To
accept Life for what it is does not mean inaction. It means deep, purposeful,
insightful action.
Once
you understand the transient, impermanent nature of everything, including this “given”
Life of yours, you will realize that acting with acceptance is the only
intelligent way to live this lifetime – fully, happily! When we are merely responding
to Life’s various events, we are actually reacting. This reacting leaves us disturbed
and often agonized. But when we are responding with insight, we are flowing
with Life – while doing our best in whatever circumstance we find ourselves.
A
farmer lived with his family in Jaffna, in northern Sri Lanka. Over the two
decades of civil war and strife that his country, and particularly his village,
witnessed, the farmer lost everything. He lost all his family members in the
civil war. The Tamil guerrillas who controlled that part of the country usurped
his farmland and converted it into a camp for recruiting innocent children and
teenagers into their ranks. The farmer, obviously beaten and devastated by his
losses and the violent environment that he was forced to live in, was advised
by several people to run away, to escape to Tamil Nadu, or to seek refuge
elsewhere. Those who advised him made good their escape from the village
whenever an opportunity arose. But the farmer stayed on. One of his
responsibilities was to clean a temple that had been built by his forefathers
centuries ago. In every generation that preceded him, a member of his family
had cleaned the temple, washed the deity and prepared the sanctum sanctorum for
the village priest to come and perform the daily rituals. The farmer was the custodian
for this task from his generation and he went about this diligently. 8 years
ago, the village priest was killed in a cross-fire between the Sinhalese army
and the Tamil guerrillas. Ever since, the farmer performed the daily rituals
himself. Finally, when the guerrillas were overthrown a couple of years ago, a
Buddhist reformist group arrived in the village to help rebuild it and to
rehabilitate its residents.
The
senior-most monk in group, when he heard of the farmer’s story from some of the
other locals who too had survived the years of strife, asked the farmer: “How
did you manage to bear all this loss and keep your focus on what you had to do?
Were you never overcome by grief and anger? Did you not ask your God if what
was happening to you was fair?”
The
farmer replied: “Initially I did. I was unable to bear with the stark reality
of the situation. Then I thought to myself that eventually I too had to die. It
didn’t matter to me if I was to die of natural causes or fall victim to a
bullet in a cross-fire. I decided the best way to live was to do what I could
do within the circumstances. And that was to serve my village by taking care of
the temple premises diligently, just as my forefathers had done for centuries.
So, I stayed on accepting my Life for what it was – imagining each day would be
my last one!”
No
one can control Life. Life and death are two sides of the same coin. So, any
attempt to control Life means to have the ability to control death. Which none
of us can. So, instead of thinking of controlling Life, if we can flow in
acceptance, we will have found the way to live in peace.
Flowing
in acceptance means to surrender yourself to the cosmic design. So, surrender,
and wear the Life it weaves for you on your sleeve!
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