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The
Idiot and the Sage
by MSI
"One day, God came walking through
the world to see how his children were faring. He came upon an old
ascetic who had spent his entire adult life in severe bodily
mortification and forceful mental disciplines.
The ascetic had gained a certain degree
of clarity of his senses from his prolonged practice and realized that
the man casually walking by his cave was fully established in awareness
of the inner Divine Self. Painfully unwinding his body from his rigid
posture, the ascetic bowed before God and said, "Great-Souled One!
I perceive you are an illumined master. Pray tell me, honorable sir, how
long it will be before I realize my inner Divine Nature?"
God smiled warmly and laughingly
replied, "You are doing well, my son! At your present rate of
progress, you will realize your inner Divine Self with just one more
lifetime of similar effort."
The ascetic, terrified, in shock,
cried, "Another lifetime of this horror? How can I endure this
boredom, this agony, this pain for another day, let alone another
lifetime! How horrible! You have cursed me this day! Be gone from this
place, you imposter! Never would I believe such as you."
God smiled lovingly at him and walked
on. Soon He came upon an idiot splashing in the river, laughing and
singing. This man’s primary activity every day was to cry out,
"God! How I love God! God! I love God! God!" This foolish one
never took the slightest care for his physical needs, never cared if he
were fed, clothed, housed. He never noticed if he were clean or dirty,
hot or cold, wet or dry. He might have been locked up in a padded cell
in our modern age, but in those days, people saw that he was harmless
and therefore tolerated him and occasionally gave him a crust of bread
or some old, half-rotten fruits or vegetables to eat.
The idiot was attracted by the radiance
of this handsome stranger, came up out of the water, bowed before him
and said, "How wonderful! God has sent by a Great-Souled One. I
have been enjoying myself so much of late I had nearly forgotten I have
a goal. I began my quest to realize enlightenment long ago but of late
have become distracted by this constant joy welling up inside. Seeing
you just now reminded me of my journey and I was wondering if you could
tell me how long it will be before I realize my inner Divine
Nature?"
God smiled warmly and laughingly
replied, "You are doing well, my son! At your present rate of
progress, you will realize your inner Divine Self with just seventy more
lifetimes of similar effort."
"Seventy lifetimes of similar
effort!" cried the idiot with perfect joy. "How wonderful!
What a flawless boon you have today bestowed upon me, Great Lord!"
The idiot was so filled with joy at the prospect of another seventy
lifetimes of such bliss that the last doubt fled from his mind; his last
question melted into the joy that was his life; his ignorance was
irrevocably crushed; he attained the highest state of enlightenment
instantly."
We on Earth commonly think there are three kinds of time: the past, the
present and the future. We often guide our actions largely on the basis
of regret for our past actions and missed opportunities or from concern
for our future well-being. The problem with living for the future is
that the future never arrives. It doesn’t exist except as an invented
concept. There is only NOW—now extends in all places and at all times.
The past does not exist, either: there was, before this instant, an
unbroken succession of Now moments; there will be in the future an
unbroken succession of Now moments. Now, the present, is the only time
there is, the only time there has ever been, the only time there will
ever be.
This is why it is so absurdly easy to
gain enlightenment—the Infinite light is already here, now, within the
grasp of each of us. Nothing more is required than ceasing the attempt
to live in the past or the future. The Sun is always shining; we have
only to stop identifying with the clouds passing in front of it to be
free.
The unhappy ascetic was not enjoying
the present; he was continually hoping to realize his Self in the
future. Therefore the prospect of even one more moment of such torture
was agonizing. The happy idiot, on the other hand, thoroughly enjoyed
each and every instant—he was filled with joy at the thought of
continuing his ecstatic present. The additional rush of joy through his
already bliss-saturated nervous system was more than the last of his ego’s
weakened belief system could withstand—the old limitations in his
mind, already largely discarded, were destroyed—the Infinite light of
the Now burst through him, upward and out, transforming his life
permanently. His eyes fully opened for the first time; he recognized God
standing before him. The newly enlightened one bowed before his Lord and
cried his gratitude and joy to the Source of all that is.
