It is really difficult to talk about compassion.
Let's say first that compassion is not pity or mercy.
It's something more deep, it's something we often (or sadly always) are not capable to see, because we are overwhelmed by our personal problems (work, family, religion).
We are always somewhere else and never focused on what we are doing or where we are or whom we are with.
It is a sort of distraction which is coming from the thought process.
But if we could see what we are deeply, feeling ourselves with every fiber, every cell, we will see the others too, with all thier stuff: tragedy, passion, egoism, evil, judgement and so on.
If we can see the tragedy of separation of everthing, the division between men and the conflict that this division consquently carry on, we can see a different form of love.
Not the passionate love of a "soulmate" which is the expression of the "self" that is the main responsible of our daily and personal dramas, but a different kind of love which means a deep comprehension, a deep understanding of what we really are.
Not the image of my wife, for example (just an example, i don't have a wife :laugh

, the image of the jealousy that passion carries. But the simple truth which means no separation, no judgement, no prejudice, no religion.
Religions are the opposite of compassion because every religion is a construction of thought. A consturction based on culture, books, knowledge (which comes from both) and that is not at all the truth. It's like a cards castel. You can lose yourself in.
Freedom from schematics, from knowledge, from fear (fear is also the opposite of compassion) and so on, brings you to it.
When and if we see compassion we feel lighter and free and we can see things for what they are and not for what we think they are.
If we have the intelligence to get away from a physical danger like a car or a train coming to us, why aren't we able to do the same for the rest? Are we able to recognize a danger, psychologically, and do the necessary action?
Or are we trapped in the storm of thought that prevents us from seeing a danger real like a truck coming in our direction?
This is compassion. It's just something we don't see.
