Personal Adversity

Personal adversity can expose the places where we resist reality, hold tightly to the past, or struggle to accept help. For the practitioners in this theme, Buddhist practice does not remove grief, conflict, or loss. It offers a way to meet them with greater awareness, compassion, and courage.

Bryn reflects on caring for her mother at the end of her life, learning to release expectations, accept support, and remain present with the reality of death. Grace explores how her father’s passing unexpectedly transformed her family relationships and taught her to pause, take responsibility for her emotions, and recognize that healing can emerge from suffering. Jogen shares how meditation helped him understand and gradually release long-held resentment toward his mother, allowing tenderness and genuine connection to replace the weight of the past.

Together, their stories show that adversity can become part of the path. Through sustained practice, grief can deepen love, conflict can open into forgiveness, and the experiences that once divided us can reveal our interdependence.

 

Register to explore their complete stories and discover how other practitioners have transformed personal hardship into a source of wisdom, healing, and compassion.