We human beings have an unfortunate
habit of unnecessarily complicating our lives. Love is supremely simple,
absolutely fundamental, requires no training whatsoever, is permanently
transforming, increases more and more as it is given away, and is the
greatest secret in the entire Universe. Like most great secrets, this
particular one is displayed openly, as if it were valueless. It is here
for all who wish to have it; there is no limited supply; it increases
from age to age and yet is infinitely full always.
What stands between any of us and the
full experience and expression of love? In fact, nothing at all. Love is
the most natural expression of everyone’s life, the one fundamental
constituent of everything, the innermost basis of every feeling of every
being in created time. It is simpler to experience love for everyone
than to experience any dark emotion, any feeling of hatred or fear. Why,
then, is the world apparently dying from lack of love? What abuse of
industry, government, disease, crime or neglect could not be cured by
just a drop more comprehensive vision inspired by the smallest increase
of love? The world is being strangled by the absence of love! Where the
all-embracing wonder of life, where the overpowering joy in this? Why is
the world so sick?
I know a garden in Charlotte: small,
little more than three acres, but filled with beauty everywhere. The
couple that created it bought the lot in 1927—at the time, it was
treeless, a red clay-baked North Carolina cornfield; now their Wing
Haven is considered one of the loveliest gardens in the region. It is a
garden famous not only for its inherent loveliness, but also for the
multitudes of wild birds that live and visit there. The founders’
manifest love transformed this onetime barren field into a little slice
of wonder.
This couple was not inherently
different from anyone else, with the single exception that they had a
deep intuitive grasp of one of the most fundamental principles of the
enlightened—if you want to experience love, give love.
This Earth is not loveless. On the
contrary, it is saturated with love overflowing everywhere at all times.
Those who are desperately lonely and love-starved are living in an
artificial hell of their own creation. They are lonely and love-starved
only because they demand that everyone else prove they love them first.
I once had a friend, I’ll call him
Mike Little, who was talented in many areas: he was a talented classical
guitarist, a great dancer, a brilliant conversationalist, a gifted
astrologer. But Mike could never maintain a relationship with a person
of the opposite sex for more than a few days. I asked him once why he
thought this was so. His answer was, I thought, quite revealing:
"No one can love better than I can. I know this! But I’m waiting
for the perfect girl before I reveal my love."
"How will you recognize her?"
I asked, fascinated. "Does she have a particular appearance?"
"Oh, no, nothing superficial like
that. The perfect girl will love me first! She will be willing to give
herself to me completely. She will open her heart fully to me. Such a
hidden diamond she will get in me! I know how deeply I can love. She
will be so lucky!"
How often do we think in similar ways?
"If only he would stop smoking/drinking/doing drugs/get a regular
job/be nicer to me/love my mother more/be nicer to my children—why
then, I would give him my whole heart." It is easy to see, when it
is presented like this, how completely upside down this kind of thinking
is. Love second, you will wait forever to be loved. Love first, you will
be loved. This is absolutely guaranteed.
There is another kind of thinking,
closely allied to it. This kind demands proof of love to love back. It
usually goes like this: "Jacki said she loves me. But if she truly
loves me, she would..." and then we fill in the blanks with
whatever it is we want from Jacki or believe Jacki should do for us to
demonstrate her love. We have a deeply rooted habit of defining others’
love for us in specific ways that fit neatly with our romantic ideal,
which is a creation of that part of our minds that likes to dwell in
fantasies and/or the future.
But there are no absolute standards of
behavior. Being loved by someone does not imply that the lover must
conform to any particular rigid standards we might desire. On the
contrary, if the love is mutual, freedom of expression naturally
increases. Many people in our society feel that being in love means
putting the partner in a cage—controlled, defined, restricted, bound.
This most often happens when the male member of the relationship
overshadows and dominates the female. But occasionally it is seen in
reverse.
There could be a great many reasons for
desiring and attempting to enslave another, but typically this behavior
results from a sense of insecurity— "Mary would find someone else
if I didn’t watch her closely." "John would betray me if I
didn’t keep him on a tight leash." And so forth.
