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Friday, August 6, 2010

Zen Stories: Cliff Hanger and a dog's bone

I have been relishing myself on some good content on Zen and Buddhism and so would be sharing some stories which i liked.. These stories are widely discussed and largely available in many sites including the internet, but wanted to share the ones i really liked here... 


Cliffhanger


One day while walking through the wilderness a man stumbled upon a vicious tiger. He ran but soon came to the edge of a high cliff. Desperate to save himself, he climbed down a vine and dangled over the fatal precipice.



As he hung there, two mice appeared from a hole in the cliff and began gnawing on the vine.



Suddenly, he noticed on the vine a plump wild strawberry. He plucked it and popped it in his mouth. It was incredibly delicious!

--

The Zen story "Cliff Hanger" has Indian equivalents in 2 different versions:

Version 1: In the same story the Indian version has a snake thats coming at him in the tree when he is hanging and a crocodile waiting for him down below. The story highlights that how we as human are engaged in short term pleasures of life in the midst of "Uncertainties of life".

Version 2: Dog's bone
I like this version very much. A bone does not have any meat or blood in it for any dog to relish on it. Still dogs salivate at the sight of bones. This is because when dogs try to eat the bone, the bone breaks and ruptures dogs inner mouth and its tongue and due to this the dog bleeds.

The stupid dog thinks that the blood that oozes is actually from the bone and relishes it more at the risk of injuring itself more.

Now this version highlights multiple aspects like  "Every joy is a sadness masked.., Both happiness and sadness are within you and you are the root cause."

In Tamil there is a great saying "தீதும் நன்றும் பிறன் தர வாரா..." this means that good and bad that happens to one, is NEVER because of others.

Happy reading!





1 comment:

  1. I'd like to hear more on the last concept of "... good and bad that happens to one, is NEVER because of others", particularly in terms of Eastern Philosophical interpretation of that.

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