule for the placing of prayer
candles. At night, it glows: hundreds of candles placed lovingly on the shelves
are a manifestation of hope and devotion, compassion and love. Placing these
candles is not only a practice of a religious faith, it is an action to express
care and concern for another’s suffering. Compassion lives, twenty-four hours a
day, at our treasured downtown cathedral.
This experience, of being consumed by the candles in both sense and sight, propelled me to ask: Where do we find compassion in our daily lives and practices? And how can we find more of it? Very occasionally, a visitor might leave a small offering of a coin or two on the pedestal in front of the Ganesha or linger with the Buddha as part of their own practice, but how can we teach the complex lessons of compassion every day at the Crow Collection of Asian Art? Why does the need for compassion seem more urgent with every passing headline?
Where do we start? I wrote first to Karen Armstrong, author of Twelve Steps to a Compassionate Life and
founder of The Charter for Compassion. Since
our visit by phone, the museum has signed the Charter and joined a coalition of
more than thirty cities in North Texas committed to compassion and education.
Ms. Armstrong’s third chapter: Self-compassion
was the signpost I was looking for, and the one I needed the most. Before
we can illuminate compassion in Asian Art and teach others, we have to look to
where compassion lives in us. And in me. Where
does compassion live in the words that I speak, and the actions I make in
conversations with others? Am I authentically practicing loving-kindness when I
criticize others or speak with pretense? No. Compassion lives in the moment I
pause, take a deep breath, and send love in the place of what was there. This
reaction, the negative one, is the mindfulness bell to change the moment to a
new action: something kind and understanding. And then, when that happens, yes,
I am compassion. We all are.
❤️
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