There’s a
story of Gautama, the Buddha, that I remember. One day the Buddha comes to his
morning discourse carrying a handkerchief. It appears to be a costly one –
perhaps some king has presented it to him. But everyone knows he does not
accept such gifts, so everybody is looking, and thinking, what is the matter
with the Buddha?
Gautama comes
and sits, and keeping the handkerchief in his hand, says to his followers,
”Look very carefully.”
They all
look. There is nothing to look at. It is just a beautiful silken handkerchief.
And then the Buddha starts putting knots in the handkerchief - he puts five
knots in it. There is a curious silence in the hall… everybody is simply
watching what he is doing. Then the Buddha asks them, “Is this the same
handkerchief, the same one that I had brought with me, or is it a different
handkerchief?”
Sariputta,
one of his chief disciples, stands up and says, “Why are you joking with us, O!
Holy One? This is the same handkerchief” The Buddha says, “Sariputta, think again
– because the handkerchief that I brought had no knots, and this one now has
five knots. How can this be the same?”
Sariputta immediately
sees the point. He says, “I am sorry. I do understand. Although it is the same
handkerchief now it is in a very knotted condition – such as a man in anguish.
He is the same man; a man in suffering is the same man that was born but now,
one who is in knots.”
The Buddha replies,
“Exactly. That’s what I want to show to you: that the man who is suffering is
not different from Gautama, the Buddha. I am just a handkerchief without knots.
You are a handkerchief with five knots.”
Of course the
Buddha’s philosophy is of five basic problems that trouble man: violence,
greed, untruthfulness, unawareness, and the ego. Each of us end up adding our
own knots to these basic five – we may add fear, jealousy, anger, guilt, suffering,
sorrow and several such. When our problems, the ones we have created, land us
in a knotty mess, it is not a time to think of an end-game. You may be losing
something material, but don’t think of losing the game of Life. Awaken instead
to a higher level of consciousness through the experience. You may have been
growing in Life so far, but by being a willing loser, you can actually grow up!
When you hit a dead end, you can actually wake up from that impact. Think of
the Buddha’s handkerchief in such times. And instead of hating that moment, be
willing to be destroyed by Life. Be ‘fanaa’
about Life. And then watch the magic. You will actually become free. Because
when you realize that you are responsible for your knots, for your problems,
and are willing to live__and die__with the Life that’s coming at you, to you,
you will really start living!
Fabulous post. It is said losing to oneself in the fight is most difficult. This is the explanation
ReplyDeleteKeep up the good work.
"How many of us remember suffering when we were infants, before we turned 5, for example? Do you remember worrying, being anxious, angry, hurt, insulted or in grief?"
ReplyDeleteDo you remember things what you did when you where below 5? I felt it was a wrong example. Sure they do suffer, else they don't cry.
I have been reading your post on an off. Love it.