This is a story that really struck me and I wanted to share it with you. I have gone through life trying to change everything, looking around and seeing suffering and hating it. I felt obligated to help others and be good so others could survive. I am slowly trying to master myself and awaken from this game of control that I have been losing at. I want to hold on tight to the people I love and never have to say goodbye. I don't want negative change, I always want everyone to have something to eat, be loved.. then I run into the problem of if there is "evil" in the world or "bad" people? Who do people do "bad" things or is it me? Is it my opinion of "bad" or "good" creating the whole idea and truly everything is neutral, that live ebbs and flows, comes and goes, is born and dies. Maybe coming to peace with the letting go, with the non-attachment -- even to the people and things I want to love and want to attach to... to love but let go while continuing to love. I am exploring making life into a practice of non-separation from others, not seeing things as good or bad, feeling connectedness with all and therefore nothing is lost in life because all is within me. May we all attain inner peace even if we walk and live in a world of bitterness, hate and anger. May it slide off our backs like water on a duck's feather.
When you awaken, when you understand, when you see, the world becomes right. We’re always bothered by the problem of evil.
There’s a powerful story about a little boy walking along the bank of
a river. He sees a crocodile who is trapped in a net. The crocodile
says, “Would you have pity on me and release me? I may look ugly, but it
isn’t my fault, you know. I was made this way. But whatever my external
appearance, I have a mother’s heart. I came this morning in search of
food for my young ones and got caught in this trap!”
So the boy says, “Ah, if I were to help you out of that trap, you’d grab me and kill me.”
The crocodile asks, “Do you think I would do that to my benefactor and liberator?”
So the boy is persuaded to take the net off and the crocodile grabs him.
As he is being forced between the jaws of the crocodile, he says, “So
this is what I get for my good actions.” And the crocodile says, “Well,
don’t take it personally, son, this is the way the world is, this is
the law of life.”
The boy disputes this, so the crocodile says, “Do you want to ask someone if it isn’t so?”
The boy sees a bird sitting on a branch and says, “Bird, is what the
crocodile says right?” The bird says, “The crocodile is right. Look at
me. I was coming home one day with food for my fledglings. Imagine my
horror to see a snake crawling up the tree, making straight for my nest.
I was totally helpless. It kept devouring my young ones, one after the
other. I kept screaming and shouting, but it was useless. The crocodile
is right, this is the law of life, this is the way the world is.”
“See,” says the crocodile. But the boy says, “Let me ask someone else.” So the crocodile says, “Well, all right, go ahead.”
There was an old donkey passing by on the bank of the river.
“Donkey,” says the boy, “this is what the crocodile says. Is the
crocodile right?”
The donkey says, “The crocodile is quite right. Look at me. I’ve
worked and slaved for my master all my life and he barely gave me enough
to eat. Now that I’m old and useless, he has turned me loose, and here I
am wandering in the jungle, waiting for some wild beast to pounce on me
and put an end to my life. The crocodile is right, this is the law of
life, this is the way the world is.”
“See,” says the crocodile. “Let’s go!”
The boy says, “Give me one more chance, one last chance. Let me ask
one other being. Remember how good I was to you?” So the crocodile says,
“All right, your last chance.”
The boy sees a rabbit passing by, and he says, “Rabbit, is the crocodile right?”
The rabbit sits on his haunches and says to the crocodile, “Did you
say that to that boy? The crocodile says, “Yes, I did.” “Wait a minute,”
says the rabbit. “We’ve got to discuss this.” “Yes,” says the
crocodile. But the rabbit says, “How can we discuss it when you’ve got
that boy in your mouth? Release him; he’s got to take part in the
discussion, too.” The crocodile says, “You’re a clever one, you are. The
moment I release him, he’ll run away.” The rabbit says, “I thought you
had more sense than that. If he attempted to run away, one slash of your
tail would kill him.”
“Fair enough,” says the crocodile, and he released the boy. The
moment the boy is released, the rabbit says, “Run!” And the boy runs and
escapes. Then the rabbit says to the boy, “Don’t you enjoy crocodile
flesh? Wouldn’t the people in your village like a good meal? You didn’t
really release that crocodile; most of his body is still caught in that
net. Why don’t you go to the village and bring everybody and have a
banquet.”
That’s exactly what the boy does. He goes to the village and calls
all the men folk. They come with their axes and staves and spears and
kill the crocodile. The boy’s dog comes, too, and when the dog sees the
rabbit, he gives chase, catches hold of the rabbit, and throttles him.
The boy comes on the scene too late, and as he watches the rabbit die,
he says, “The crocodile was right, this is the way the world is, this is
the law of life.”
There is no explanation you can give that would explain away all the
sufferings and evil and torture and destruction and hunger in the world!
You’ll never explain it. You can try gamely with your formulas,
religious and otherwise, but you’ll never explain it. Because life is a
mystery, which means your thinking mind cannot make sense out of it. For
that you’ve got to wake up and then you’ll suddenly realize that
reality is not problematic, you are the problem.
Story Source: “All’s Right With The World”, from Awareness, by Anthony De Mello
--Lin Chi
If you want to
perceive and understand objectively, just don’t allow yourself to be
confused by people. Detach from whatever you find inside or outside
yourself – detach from religion, tradition, and society, and only then
will you attain liberation. When you are not entangled in things, you
pass through freely to autonomy.
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