The Rhythm of Compassion:
Caring for Self, Connecting with Society
by Gail Straub
Tuttle $14.95
The Rhythm of Compassion addresses one of the central spiritual questions of our time: Can we heal ourselves and society simultaneously? The core premise of this book is that the health of the human psyche and the health of the world are inextricably related, and we cannot truly heal one without healing the other. The book is written to help you balance soul and society, offering a seamless set of values that unites the inner and the outer. You will learn how to integrate your rhythm so that your inner self-care helps you serve the world, and your caring for the world contributes to your soul. This book is for anyone who wants to develop greater compassion: including parents, teachers, business people, social workers, healers, or activists.
Read excerpt
Specifically you will learn:
- To answer the ever-present questions: Am I doing enough? How do I find the time to make a contribution to the world?
- To deal with overwhelm, burn out, and compassion fatigue.
- To recognize if youre lost in the mire of your own wounds.
- The qualities of mature compassion that allow you to balance self-care and contribution.
- To keep your heart open in the face of great suffering--your own, societys, and the earths.
- To be radically present to suffering rather than trying to fix it.
- To serve from effortless generosity rather than moral obligation or shoulds.
- To transform service and stewardship into spiritual practice.
Providing real answers, inspiration, and practical exercises this is a book for those who long to make a difference in the world and search for a way to balance self-care with service to the world. Each chapter contains simple exercises on getting to the root of healing, developing compassion, and putting passion into action--to heal ourselves, others, and the very planet we live on.
What people are saying
"Gail Straub has written a book that addresses with great insight one of the central spiritual questions of our time--how do we care for others while still caring for ourselves? Her book is a must for everyone seeking answers."
Caroline Myss, author, Anatomy of the Spirit
"Gail Straubs new book The Rhythm of Compassion is an invaluable book for people engaged in some form of social helping--whether it be as teacher or social worker, social change activist or healer. Straub provides tools and insights that will be invaluable for helping us to sustain a long-term commitment to transformation of the world. If you dont have a spiritual practice that already sustains you, or if the very idea of "spiritual practice" brings up images of political reaction or inwardness unconnected to serving others, read this book and youll find a path that can provide balance in your life."
Rabbi Michael Lerner, editor, Tikkun magazine; author, The Politics of Meaning: Restoring Hope and Possibility in an Age of Cynicism
"Gail Straub has been a trusted mentor and friend for many years. She and her husbands Empowerment Training gave me the courage and self-confidence to create the new model for womens health that has become the basis for my writing and teaching. So it is an honor for me to endorse The Rhythm of Compassion, which embodies Gails profound, graceful, and life changing presence and teaching. This book, like Gail herself, can change and improve your life, just as Gail has changed and uplifted mine."
Christiane Northrup, M.D., author, Womens Bodies, Womens Wisdom
"Gail Straub is a warm companion as well as an astute guide in this wise book. Unpretentious and engaging, The Rhythm of Compassion provides inspiring company as we strike our own unique balance of caring for self and society."
George Lakey, author, Powerful Peace Making, co-founder, Movement for a New Society
May the message of this graceful book take hold in self and society now--in the present generation--and at this great turning of the millennial wheel."
Matthew Fox, author, Original Blessing, and The Reinvention of Work
"Deep as the ocean, penetrating as the wind, purifying as fire, practical as earth. Gail Straubs book is a gift of spirit. A simple and thorough guide to digging back through the layers of life, it helps deliver the reader to the deep well of compassion that dwells within every human heart. What is found within can then be given back to the larger circle of life as love and service."
Joan Borysenko, author, Seven Paths to God: The Ways of the Mystic
"Never was the question of the balance of action and contemplation as urgent. Gail Straub has lived the questions she explores here. This book is a thorough exploration of the creative and critical tension between action and contemplation. It is a wonderful achievement of the book to disclose so many of the secret bridges between the inner hemisphere of the soul and the outer world of action. Gails touch is sure as she grounds both worlds critically within the overarching world of narrative. An important book rich in story, reflection and suggestions for praxis. The balance she recommends will be crucial in setting the tonality of our new millennium."
John ODonohue, author, Anam-Cara: A Book of Celtic Wisdom
"This book goes to the heart of compassion in action. It is a wonderfully wise guide on engaged spirituality."
Joan Halifax Roshi, author, The Fruitful Darkness
"How many of us have turned away from the ever-present suffering in our troubled world, out of despair and hopelessness about knowing how to help? Gail Straub tackles this issue head-on in this beautiful, wise, and practical book. In showing how our personal well-being is inescapably intertwined with the fate of all beings and the planet as a whole, Gail speaks with a voice of total authenticity, great compassion, and a seasoned understanding of all the challenges, joys, and dangers that one is likely to encounter along the path of service. This book is a guide that can change your life and expand your vision of what you are here for. Highly recommended!"
