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What if “selfless caring” isn’t the ideal we think it is? We return from a short hiatus with a provocative lens on compassion, questioning why so much giving feels like loss and how burnout sneaks in when the mind keeps score. Instead of turning care into a transaction—time out for thanks in—We explore a Zen-infused view where helping is not a heroic sacrifice but the natural movement of one body. Think of the candle that lights a thousand candles without dimming, and the hand that scratches an itchy knee without applause. No fanfare. No invoices. Just the right action, arising on its own.<br><br>We trace the common stages of caring: starting with duty, graduating to “selfless” sacrifice, and finally stepping beyond the subtle duality that still divides helper and helped. Along the way we unpack the “calculating mind,” the hidden ledger that breeds resentment, and we contrast it with the lightness of flow—what athletes describe as being in the zone and what seasoned caregivers embody on tough nights. Heart Sutra insights help us unhook from rigid labels like gain and loss, while keeping both feet on the ground with clear boundaries and practical sense.<br><br>A story from a hospital cleaner reveals the quiet power of attention that includes both floor and patient—an undercover bodhisattva at work without seeking credit. We celebrate a living sangha that responds like an organism, not a spreadsheet, and we offer simple ways to practice: notice the tally-keeper, return to what’s needed, and let gratitude be free. If you’ve ever felt drained by doing good, this conversation reframes compassion as oxygen, not fuel you must burn.<br><br>If this resonated, subscribe, share it with someone who could use a lighter way to care, and leave a review to help others find the show. Got a topic you want us to explore? Send it our way.
Dr. Ruben Lambert can be found at wisdomspring.com
Ven. MyongAhn Sunim can be found at soshimsa.org