Hi zavk
What's wrong with "wishing someone well"?

zavk wrote:In light of how much emphasis is given to metta and how much I have felt the positive effects of metta myself, I don't wish to simply reduce it to just another 'good wish'.
If we simply explain metta as a 'good wish', what if someone retorts, 'How is that different from wishful, infantile 'New-Age' thinking?'
)We as Buddhists, however, I assume know that "all experience is preceded by mind, led by mind, made by mind". Before speech and action, there is intention. Ideally, right intention. Isn't metta part of right intention, and thereby one step on the eightfold middlepath?
thecap wrote:On the other hand, what do you wish to accomplish by (over-)analyzing it? Do you feel like having to explain yourself as a Buddhist?
Perhaps that is because this is all that can be done, regardless of its efficacy or lack thereof? Also, wouldn't generating these feelings in yourself somehow leave a "positive residue" that subtly shows when next you do have actual communications with the recipient of the directed metta? No matter what, trust your instincts.I have certainly felt the need to 'intervene' in the situation of others by directing metta to them. I 'intervene' out of a certain assumption that my practice would somehow benefit the person in question.

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