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Glossary›Karuna Meditation

Glossary

Karuna Meditation

Buddhist compassion meditation cultivating the wish for all beings to be free from suffering through systematic practice directing compassion toward oneself, loved ones, difficult people, and all sentient beings.

What is Karuna Meditation?

Karuna meditation is a formal Buddhist contemplative practice designed to cultivate compassion—the active wish for all beings to be free from suffering. Unlike sympathetic pity or passive empathy, karuna represents what the Buddha called the “quivering of the heart” that compels meaningful action to alleviate pain. The practice systematically extends compassion in widening circles: from oneself to loved ones, neutral persons, difficult individuals, and ultimately all sentient beings. Practitioners typically use silent phrases such as “May you be free from suffering” while directing attention toward specific people or groups, gradually training the mind to respond to pain with wisdom and care rather than aversion or indifference.

Origins & Lineage

Karuna appears in the earliest Buddhist scriptures as one of the four brahma-viharas (divine abodes or sublime states), alongside metta (loving-kindness), mudita (sympathetic joy), and upekkha (equanimity). The Pali Canon describes these as mental qualities the Buddha instructed disciples to cultivate both in seated meditation and daily life. The practice is mentioned in the Visuddhimagga (Path of Purification), the 5th-century CE systematic manual by Buddhaghosa that became authoritative in Theravada Buddhism.

In Mahayana Buddhism, compassion gained even greater emphasis as the essential motivation of the bodhisattva path. The 8th-century Indian master Kamalashila wrote in Stages of Meditation that “Moved by compassion, Bodhisattvas take the vow to liberate all sentient beings.” Shantideva’s Bodhisattvacaryavatara (8th century CE) includes extended meditations on karuna, beginning with contemplating the equality of self and others. Avalokiteshvara, the bodhisattva who embodies compassion, became one of the most widely venerated figures throughout the Mahayana world (known as Guan Yin in Chinese, Kannon in Japanese, Chenrezig in Tibetan traditions).

Tibetan Buddhism preserved distinct compassion practices, most notably tonglen (“sending and taking”), taught extensively by teachers including Pema Chödrön. In this variant, practitioners visualize breathing in the suffering of others and breathing out relief—a reversal of ordinary self-protective instincts.

How It’s Practiced

The traditional five-stage karuna bhavana (compassion cultivation) structure follows this sequence:

Stage One: Self-Compassion — Practitioners begin by acknowledging their own suffering and directing compassion phrases toward themselves. This foundation recognizes that genuine compassion for others requires first developing a kind relationship with one’s own pain.

Stage Two: A Suffering Person — Attention shifts to someone currently experiencing clear difficulty—illness, loss, hardship. The phrases extend naturally toward someone whose pain is visible.

Stage Three: A Neutral Person — Practitioners choose someone toward whom they feel neither strong affection nor aversion—perhaps a neighbor, store clerk, or stranger—recognizing that this person also experiences suffering.

Stage Four: A Difficult Person — The most challenging stage extends compassion toward someone who has caused harm or with whom there is conflict, acknowledging their suffering without condoning harmful actions.

Stage Five: All Sentient Beings — The practice expands to encompass all beings everywhere, often extending compassion in geographic circles: one’s home, neighborhood, city, region, world, and universe.

An alternative method from the suttas involves extending compassion outward in all directions rather than toward specific categories of people. Both approaches aim to make compassion a stable disposition rather than a conditional response.

Common phrases include: “May you be free from suffering,” “May you be at peace,” “May you find relief,” or “May your pain ease.” Unlike mantra repetition, these phrases serve as anchors for genuine emotional intention.

Karuna Meditation Today

Contemporary practitioners encounter karuna meditation through multiple channels. Insight Meditation (vipassana) centers in the Theravada tradition regularly teach compassion practices alongside mindfulness training. Teachers such as Sharon Salzberg, Jack Kornfield, and Tara Brach have made these practices accessible to Western secular audiences while maintaining their Buddhist foundations.

Tibetan Buddhist centers worldwide teach karuna within the broader bodhisattva training, often combined with analytical meditation on suffering and its causes. The Dalai Lama has written extensively on compassion cultivation, noting that “by feeling compassion for others, our own suffering becomes manageable.”

Secular adaptations have emerged in therapeutic contexts. Compassion-focused therapy, developed by psychologist Paul Gilbert, draws on Buddhist karuna principles. Kristin Neff’s research on self-compassion has brought karuna meditation techniques into educational and clinical settings, though often separated from their cosmological Buddhist context.

Guided recordings are widely available through meditation apps, retreat centers, and online dharma platforms. Week-long or longer meditation retreats commonly include dedicated periods of karuna practice alternating with other brahma-viharas.

Common Misconceptions

Karuna meditation is not the same as metta (loving-kindness) meditation, though they are closely related. Metta wishes beings to be happy; karuna specifically addresses suffering. While metta feels warm and generative, karuna often carries a quality of tender sorrow at the recognition of pain.

It is not about feeling pity or superiority toward those who suffer. The practice explicitly counters the “near enemy” of compassion—pity—which maintains separation between the one who pities and the pitied. Authentic karuna recognizes shared vulnerability.

Karuna meditation does not require believing in Buddhist cosmology, rebirth, or bodhisattva vows, though these contexts deepen the practice’s traditional significance. Secular practitioners can cultivate compassion as a psychological skill, though this represents a philosophical departure from classical Buddhism.

The practice is not passive or sentimental. The Sanskrit root kṛ means “to do” or “to act,” emphasizing that karuna naturally flows into compassionate action (karuna in action is sometimes called karuna-prajna, compassion-wisdom). Sitting meditation trains the mind; application in daily life completes the practice.

It does not mean accepting harm or abandoning boundaries. Extending compassion to difficult people does not require continued relationship or exposure to abuse; one can wish for someone’s freedom from suffering while maintaining necessary distance.

How to Begin

Beginners should start with short sessions—five to ten minutes—as compassion meditation can bring up unexpected emotions, including grief, anger at injustice, or resistance. Starting with self-compassion is essential but often most difficult for Western practitioners conditioned toward self-criticism.

Accessible written guides include Sharon Salzberg’s Lovingkindness: The Revolutionary Art of Happiness (which covers both metta and karuna) and Pema Chödrön’s Tonglen: The Path of Transformation. The Visuddhimagga provides traditional instructions for serious students willing to engage classical Buddhist texts.

Many Insight Meditation centers offer introductory courses in the brahma-viharas. Wildmind, One Mind Dharma, and similar online platforms provide guided audio sessions specifically for karuna meditation. Apps including Insight Timer feature both traditional Buddhist teachers and secular adaptations.

Retreats dedicated to the brahma-viharas create immersive environments for deepening practice. Spirit Rock Meditation Center, Insight Meditation Society, and similar centers regularly schedule these intensives.

For those interested in the Tibetan tonglen approach, Pema Chödrön’s recorded teachings and books—particularly The Places That Scare You—offer clear, psychologically informed instruction rooted in the Tibetan Buddhist lineage.

Related terms

loving kindness meditationcompassion meditationbody scan meditationtibetan book of living and dyingmindfulness based stress reduction
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