0 a calm mental state, especially after a shock or disappointment or in a difficult situation:
1 the state of being calm and in control of your emotions, esp. in a difficult situation:
Equally, it is important to explicitly recognize that neither formal education nor material wealth guarantees emotional well-being or equanimity in parenting.
Such statements make one wonder whether the equanimity that these men projected may have been their way of coping with whatever difficulties they felt.
Any desire that either (a) is phenomenologically salient, or (b) disposes the agent toward sensations that are inconsistent with equanimity is prohibited.
This distancing from self and others is taught before issues of closeness or equanimity are considered fully.
Nonetheless, it risks being interpreted as indicating equanimity in the selection of a modelling approach.
If she is disposed toward losing her equanimity, her equanimity is not guaranteed.
Self-renunciation is easier for a woman who can admit with equanimity that she is indeed an instrument played upon by another.
She must needle, cajole, and sometimes enrage her fellow citizens to overcome their acquiescence and recover their moral equanimity.