V
Vouthon
Guest
Could someone tell what the definition of “Upekkha” is?
I have been led to believe that it connotates a state of equanimity, akin to the apatheia of the Desert Fathers and the holy indifference of the Western mystics, a state in which one has freed oneself from ties and attachments and is no longer swayed by outside influences ie one remains calm even in the face of adversity, is not depressed when trying times arise or overly elated when apparently good things occur but rather maintains an inner poise and sense of stability, as summed up by Eckhart:

I have been led to believe that it connotates a state of equanimity, akin to the apatheia of the Desert Fathers and the holy indifference of the Western mystics, a state in which one has freed oneself from ties and attachments and is no longer swayed by outside influences ie one remains calm even in the face of adversity, is not depressed when trying times arise or overly elated when apparently good things occur but rather maintains an inner poise and sense of stability, as summed up by Eckhart:
“…True detachment means a mind as little moved by what happens, by joy and sorrow, honor and disgrace, as a broad mountain by a gentle breeze…Now all thoughtful people should take note. No one is more cheerful than the one that lives in the greatest detachment. The teachers praise love most highly, as Saint Paul does when he says: “In whatever tribulation I may find myself, if I have not love, I am nothing.” But I praise detachment more than all love…I call that mental satisfaction when the summit of the soul is not brought so low by any joys as to be drowned in pleasure, but rises resolutely above them. Man enjoys mental satisfaction only when creaturely joys and sorrows are powerless to drag down the topmost summit of the soul…To the just man -the fully-transformed man- nothing gives more pain or distress than when, counter to justice, he loses his equanimity in all things. How so? If one thing can cheer you and another depress, you are not just: if you are happy at one time you should be happy at all times. If you are happier at one moment than another, that is not just…And so, if you were to ask a genuine man . . . ‘Why do you act,’ if he were to answer properly he would simply say, ‘I act because I act.’…nor should one work for any ‘Why,’ neither for God nor one’s honor nor for anything at all that is outside of oneself, but only for that which is one’s own life within oneself…The just man does not love ‘this and that’ in God . . . he wants nothing and seeks nothing: for he has no why for which he does anything, just as God acts without why and has no why. In the same way as God acts, so the just man acts without why; and just as life lives for its own sake and asks for no why for which to live, so the just man has no why for which to act…Some people want to have their own way in all things–that is bad, there is fault in that. Those others are a little better who truly want what God wants and don’t want anything against His will, but if they should fall sick they would wish it were God’s will that they should be better. These people, then, would rather that God willed according to their will than that they should will according to His. This may be condoned, but it is not right. The just have no will at all: whatever God wills, it is all one to them, however great the hardship…The lucky man who is attachment-free and therefore content with whatever befalls him–sickness or health, weal or woe–must be very comfortable indeed. For the will that things should be otherwise simply does not arise. Abegescheidenheit denotes such an easy restfulness: it represents the affective sense of being uninvested in external and conditioned things. It denotes one’s ‘detachment’ from personal aggrandizement and the insidious will to better oneself…It is a strange and desert place, and is rather nameless than possessed of a name, and is more unknown than it is known. If you could naught yourself for an instant, indeed I say less than an instant, you would possess all that this is in itself. But as long as you mind yourself or anything at all, you know no more of God than my mouth knows of color or my eye of taste… There, in that most inward place, the light is satisfied, and there it is more inward than it is in itself, for this ground is a simple stillness which is immovable in itself…”
Is this a similar/Catholic equivalent to “Upekkha”?***- Meister Eckhart (c. 1260 – c. 1327), Catholic mystic & Dominican priest ***