Jug, Mud and Meditation
- fa-hsin
- 3 days ago
- 2 min read
Updated: 16 hours ago
A restless man lived at the edge of a town. He read books, debated ideas, and prided himself on needing proof before belief. But for all his thinking, there was something inside him that never quieted. A grinding. A motion that solved nothing and tired everything.
One autumn, he heard of a monk who lived in the forest. Not knowing exactly why, he went.
The monk was sitting outside when the man arrived, doing what seemed to the visitor like nothing at all.
"I am always rushing," the man said after greetings. "I keep running — from thought to thought, from problem to problem — and nothing answers. Nothing resolves."
"Then sit," said the monk. "Meditate."
The man frowned. "Sit still? What does sitting still give you? It will make me docile. A man on a cushion while life moves on without him."
The monk did not argue. He rose and walked toward the garden. The man followed, more out of confusion than anything else.
The monk gathered sand from the ground, carried it inside, and poured it into a jar of water sitting on the table. He stirred it. The water turned dark. The sand rose into a cloud, churning, folding into itself, refusing to settle.
Both men watched.
The monk set down the stick and stepped back.
For a while, nothing seemed to change. The water churned. Then, slowly, the sand began to fall. Not all at once. Grain by grain, each particle tracing its own path down, until everything had found its place at the bottom.
The water was clear.
The man stood looking at the jar for a long time. He did not speak. He did not move. And when he saw the last speck find its way to the ground, he was realised.
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