Again, a sense of insecurity can have
many different causes, based on previous experience: "My father was
killed on the freeway when I was sixteen." "My mother left me
for three weeks with my aunt when I was four." "My wife ran
away with a vacuum cleaner salesman." The list is as long as the
life experiences of the human race. But any sense of insecurity always
reduces down to a deep-seated sense of unworthiness.
If I don’t feel I am worthy of love,
I will structure my life (quite unconsciously) to prove that I am not
loved. Again and again, I will demonstrate the truth of my own
self-image. Then I will be able to say to others and to myself,
"See, it didn’t work out because he/she just didn’t love me
enough. It’s not my fault. I am quite innocent. He/she betrayed
me."
Taking personal responsibility for the
parts of our lives that don’t work to our satisfaction can be one of
the most difficult parts of assuming control of our own destiny. Yet
this is also one of the most important. If we condemn anyone else for
anything at all, we are projecting our own guilt and lack of worthiness
onto the world. It is difficult or impossible to see anything outside
that does not exist inside. Rabbits live in a rabbit world, not a bird’s.
Dogs live in a Dog Universe, not our human one.
If an angel comes to your door and you
don’t believe in angels, what will you see? If you believe that
everyone is out to get you, how will you greet anyone you don’t know?
If you believe everyone is basically untrustworthy, how can you ever
hope to trust anyone? In large cities, we walk by thousands of strangers
every day. We have become so inured to their presence, we frequently don’t
even glance at them. They could be smiling with joy to see us, but we
don’t look up from our private world to greet them. This is not just
true on busy pedestrian thoroughfares; it carries over to our silent and
sparsely populated pathways in our public parks. We are walking alone;
another person approaches us; we pass each other without sharing a
single glance or a word. How often this occurs every day! Of what are we
so terrified? Is every stranger a criminal? If we dare to smile or take
a dangerous plunge and say, "Hello!" are we going to be mugged
or raped on the spot? We act as if we believe this were so.
The basic principle at work is that the
Universe perfectly reflects back to us our beliefs and understandings
about life. This is partially a result of our human physiology—we don’t
see as well as hawks, smell as well as dogs, hear as well as dolphins—but
the range of the senses operating within our own species is primarily a
result of our belief systems and the experiences we have accumulated
based on those belief systems.
Love
and Fear
There are only two roots to all our
emotions: love and fear. Love is the natural state of human life; fear
is the means the ego uses to control and possess the world. They cannot
simultaneously coexist: when love increases, fear evaporates—since it
was never real, it vanishes in the Sun of perfect love. When fear
increases, love hides and bides its time until the individual opens
again to Truth. It can never be destroyed, but since the human is
endowed with certain inalienable rights (including perfect free will) if
the ego insists on illusions, love will as if disappear from the mind
until the personality chooses again for Reality.
The ego wants to own everything; this
denies the invincibility of surrender, the handmaiden of love. Love is
universal and freely given, yet the ego insists that it be owned, that
it obey the ego’s stern dictates of when, how and where. In this, the
ego will forever fail, for it is fighting the wrong battle. Love can
never be limited or exist in separation or isolation. Only by
renunciation of the desire to manipulate and control will the ego melt
into the Universal Self of Infinite, Eternal Love.
It is not by attempting to force
feelings to change that they change. Emotions evolve only when they are
accepted exactly as they are. The key to doing this is to stop judging
them. Only the ego defines good and bad. This is its primary tool of
control: if some desires are good and some are not, life is going to
remain split. By separating our feelings from the ego’s belief
systems, we can use their powerful energy for personal growth.
There is a story from the Ishayas that
illustrates this point. The monks were attacked from time to time by
hordes of demons when they were deep in meditation. No matter how hard
they worked to be free of them, there was no escape. It was only when
they stopped judging them as evil that they would vanish or transform
into celestial nymphs or angels. It was only the monks’ interpretation
of reality that was giving them trouble. This recognition is a necessary
stage of evolution.
As consciousness grows, we learn that
whatever comes to us is our own creation, none other’s. With the dawn
of this understanding, we stop wasting our energy fighting, resenting or
repressing what we created. This enables us to use the energy of our
desiring to accomplish much faster growth.
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