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Glossary›Karuna

Glossary

Karuna

Karuna is the Sanskrit and Pali term for compassion, particularly the active wish to alleviate suffering in others—a central virtue in Buddhist ethics and meditation practice.

What is Karuna?

Karuna is the Sanskrit and Pali word for compassion—specifically, the active aspiration to relieve suffering in all beings. Unlike sympathetic pity or emotional identification with pain, karuna is a deliberate, courageous quality of heart that meets suffering with clarity and the intention to alleviate it. In Buddhist psychology, karuna is counted among the brahmaviharas (sublime abodes or divine dwellings), four interrelated mental states cultivated through meditation: metta (loving-kindness), karuna (compassion), mudita (sympathetic joy), and upekkha (equanimity). While metta wishes happiness for all beings, karuna responds specifically to suffering—recognizing it, dwelling with it, and acting to reduce it.

Karuna is not an abstract ideal but a trainable capacity developed through formal meditation practice and ethical conduct. It arises when a practitioner perceives the universality of suffering (dukkha) and responds not with aversion or overwhelm, but with the resolve: “May you be free from suffering. May I contribute to the end of this pain.” This makes karuna inherently practical and relational; it drives bodhisattvas in Mahayana Buddhism to postpone final liberation until all sentient beings are freed from suffering.

Origins & Lineage

Karuna appears in the earliest Pali Canon suttas—the Metta Sutta (Sutta Nipata 1.8) and related discourses outlining the brahmaviharas—dating to approximately the 5th century BCE. The Buddha taught karuna as both an ethical orientation and a meditation object: practitioners would systematically radiate compassion toward beings in distress, beginning with those suffering visibly and expanding outward. The Visuddhimagga (Path of Purification), Buddhaghosa’s 5th-century CE Theravada compendium, details karuna meditation (karuna-bhavana) as a structured contemplative practice pairing mental phrases with visualization of suffering beings.

In Mahayana Buddhism, karuna became inseparable from the bodhisattva ideal. The Lotus Sutra (1st century CE) and the writings of Nagarjuna (2nd century CE) frame compassion as the engine of enlightened activity—prajna (wisdom) sees emptiness, and karuna ensures that insight fuels compassionate engagement rather than detachment. Avalokiteshvara (Chenrezig in Tibetan, Guanyin in Chinese, Kannon in Japanese), the bodhisattva of compassion, embodies karuna and is among the most widely venerated figures in Mahayana traditions. Tibetan Buddhism amplifies this through tonglen (sending and taking) practice, attributed to the 11th-century master Atisha, in which practitioners breathe in others’ suffering and breathe out relief.

Karuna also appears in Hindu bhakti devotion and Jain ethics, though Buddhism gave it systematic contemplative form.

How It’s Practiced

Karuna meditation typically follows a structured sequence. The practitioner begins by bringing to mind a person or being who is clearly suffering—illness, loss, fear, injustice—and silently repeats phrases such as “May you be free from suffering,” “May you be free from pain,” “May you find relief.” The phrases serve as anchors while the meditator cultivates the felt sense of compassion, a warm, responsive openness in the heart region. After establishing stability with one suffering being, the practice expands concentrically: to other individuals, groups, strangers, difficult people, and ultimately all sentient beings.

In Tibetan tonglen, practitioners visualize suffering as dark smoke, inhale it fully, and exhale bright light or relief. This reverses habitual self-protection and trains the mind to meet pain without flinching. Zen practitioners may encounter karuna implicitly in koan work or the bodhisattva vow recitations, while Theravada monks often pair karuna meditation with reflections on the body’s fragility and the pervasiveness of old age, sickness, and death.

Physically, karuna practice may accompany gentle hand placement over the heart, slow breathing, and a downward, softening gaze. The emotional tone is tender but not sentimental—it acknowledges suffering without collapsing into despair.

Karuna Today

Contemporary seekers encounter karuna primarily through insight meditation (vipassana) retreats, Tibetan Buddhist centers, and secular mindfulness adaptations. Teachers such as Pema Chödrön, Sharon Salzberg, and Tara Brach have brought karuna meditation into mainstream Western practice, often pairing it with self-compassion techniques adapted by psychologist Kristin Neff. Karuna Reiki, a modern form of energy healing developed by William Rand in the 1990s, borrows the term but diverges significantly from Buddhist meditation—it uses symbols and attunements rather than contemplative training.

Online platforms, apps (Insight Timer, Ten Percent Happier), and drop-in meditation classes frequently offer guided karuna meditations, often labeled “compassion practice” or “loving-kindness and compassion.” Retreat centers such as Spirit Rock (California), Gaia House (UK), and Plum Village (France) dedicate weeks to brahmaviharas practice, and Tibetan monasteries worldwide incorporate karuna as foundational training for monastics and laypeople alike.

Common Misconceptions

Karuna is not pity. Pity reinforces separation and often carries condescension; karuna recognizes shared vulnerability and the universality of suffering. It is also not the same as empathy or emotional overwhelm—karuna includes discernment and stability, cultivated alongside equanimity (upekkha) to prevent burnout or “compassion fatigue.”

Karuna does not require fixing or rescuing. The intention is to relieve suffering if and when possible, but the core practice is the cultivation of the wish itself—the repeated turning of the heart toward pain rather than away. This makes karuna accessible even when external conditions cannot change.

Finally, karuna is not inherently religious. While rooted in Buddhism, the practice is secular-compatible and has been adapted in clinical psychology, social justice work, and palliative care without doctrinal commitment.

How to Begin

Beginners can start with a simple 10-minute daily karuna meditation. Sit comfortably, bring to mind someone you know who is suffering, and silently repeat: “May you be free from suffering. May you be held in compassion.” Notice sensations in the chest and breath. Sharon Salzberg’s Lovingkindness: The Revolutionary Art of Happiness and Pema Chödrön’s The Places That Scare You offer clear instructions. Guided audio meditations by Tara Brach (available free at tarabrach.com) and on the Insight Timer app provide accessible entry points. For in-person learning, seek vipassana or Zen centers that teach the brahmaviharas, or attend a karuna-focused retreat at Spirit Rock or Insight Meditation Society.

Related terms

zen buddhismthree jewelsom meditationheart chakrapema chodron
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