Tonglen (Giving and Receiving Meditation)
Tonglen is a Tibetan Buddhist compassion meditation where one visualizes breathing in others' suffering and breathing out well-being and healing. Taught by Pema Chödrön and other Tibetan masters, it transforms self-centeredness into active empathy.
Overview
Tonglen (Tibetan: giving and receiving) is a Tibetan Buddhist compassion meditation from the Lojong tradition, popularized by Pema Chödrön. One visualizes breathing in others' suffering (dark smoke) and breathing out healing and well-being (white light). Research by Davidson and Singer shows compassion training reduces empathic distress while increasing well-being and resilience.
Core Principles
- Ego reversal: instead of seeking pleasure and avoiding pain, do the opposite
- Breath-visualization synchronization: inhale suffering (black smoke), exhale healing (white light)
- Concentric circles: start with self/loved one, expand to strangers, difficult people, all beings
- Sensory texture: suffering is heavy, hot, dark; well-being is light, cool, luminous
- Courage and openness: warrior training of compassion
Main Indications
- Compassion and empathy development
- Grief and loss
- Guilt and shame
- Caregiver burnout prevention
- Resentment and forgiveness difficulty
- End-of-life accompaniment
Session Structure
15-30 minutes: centering, Bodhichitta flash, texture practice, personal Tonglen, Tonglen for loved one, progressive expansion to all beings, dedication of merit.
Variations
"On the spot" informal Tonglen, self-Tonglen, Davidson's secular Compassion Meditation, combination with Metta practice.
Contraindications
- Recent untreated psychological trauma
- Severe depression with suicidal ideation
- Unstabilized borderline personality disorder
- Active psychosis
- Beginners should start gradually with experienced teacher
Medical Disclaimer
The information presented in this article is provided for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment prescription. If in doubt, always consult your physician or a qualified healthcare professional. The techniques described do not replace conventional medical treatment.