Tag Archives: daily metta

“Should I have said that?”–Daily Metta

August 21: “The reader can have no idea of the restraint I have to exercise from week to week in the choice of topics and my vocabulary. It is a training for me.” –Gandhi (Young India, July 2, 1925)   Gandhi exercised a great deal of self-discipline in all areas of his life, including the… read more

“Our Nonviolent Earth”–Daily Metta

August 20: “I want to show that what is useful can also be beautiful.” –Gandhi (Harijan, April 7, 1946)   As I took a long walk this evening with my neighbor’s dog, Fancy, beneath the oaks and redwoods, I thought about nature, her forces, her weather, and how it is often described as violent. I’ve… read more

“A glance at Gandhi on Marxism”–Daily Metta

August 19: “If you believe in true communism, you would have to give up violence.” –Gandhi (Mahadevbhai ni Diary, vol. 19) Both men of the 20th century, Gandhi and Marx sought the well-being of the world, and the Socialists and Gandhi worked together for various efforts, including the effort to prevent partition.  But there were… read more

“The Moral Dilemma”–Daily Metta

August 18: “Moral authority is never retained by any attempt to hold onto it. It comes without seeking and is retained without effort.” –Gandhi (Young India, January 29, 1925) This evening I read a message from the Sierra Club’s Executive Director on why they do the work they do, and this is what it came… read more

“Is nonviolence selfish?”–Daily Metta

August 17: “Selflessness may be the purest form of selfishness.” –Gandhi (Collected Works of Mahatma Gandhi, vol. xxvi) While there is much selflessness in the world today, thank goodness, there is nothing about nonviolent action that guarantees selflessness or altruistic intent. Most people would actually admit to engaging in such action for some personal reason:… read more

“Gandhi on Independence Day”–Daily Metta

August 15: “In concrete terms, the independence should be political, economic and moral.” –Gandhi (Harijan, May 5, 1946) When the flag was raised on a free India on August 15, 1947, Mahatma Gandhi was not a part of the celebrations and he did not want to be. In many ways, the “victory” to him was… read more

“Civil Disobedience and Conscience”–Daily Metta

August 14: “To put down civil disobedience is an attempt to imprison conscience.” –Gandhi (Young India, January 5, 1922) Gandhi rarely spoke of rights, always opting in favor of duties from which our rights emerge. This, according to Sushila Nayyar, is due to the curious fact that Sanskrit has no word for “rights.” It is… read more

“Tend and befriend”–Daily Metta

August 13: “Having flung aside the sword, there is nothing except the cup of love which I can offer to those who oppose me.” –Gandhi (Young India, April 2, 1931) When there is a conflict, the brain goes into an instinctual response pattern. We’ve all heard of it. (Can you guess?) Fight or flight!  It… read more

“Nonviolent Response to Stealing”–Daily Metta

August 12: “Not to think badly of anyone, not to wish ill to him though we have suffered at his hands, not to hurt him even in thought, this is an uphill task, but therein lies the acid test of nonviolence.” –Gandhi (Ashram Observances in Action) When Gandhi was a little boy he stole money… read more

“Nonviolence: more than a word”–Daily Metta

August 11: “Nothing that is violent can be of lasting benefit to mankind [sic].” –Gandhi (Gandhi’s Correspondence with the Government 1942-1944) More times than I can count, I have have been engaged in passionate discussions around replacing the word ‘nonviolence.’ Why should we define ourselves negatively?’ People ask; should we really be talking about a… read more