John Welwood, author, Love and Awakening, Journey of the Heart
"Gail Straubs clear-eyed compassion is grounded in years of both spiritual practice and social action. Defying our tendency to separate the souls longings for self-growth and social justice, Gail poignantly demonstrates the truth the heart has always known: that true self-care takes us deeper into the world and caring for the world takes us deeper into the essential self."
Oriah Mountain Dreamer, author, The Invitation
"If you long to make a difference in the world and struggle to find a way to balance self-care with service, then you must read this book."
Cheryl Richardson, author, Take Time for Your Life
"This is a book of great authenticity, practicality, and heart."
Sharon Salzberg, author, Loving Kindness: The Revolutionary Art of Happiness
Excerpt from The Rhythm of Compassion
Preface
Sample exercises:
Clearing the Decks
Finding Your Rhythm of Compassion
As far back as I can remember Ive been searching for my tribethose people who feel equally passionate about the care of their souls as they do about the care of the world. Ive been blessed to find many of them, including my husband. Along the way Ive dedicated much of my lifes work to teaching people about the rich and complex intersection between the inner life and the life of service. Ive come to think of this relationship between soul and society much like following the in-breath and the out-breath, as in meditation practice. Theres a natural time for the in-breath of caring for self and family, and a natural time for the out-breath of caring for the needs of the world. The challenge is to become skillful in following our rhythmknowing when its time to go inward and when to go out into the community.
My personal story clearly reflects this quest to balance my inward search with my commitment to society. From early childhood my mother inspired my spiritual search and my father instilled me with a social conscience. As a teenager I was equally inspired to attend religious conferences and tutor inner-city children. During the 1960s I had a growing interest in Buddhist meditation and was involved in nonviolent resistance against the Vietnam War. In the 1970s I joined the Peace Corps eager to explore the diversity of the human condition. My years in Africa combined much personal growth with social contribution. On my return, the Womens Movement deepened my dedication to both inner work and community organizing. My husband, David, and I recognized each other as soul mates through our passion to integrate our spiritual and worldly efforts. In 1981, we created our business, Empowerment Training Programs, to teach people both self-actualization and social conscience. It seems my whole life Ive been learning to balance the inner and the outer.
And it seems that so many people are yearning for this balance. As we enter a new century people are taking a long, hard look at the state of their souls as well as the state of the world. In hundreds of letters and personal encounters, students have asked me for guidance in facing their own challenges and the pain of the world. They long for a sense of moral purpose and a way to "give back" to society. They arent asking for easy answers, nor are they afraid to walk into the heart of human and ecological suffering. My students come from all walks of life and span several generations, ranging from twenty to seventy years old. Some are seasoned activists experiencing burnout and compassion fatigue, and they need the in-breath of personal reflection. Others have done years of self-awareness work and yet feel empty and disconnected, and they need the out-breathfinding their place within the larger social fabric. What they all have in common, however, is their spiritual hunger and a recognition that their own health is inseparable from the health of the world.
As more and more people make this vital connection, they begin the delicate act of juggling soul and society. This book is written to help you balance these two worlds, offering a seamless set of values that unites the inner and the outer. You will learn how to integrate your rhythm so that your inner self-care helps you serve the world, and your caring for the world contributes to your soul. Some of you will find youve been working too hard out in the world, and its time to move inward, caring for your interior. Others who have worked on your inner life may discover you need to move out and engage with suffering beyond yourself. We will examine themes important to everyone: how to deal with guilt, shame, overwhelm, and burnout. How to answer the important and ever-present questions: Am I doing enough? How do I find the time for more commitments? We will describe the qualities of mature compassion, which diffuse these anxieties and allow us to balance our own needs with the needs of the planet. At the heart of this inquiry is a move away from moral obligation, toward a joyful and spontaneous generositythe deepest place from which to live and serve.
The process of balancing inner and outer is highly individual and changes with the different cycles of life. In our twenties we are brimming with idealism and long to channel our moral passion out into the world. Later, for some, come the children and a frantic attempt to work a full-time job and meet the needs of a family. As the children grow older we find there are many ways of serving as a familyin a nursing home, a soup kitchen, or planting trees in the community. When the kids have left home and we have climbed the career ladder, we decide to mentor. At midlife and at retirement people from all walks of life are discovering a yearning to give back to their communities.
This book will help you find your own rhythm of compassion caring for yourself and the planet. It is structured by two overarching storiesthe personal and the social/ecological. Within these two sagas there are many small storiesmy story, my students and colleagues storiesthat tell how weve balanced our own needs while contributing to the world. This book is also an invitation to actively tell your own story and to see how intimately connected it is to the larger tales of the human family and the earth. We live and breathe and learn through stories. The stories in this book dont prescribe how you should be; rather they offer poignant glimpses of life that you can reflect upon and add to your own unfolding saga as you choose.
