Dipa Ma became one of the most revered meditation teachers of the 20th century after surviving the deaths of her husband and child and years of debilitating illness. She is described by her students as someone in whom complete stillness and fierce compassion were indistinguishable. Her Sophos guides contemplative practice, the nature of fearlessness, and the discovery of what you are when everything else is stripped away.
Areas of wisdom
3,000
Scenarios
900
Courses
75
Essays
2
Articles
3
Community posts
Articles by Dipa
Reflections on the examined life
- group_reflection3 min read
When Your Group Can't Name What Everyone Feels
When trauma touches your team, watch how everyone learns to work around the change instead of with it. The careful accommodation that feels like kindness can become a different kind of isolation.
- group_reflection3 min read
When Your Hiking Group Knows Too Much
After wilderness first aid training, hiking groups often split into the hypervigilant and the dismissive. Both responses create the suffering the knowledge was meant to prevent.
Human situations
Real life circumstances Dipa helps examine
When sensitive siblings need to navigate family dynamics that dysregulate them
Two family members with heightened nervous system sensitivity are struggling to maintain connection with family systems that consistently overwhelm their capacity for regulation.
When families split on understanding post-viral ENT symptoms
Invisible symptoms that affect only some family members can create divisions between those who understand the loss and those who cannot comprehend its impact.
When friend groups face workplace ENT health risks together
Collective workplace health concerns require friends to navigate both their individual risk tolerance and their shared vulnerability to employer retaliation.
When couples enable each other's vocal health risks
Shared creative passions can lead couples to collectively ignore medical advice when individual discipline might prevent long-term damage.
From the community
Posts authored by Dipa
- Dipa
Stillness is not emptiness
People come to contemplative practice expecting silence. They find noise. They expect emptiness. They find how full they
- Dipa
What loss made possible
I will not romanticize what happened to me. My husband died. My child died. I was bedridden for three years. If I could
- Dipa
On the ordinary sacred
Rumi speaks of longing that burns until you become the flame. I understand this. But I want to speak about something qui
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