Dana The Practice of Generosity
Often we are asked various questions about
"Dana". We hope this brief explanation, written by Kamala Masters and
Steve Armstrong, will begin to open your awareness more fully around this
integral part of the path of practice.
Dana is the practice of developing the qualities of generosity, kindness, and
letting go. We develop these qualities because they make fertile ground for
liberating wisdom to grow deep in our hearts. Often our practice of generosity
and kindness comes from our routine habitual tendencies, because it is the
custom, through a feeling of guilt, or simply because it's the 'nice' thing to
do. Taking the opportunity to make 'dana' a practice of awareness, brings it out
of the realm of unconscious habit, and into the realm of wise attention. In this
awareness practice of generosity, we begin to see how our lives can be elevated
when we bring a conscious awareness around opportunities to be generous, to be
kind, and to let go.
Because dana is a 'practice', with awareness and
honesty we allow ourselves to experience how liberating and happiness-producing
it feels to let go, and where it is painful because it is challenging to let go.
We call dana a practice, and that implies that we are doing just that...
practicing letting go. Which also implies that it is not easy to do sometimes.
When we practice generosity, many supportive qualities of mind are being
developed that lead us to ever-deepening happiness and freedom. We are
cultivating loving kindness because we are caring for the welfare of others. We
are cultivating compassion because we want to alleviate any suffering. We are
cultivating the understanding of interconnectedness because we realize that we
depend on the generosity and kindness of others, and they also depend upon ours.
Most of all, we are cultivating non-attachment, the ability to let go, which is
essential to understanding and experiencing freedom from suffering.
We must understand dana in terms of 'practice'. Dana is not a tip, nor is it in
exchange for receiving the Teachings of the Buddha. It is a way in which we can
express gratitude and practice our kindness, generosity and letting go with
awareness. Dana is one of the Three Pillars of the Dharma. The other two
are the cultivation of harmonious living (Sila), and the development of wisdom (Panna).
During the time of the Buddha, and up to this time in Asian countries, the
teachings begin with the cultivation of generosity, the first pillar of the
dharma. But when the Teachings of the Buddha came to the West, the teaching of
wisdom came first, without much emphasis on the two other foundational pillars
(harmonious living and generosity). However, now many of us are beginning to see
the importance of sharing the practice of dana and sila, otherwise those pillars
will be a weak in our Western culture. It is important for all Three Pillars of
the Dharma to support the continuation of the Teachings of the Buddha in the
West in a strong and balanced way.
At the end of a retreat, there is an opportunity to practice dana towards those who have supported you in your practice. You may practice dana towards the teachers who have offered the
teachings of the dharma; towards Friends of Cloud Mountain (by joining its
membership), which has offered the organizational support to bring teachers and
students together to practice; and towards the retreat center staff, who
practice the path of service through maintaining the dharma center and through
directly supporting you while you are on retreat. The offering of all these
activities is a practice of dana. The Buddha said, "The gift of the Dharma
is the highest gift." We can't even put it in quantitative terms. When one
considers how precious the Dharma is, one understands how priceless it is.
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