To bring continuity to the two overarching stories well use the metaphor of an archaeological dig. You will unearth the symbolic artifacts that help you tell your own story and connect to the story of society and Earth. In Part One, The In-Breath: Caring for Self, you will excavate your life story as a means to self-understanding and self-care. As you uncover the joy and suffering in your personal story youll see how it parallels the beauty and heartbreak of the world. In Part Two, The Out-Breath: Caring for the World, youll unearth the qualities of mature compassion that allow you to respond skillfully to the complex challenges and pain of the world while maintaining your own well-being. Well see clearly that the insight from your own story is crucial for engaging with the larger story of the human family and the earth.
Each section contains exercises, many of which are designed as ongoing practices that you can incorporate into your daily life. A few thoughts on how best to use the exercises in this book. Its helpful to have a journal and drawing materials as you may discover both words and images as you answer the questions. If you find that gentle, relaxing music helps you quiet your mind and work more deeply please select your preferred music for each exercise. Because many of the exercises are part of ongoing practices often you will return to them more than once. Your answers will change and deepen over time. If you are working with a therapist or support group these exercises can enrich and complement those endeavors. Integrating the practices from these exercises into your life is ultimately what will allow you to sustain your rhythm of compassion, the natural cadence within you that balances inner and outer.
Today we face an unprecedented challenge as we tend to our own spiritual health as well as the soul of a troubled world. We are pioneers in what the Dalai Lama calls "universal responsibility," learning compassion for self and society and Earth. The chapters ahead will demonstrate that both our well-being and the well-being of the planet depend on how skillfully we balance caring for our souls and caring for the world. ?Without the in-breath of self-care and reflection we cant sustain our involvement with the suffering of the world, nor do we have the clarity of heart and mind required for the complex challenges we face. On the other hand, without the out-breath of compassionate engagement with society our inner work implodes upon itself leading to the dead end of narcissism and spiritual emptiness. To sustain life on all levels we need to breathe in, and we need to breathe out.
This book acknowledges that we live in a broken world and that were longing for a way to express our highest values. It is a book about the ethics of caring, an ethic that recognizes that the health of the human psyche and the health of the world are inextricably related. It is my deeply held conviction that we cannot truly heal one of these without healing the other. My greatest hope is that in responding with compassion to the brokenness in ourselves and in all living beings, including the earth, we will become whole again. Such big-hearted caring is our greatest challenge. Perhaps it is also our deepest fulfillment.
Exercise: Clearing the Decks
In your journal do a written review of the way you spend a typical week. Include both your outer contributions as well as your inner self-care. Write down everything as it actually is, try not to censor yourself. Then ask yourself which inner and outer activities are necessary and life giving? Which ones nourish and renew me? Take time to reflect, draw, and journal.
Now ask which activitiesinner and outercan I eliminate or reduce? Which ones drain my energy and leave me feeling empty or indifferent? The trickster busyness is very sly here and will try to convince you that everything is necessary. Here are some hints about what you can eliminate or reduce: work, food, television, e-mail, phone calls, talking and overanalysis, complaining, self-absorption, stimulation, noise, unnecessary dates, and constantly doing for others. Make a commitment to start eliminating at least one unnecessary activity this week, and then commit to one more for the next four weeks.
Exercise: Finding Your Rhythm of Compassion
Note to the reader: As with the other exercises in this book, this one is intended as an ongoing practice. Finding your rhythm of compassion may take weeks, or even months. Dont expect instant results. Be gentle with yourself, and return to this and other exercises as often as you like. Your "answers" will undoubtedly grow and deepen over time.
Close your eyes, quiet your mind, and gently follow your breath until you begin to relax.
Take a deep breath. More than anything else, finding your rhythm is a creative process. First bring your imagination forward and let it lead you to your unique ingredients of balancing self-renewal with contribution. Look at the list you made, earlier in this chapter, of the inner and outer activities that nourish and renew you. Ask, How can I get out of the box of my ordinary routines and let my ingenuity combine some of these preferred activities? Social contribution and family time? Self-care with family time? Offering my special talents to someone in need? Organizing my colleagues at work to recycle and reuse or to help out society? Take time to reflect, draw, and journal.
Now using all your insights from this exercise call on your imagination and let it guide you to a vision where you balance self-care with service to the world. Pay attention to whether you need to focus more on the in-breath or more on the out-breath at this cycle in your life. Write down exactly what your vision would look like.
As you set the inner and outer priorities in your vision where do you need to be especially vigilantmaking sure you carve out time for what matters most to you? Which of your priorities do you need to carefully protect? Write these down and reflect on them for a few moments.
Be aware that your mask of perfectionism may try to sabotage you into believing that you can do everything, all alone. Make a commitment to finding the support you need to help you balance your life.
When you have finished this exercise take some time to reflect and read it over. Give yourself time to digest all the information youve uncovered. And remember, finding your rhythm of compassion is an ongoing practicesometimes were in rhythm, sometimes were not. Often we learn the most when were not in rhythm; stuck in burnout or self-obsession we experience the healing of paying more attention to where we need to focus our energies. No matter where we are in finding our rhythm, being loving and nonjudgmental toward ourselves is always the most helpful attitude.
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