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Glossary›Brahmaviharas

Glossary

Brahmaviharas

The four Buddhist virtues of loving-kindness, compassion, empathetic joy, and equanimity, cultivated through meditation to develop an awakened heart.

What is Brahmaviharas?

The Brahmaviharas (also called the “Four Immeasurables” or “Four Divine Abodes”) are a set of four meditative practices and emotional qualities central to Buddhist psychology and ethics. The four states are:

  1. Metta (loving-kindness) — unconditional goodwill toward all beings
  2. Karuna (compassion) — the wish for others to be free from suffering
  3. Mudita (empathetic or sympathetic joy) — joy in the happiness and success of others
  4. Upekkha (equanimity) — balanced, non-attached presence amid life’s changes

These qualities are understood not as emotional sentiments to feel occasionally, but as trainable mental capacities developed through systematic contemplative practice. In classical Buddhist teaching, the Brahmaviharas serve both as ethical foundations for lay life and as concentration practices (samadhi) that can lead to advanced meditative absorptions (jhanas).

Origins & Lineage

The Brahmaviharas appear in the earliest strata of Buddhist literature, the Pali Canon (compiled between the 3rd century BCE and 1st century CE), particularly in the Metta Sutta of the Sutta Nipata and throughout the Anguttara Nikaya. Scholars trace their conceptual roots to pre-Buddhist Vedic and Upanishadic traditions, where brahma-vihara literally means “divine abode” or “dwelling of Brahma,” suggesting these qualities aligned practitioners with the highest spiritual state recognized in ancient Indian cosmology.

Buddha Shakyamuni adapted and systematized these practices within a non-theistic framework, removing their association with a creator deity and reframing them as qualities cultivable by anyone through mental training. The most detailed classical instructions appear in Buddhaghosa’s 5th-century CE Visuddhimagga (Path of Purification), which outlines technical methods for developing each quality, addressing near-enemies (qualities that mimic but distort the Brahmaviharas) and far-enemies (direct opposites).

While rooted in Theravada Buddhism, analogous practices appear across Mahayana and Vajrayana traditions—Tibetan Buddhism’s tonglen (sending-and-taking) practice draws on karuna, while Chinese Pure Land traditions emphasize metta toward Amitabha Buddha.

How It’s Practiced

Brahmavihara practice typically begins with metta meditation. A practitioner sits in a quiet space and systematically directs phrases of goodwill—such as “May I be safe, may I be happy, may I be healthy, may I live with ease”—first toward oneself, then progressively toward a benefactor, a dear friend, a neutral person, a difficult person, and finally all beings without exception. The practice involves both verbal recitation (initially) and cultivation of the felt sense of the quality.

Karuna practice follows a similar structure but focuses on suffering: “May you be free from pain, may you be free from suffering.” Practitioners may visualize beings in distress and mentally extend relief.

Mudita practice cultivates joy by contemplating others’ good fortune, deliberately counteracting envy or comparison. Upekkha is often taught last, as it requires the stability developed through the other three; practitioners learn to maintain spacious presence without clinging to pleasant experiences or recoiling from unpleasant ones.

Traditional instructions warn against “near enemies”: attachment masquerading as metta, pity instead of karuna, exuberance rather than genuine mudita, and indifference rather than true equanimity. Advanced practitioners work with these distinctions through sustained retreat practice.

Brahmaviharas Today

Contemporary Western practitioners most commonly encounter Brahmavihara training through Insight Meditation (Vipassana) retreat centers, where week-long or month-long programs dedicate intensive practice to metta and the other qualities. Teachers such as Sharon Salzberg, who popularized metta in the West through her 1995 book “Lovingkindness,” and Sylvia Boorstein have made these practices accessible outside monastic contexts.

Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) and related clinical programs increasingly incorporate loving-kindness meditation, with peer-reviewed research documenting effects on well-being, social connection, and vagal tone. Secular adaptations often retain the structure while removing Buddhist cosmological elements.

Metta retreats now appear regularly at centers like Spirit Rock in California, Insight Meditation Society in Massachusetts, and Gaia House in the United Kingdom. Online platforms offer guided audio practices, and the techniques have been adapted into workplace wellness programs, though this commercialization prompts debate about cultural appropriation and decontextualization.

Common Misconceptions

The Brahmaviharas are not about generating forced positivity or suppressing difficult emotions. Authentic practice includes acknowledging hatred, jealousy, and indifference before working skillfully with these patterns. Metta is not self-esteem building or affirmation—it’s a systematic deconstruction of ill-will.

Equanimity (upekkha) is frequently misunderstood as detachment or apathy. The Pali term suggests balance and impartiality, not withdrawal from engagement. Classical texts emphasize that equanimity without the other three qualities can devolve into cold indifference.

The practices are also not quick-fix techniques. Traditional sources recommend months or years of sustained practice to develop genuine, unshakable qualities rather than temporary emotional states.

How to Begin

Begin with a 10-minute daily metta practice using the traditional phrases. Sharon Salzberg’s “Lovingkindness: The Revolutionary Art of Happiness” offers accessible instruction. For audio guidance, search for “metta meditation” by teachers like Tara Brach, Jack Kornfield, or Bhante Gunaratana.

Consider attending a metta or Brahmavihara-focused daylong or weekend retreat at an Insight Meditation center. These immersive experiences provide structured instruction and group support. Buddhaghosa’s Visuddhimagga, while dense, remains the authoritative classical source for serious students, available in Bhikkhu Nanamoli’s translation.

Related terms

metta meditationvipassanaloving kindnessbuddhist meditationmindfulnesskaruna
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