Wildmind as “right livelihood”

Old buddha statuesThe reactions I get when I tell people that I did an interdisciplinary Master’s degree in Buddhism and business studies are very telling. Once people have stopped laughing or spluttering incoherently, they usually say that they’d assumed that Buddhism and business were mutually exclusive. But in fact the concept of “right livelihood” is part of the Buddha’s core teaching, the Eightfold Path.


In Buddhist practice we’re encouraged to make every aspect of our lives an opportunity to practice mindfulness, compassion, balance, and insight. Since we all have to earn a living, our work needs to become part of our practice.


Our mission at Wildmind is to benefit the world by promoting mindfulness and compassion through teaching meditation. Almost all the events we run are free of charge. This year (our Year of Going Deeper) we’ve been running eight events, which have had an average of 1,200 participants each. These events are by donation.


We also sell guided meditation CDs, which provide the bulk of the income that allows us to teach. And because we were selling our CDs online, we started selling other meditation supplies, both to support others’ meditation practice and to subsidize our teaching.


We don’t pay ourselves much — enough to live with simple dignity, but not enough (unfortunately) that we don’t have money worries.


But our aim is always the promotion of meditation.


If you benefit from the work we do, please consider supporting Wildmind. Click here to make a one-time or recurring donation.If you benefit from the work we do, please consider supporting Wildmind. Click here to make a one-time or recurring donation.There are other aspects to right livelihood as well. We strive to be honest. The three of us who work here strive to care for each other. We have a very harmonious office! We source fair trade products as much as possible. We support local small businesses (like the woman who makes our meditation cushions and the Buddhist former prison inmate who makes some of our malas).


I’m mentioning all this because I know you have choices about what you can do with your money. You can support large businesses like Amazon that treat their workers badly, dodge taxes, and use their quasi-monopoly power to bully suppliers. Or you can support people like us — not a faceless corporation, but people trying to make the world a truly better place.


Your money is power. You have the power to choose (or least influence) the kind of world you want to live in. Your choices matter.


So when you’re buying gifts, we’d ask that you consider our online store.


We’re participating in a Triratna campaign called #ethicalchristmas, along with other Buddhist businesses. You can read about the how Evolution in the UK benefits the environment by selling recycled glass products, and how they’ve been supporting children orphaned by HIV in Thailand.


This is consumer power at work: the money of people like you being used to make the world a better place.



Related posts:
Day 8 of Wildmind’s 100 Day Meditation Challenge
A new online Wildmind community
Day 16 of Wildmind’s 100 Day Meditation Challenge


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Published on October 29, 2014 10:19
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