Being humble, yielding, in times of adversity, is
being courageous. That’s when you emerge “cleansed” and “stronger”!
There’s an ancient Chinese analogy for
understanding courage, for demystifying the popular perceptions we have of this
magical quality which we all possess but don’t summon, don’t use. Imagine a
3000-year-old ancient tree, 300-feet high. The very sight, the presence of this
tree gives strength, denotes power. But a huge storm, like Nilam, can__and often will__ uproot this tree. When the storm blows
over, the tree which, obviously logically aware of its might and power, fought
and refused to surrender, lies defeated, uprooted and felled. Whereas the
blades of grass at the foot of the tree and around it, remain un-uprooted.
Imagine the meek, easy-to-yank-out blades of grass, being able to withstand a
whole night of fury. And after yielding to the storm, allowing the storm to
‘cleanse’ them, the blades of grass are again looking fresh and dancing in the
early morning sunlight, with little drops of dew adorning their tips like crown
jewels. That’s illogical, right? The mighty tree has been felled and the meek
grass lives on, happy, blissful! And yet, this is what happens. This is what
courage is all about. The tree showed logic and operated from its head__its
knowledge of its strength and its ‘unyielding nature’ is what felled it, not
the storm really. On the other hand, the grass showed tremendous mindfulness,
‘yielding’ happily when the storm raged and finding the song in its heart back
the next morning! Between the two, the grass showed courage.
Courage is not fearlessness. Courage means
going all the way despite the fear, in spite of the unknown. The storm
represents the phase that sometimes we encounter in Life. And the tree
represents those who operate from too much logic, too much ego, too much
unwillingness to change. And the grass is the inspiration for all of us__to be
willing to let go, surrender, yield, so that our inner equilibrium remains
undisturbed despite the huge storm raging outside. Courage
is therefore choosing the way of the grass__to NOT treat Life as something to
be conquered, defeated, but to yield humbly, intelligently, and to go with the
flow!
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