What Mettā Means
The Pali word mettā derives from the root mitta, meaning friend. Mettā is sometimes translated as “loving-kindness,” sometimes as “benevolence” or “goodwill.” What all these translations attempt to capture is a quality of warm, genuine care for the wellbeing of all beings — a friendliness that extends without discrimination, without expecting anything in return, to oneself, to loved ones, to strangers, and even to those with whom we are in conflict.
Mettā is not sentiment or surface pleasantness. At its depth, it is a radical reorientation of the heart — a turning from self-protection and reactivity toward genuine openness and care. The Buddha described the fully developed heart of mettā as “as vast as the sky” — limitless and boundless, recognizing no boundary between self and other.
The Karaṇīya Mettā Sutta
The primary canonical source for mettā practice is the Karaṇīya Mettā Sutta — the “Discourse on What Should Be Done.” It describes how a practitioner should cultivate mettā as a brahmaviharā — one of the four divine abodes. The sutta opens by describing the qualities needed before beginning the practice: honesty, gentleness, uprightness, care in speech, and moderation. These ethical qualities are the soil in which mettā takes root.
The sutta then describes the cultivation of mettā radiating outward — “above, below, and across, unhindered, without ill will, without enmity” — to all beings everywhere. The practice is sometimes described as “the sublime abiding” because a mind dwelling in mettā is, in that moment, at home in the best of all possible states.
The Five Stages of Mettā Meditation
Stage 1: Yourself
Mettā practice traditionally begins with oneself — not out of self-indulgence, but because it is hard to genuinely wish others well if we cannot do so for ourselves. Many practitioners find this the most difficult stage. Sit quietly, bring your awareness to your own heart, and gently repeat the traditional phrases: “May I be happy. May I be well. May I be safe. May I be peaceful and at ease.”
Stage 2: A Loved One
Bring to mind a person who is clearly dear to you — someone whose presence naturally evokes warmth. It may be a parent, a child, a dear friend, or a teacher. Allow the feeling of warmth to arise naturally as you picture them. Extend the same phrases: “May you be happy. May you be well. May you be safe. May you be peaceful and at ease.”
Stage 3: A Neutral Person
Now bring to mind someone you feel neutral toward — someone you neither particularly like nor dislike. This might be a neighbor you rarely speak to, or someone you pass on the street regularly. Extend the same warm wishes. This stage begins to stretch the heart beyond its habitual circle.
Stage 4: A Difficult Person
This is the most challenging and most transformative stage. Bring to mind someone with whom you have difficulty — not the most difficult person in your life, but someone you struggle with. Extend the same wishes: “May you be happy. May you be well.” You are not approving of their behavior. You are recognizing that they, too, suffer, and that your own peace is not served by harboring ill-will. When genuine mettā arises toward a difficult person, something deep in the practitioner is released.
Stage 5: All Beings
Finally, open the heart to all beings — human and non-human, visible and invisible, near and far, born and yet to be born. The Karaṇīya Mettā Sutta describes this as extending mettā in all ten directions without limit: “May all beings be happy and free from suffering.” The individual heart, in this moment, touches the boundless.
Common Challenges
Many practitioners find that mettā for themselves feels hollow or even painful at first — as though they are saying words they don’t quite believe. This is normal. Do not force a feeling. Simply repeat the phrases with as much sincerity as you can access, and allow whatever arises to be what it is. Over time, the phrases become seeds that gradually change the conditions of the heart.
Others find Stage 4 (the difficult person) provokes frustration or resistance. If the resistance is very strong, return to Stage 2 (the loved one) for a while to re-establish warmth, then try again. The practice is patient by nature — it asks only for sincerity, not perfection.