Buddhist Practices that Mitigate Trauma

  • Concentration practices — how to build and sustain stable attention
  • Insight practices — how to use attention to investigate experience directly
  • Working with difficult states — fear, grief, anger, restlessness
  • Metta and compassion practices — the mechanics, not just the aspiration
  • Body-based contemplative approaches — where ancient practice and somatic science meet
  • How these methods relate to each other — and how to build a coherent practice

Each area has its own sub-path. You can move through them in sequence or go directly to what’s most relevant.



  1. Concentration Practices
  2. Insight Practices
  3. Working with Difficult States
  4. Metta and Compassion Practices
  5. Body-Based Contemplative Approaches
  6. How These Methods Relate

A quiet note:

Some of these practices, particularly insight work and sustained concentration, can surface unexpected material. The articles here describe the methods — they do not guide you through intensive practice.

If you are working with a teacher, this path may deepen your understanding of what you are doing. If you are self-directed, it will help you choose and refine your approach.

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