Doing a Little More Good—Especially When It Counts
Around this time of year, people who follow the teachings of Master Choa Kok Sui often take part in a special meditation linked to Wesak. If you’re not familiar with it—the core idea is actually down-to-earth: it’s a moment where people focus on blessing the humanity and the world, setting good intentions, and trying to be a bit better than usual.
And that ties directly into the idea of the “will-to-do-good.”
Because let’s be honest—most of us already know what “doing good” looks like. It’s not complicated. It’s those everyday choices:
- Being patient when you’re about to snap
- Helping when it’s easier to ignore
- Being fair even when no one’s checking
The tricky part isn’t knowing—it’s actually doing it consistently.
That’s where the Wesak meditation experience is different. It’s not just about sitting quietly. It’s more like a reset. A reminder. During this full moon of Taurus meditation, celebrating the birth, enlightenment, and passing of the Buddha, spiritual practitioners focus on bridging humanity with the Divine to bless the Earth with peace and compassion. A time of focusing on cleansing of ones physical body, thoughts, emotions and energetic systems so that they can act as a channel for this energy to be distributed to humanity.
You pause, you reflect, and you ask yourself: “Am I actually living this, or just thinking about it?”
And during that meditation, there’s usually a focus on sending goodwill—blessings, kindness, positive intentions—outward. Whether you take that literally or just see it as a mindset shift, it does something interesting: it nudges you to think beyond yourself.
Afterward, real life kicks back in. You’re back to emails, traffic, people being annoying. Nothing magically changes. But you might be a bit more aware. That moment where you’d usually react? You catch it. That chance to do something decent? You notice it.
That’s the will-to-do-good in action—not some big dramatic transformation, just slightly better choices, more often.
Another thing worth saying: doing good doesn’t mean being soft or letting everything slide. You can still have boundaries. You can still say no. The difference is you’re trying to act from a place of clarity instead of impulse.
And honestly, that’s probably the most practical takeaway from both the teachings and the meditation:
You don’t need to overhaul your life. You don’t need to become some ideal version of yourself overnight.
Just:
- Pay attention
- Try a bit more
- Follow through when it counts
You already know what “doing good” looks like. The real question is: How often will you choose it?
To learn more about these spiritual concepts and how they can be applied in practical, simple tools for modern day life, look no further than Pranic Healing. Pranic Healing supports transformation across every dimension of life – from health, relationships to prosperity and spiritual growth.
Start with Master Choa Kok Sui’s Achieving Oneness with the Higher Soul and explore the aspects of self realisation.
