Saturday 7 December 2013

Seeking the truth

After years of searching, the seeker  was told to go to a cave, in which he  would find a well. 'Ask the well what is  truth', he was advised, 'and the well will  reveal it to you'. Having found the well,  the seeker asked that most fundamental  question. And from the depths came the  answer, 'Go to the village crossroad:  there you shall find what you are  seeking'.  Full of hope and anticipation the man  ran to the crossroad to find only three  rather uninteresting shops. One shop  was selling pieces of metal, another  sold wood, and thin wires were for sale  in the third.
Nothing and no one there  seemed to have much to do with the  revelation of truth.  Disappointed, the seeker returned to the  well to demand an explanation, but he  was told only, 'You will understand in  the future.' When the man protested, all  he got in return were the echoes of his  own shouts. Indignant for having been  made a fool of - or so he thought at the  time - the seeker continued his  wanderings in search of truth. As years  went by, the memory of his experience  at the well gradually faded until one  night, while he was walking in the  moonlight, the sound of sitar music  caught his attention. It was wonderful  music and it was played with great  mastery and inspiration.  Profoundly moved, the truth seeker felt  drawn towards the player. He looked at  the fingers dancing over the strings. He  became aware of the sitar itself. And  then suddenly he exploded in a cry of  joyous recognition: the sitar was made  out of wires and pieces of metal and  wood just like those he had once seen  in the three stores and had thought it to  be without any particular significance.  At last he understood the message of  the well: we have already been given  everything we need: our task is to  assemble and use it in the appropriate  way. Nothing is meaningful so long as  we perceive only separate fragments.  But as soon as the fragments come  together into a synthesis, a new entity  emerges, whose nature we could not  have foreseen by considering the  fragments alone.

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