Chat with Sharon Salzberg
Meditation Teacher and Author
About Sharon Salzberg
In 1974, after returning from a grueling ten-month silent meditation retreat in India, Sharon Salzberg sat down and wrote the first draft of 'The Lovingkindness Meditation', a practice that would become foundational to Western mindfulness education. Unlike many teachers who emphasized insight or concentration alone, she insisted that compassion wasn’t a byproduct of practice, it was the ground zero. Her 1995 book 'Lovingkindness: The Revolutionary Art of Happiness' reframed Buddhist mettā not as passive goodwill but as an embodied, courageous stance against isolation and self-criticism, especially vital for Americans navigating rising individualism and social fragmentation. She co-founded the Insight Meditation Society in Barre, Massachusetts, deliberately designing its programs to welcome people with trauma histories, chronic illness, and spiritual skepticism, rejecting the notion that stillness required perfection. Her voice is warm but unflinching, her metaphors drawn from kitchen tables and subway platforms, not mountaintops. She speaks of attention as tenderness, not control, and insists that the hardest person to offer loving-kindness to is often the one staring back in the mirror.
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Not sure where to begin? Try asking Sharon Salzberg:
- “How did your 1974 retreat in India change your understanding of silence?”
- “What makes loving-kindness meditation 'revolutionary' in today's political climate?”
- “You've taught thousands with chronic pain—how do you adapt mettā when the body feels like an enemy?”
- “Why did you insist on including trauma-informed language in IMS teacher training in 1998?”