Imagine being fully alive, awake and engaged. Imagine utilizing body, mind and spirit in a rapturous three part harmony that sets feet tapping, hearts beating and souls soaring. Walking together from the self to the selfless, this is one pilgrimage to the heart of the infinite. [about the walk]

Lion and the Goat

Posted on February 26, 2005 in pilgrim-abad.

Goggles. It used to be my favorite metaphor. If you wear green goggles, everything looks green.

While we were led by a drunk driver, inspiration struck: let's walk 12 kilometers to visit a 'Vedanta' nun, day after tomorrow. Walk, so we can remove some of our goggles on the way. It's one thing to get in a car, make a visit, and zoom back. And quite another to walk in silence, struggle with the heat, become dehydrated and arrive without an appointment.

And so went.

Swami Samananda received us with her ultra-peaceful presence. She asked about us and without hesitation, responded to all our questions clearly and pragmatically. No matter how tired you were, the strength of her serenity would lift anyone up. Among other blessings, she gave us a story by Anthony De Mello:

While looking for food, a hungry young man sees a lion with prey. Under a nearby tree, he sees a goat starving for food. In a surprising move of kindness, the lion drops off some of his food for the hungry goat. Seeing this, the young man thinks to himself: "The Universe is amazing! If it provides for that goat, it will surely provide for me." He goes home and sits there, figuring that food will come to him. After a few days, a wise man drops by his home and remarks: "Fool, you have to be like the lion, not the goat. Get up and start giving!"



Comments ...


   
1.
On Mar 08, 2005 Tristan wrote:

What food do both lions and goats eat? Imagine the goat wondering what to do with this piece of meat -- it may even have been a piece of one of his relatives! Or does a goat that's so weak that he isn't running when he sees a lion turn carnivorous out of necessity?

The sheer absurdity of using this story to illustrate "giving" is hilarious. But it's also truly saddening to see people reduced to communicating at this level -- perhaps it indicates having given up on real meaning a long time ago.

(The lion analogizes to some human characteristics: he gives a goat meat instead of what the goat really needs. And he attempts to save one animal from death right after killing another.)



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