“When the stars are hidden by
black clouds,
no light can they afford.
When the boisterous south wind
rolls along the sea
and stirs the surge, the water,
but now as clear as glass,
bright as the fair sun's light,
is dark, impenetrable to sight,
with stirred and scattered sand.
The stream, that wanders down the
mountain's side,
must often find a stumbling block,
a stone within its path torn from
the hill's own rock.
So too shall you:
If you would see the truth in
undimmed light,
choose the straight road, the
beaten path.
Away with passing joys! Away with
fear!
Put vain hopes to flight! And
grant no place to grief!
Where these distractions reign,
the mind is clouded over,
the soul is bound in chains.”
—from
Book 1, Poem 7
When I
face hardship, I will almost immediately begin to doubt. I will question if
there can ever be a solution, and wonder if there are even any certain and
reliable answers to begin with. I will be tempted to walk away from endeavors,
because I worry the effort will inevitably end in failure.
This is a
weakness I have had to cope with over many years, and it was only recognizing
how it was a weakness that allowed me to begin pulling myself out of
destructive thoughts. I am facing a difficulty, so I assume it is an impossibility.
I struggle with grasping the truth of the matter, so I assume there is no
truth. This is a sort of skepticism that comes from a rejection out of despair,
not from a healthy questioning.
The
tunnel may be long and dark, but that does not mean there is no light at the
other end. My vision may be obscured, but that does not mean I should stop
looking. Remove the obstruction, I remind myself, and then there will be
something to see. Don’t throw away the book because the words appear blurred,
but focus more carefully.
In most
every case, I have learned that the obstruction comes from something within
myself, from the haziness of my own thinking, from the weakness of my own commitment.
Even when it seems that something outside of me is blocking my way, it is
usually my own position and attitude that is keeping it in the way. If a wall
hinders my view, I shouldn’t curse the wall. I should walk around it, or climb
over it.
The
things that block my way are distractions, and I go astray when I follow
something lesser at the expense of what is greater. I may be lured away by the
promise of pleasure. I may be frightened by the prospect of pain. I may be
tempted by shabby rewards from empty achievements. I may be crippled by my own
vanity.
Things
become bigger to me, more desirable or more terrifying, depending on how much
value I give them in my estimation. When I am paying the most attention to
wanting to be loved, I will neglect the act of loving. When I obsess about the
wrong others may have done, I am forgetting about doing right. The obstacle is
largely self-imposed, and moving beyond it only becomes possible by the
self-rule of staying the course.
I was
driving to work very early one morning, and as the sun rose, I noticed how foggy it
seemed outside. I squinted, slowed down, and wondered at the crazy weather. It
took a moment to realize the fogginess I saw came from a huge smudge on my
glasses, and had absolutely nothing to do with the weather. I laughed aloud at
my foolishness, just as I should do whenever I am the very one distracting
myself from the right goal.
Written in 7/2015
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