Sat 12 Aug 2006
Three in the Morning
Saturday, Aug 12th, 2006 at 7:44 amCategories: Tao; Monkeys; Philosophy; India; Three
Posted by Administrator
A thought for today: Three in the Morning
When we wear out our minds, stubbornly clinging to one partial view of things, refusing to see a deeper agreement between this and its complementary opposite, we have what is called “three in the morning.”
What is this “three in the morning?”
A monkey trainer went to his monkeys and told them: “As regards your chestnuts: you are going to have three measures in the morning and four in the afternoon.
At this they all became angry. So he said: “All right, in that case I will give you four in the morning and three in the afternoon.” This time they were satisfied.
The two arrangements were the same in that the number of chestnuts did not change. But in the one case the animals were displeased, and in the other they were satisfied. The keeper had been willing to change his personal arrangement in order to meet objective conditions. He lost nothing by it!
The truly wise man, considering both sides of the question without partiality, sees them both in the light of Tao.
This is called following two courses at once.
[Thomas Merton: The Way of Chuang Tzu, Shambala Pocket Classics]
Image: THE MONKEY TRAINER
India, Bengala, Region of Chandraketugarh
2nd-1st c. BC
Terracotta, 15.5” by 21”
asianart.com: Link
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.
Next Post:
Natalie Jeremijenko: DARPA of Dissent
Previous Post:
A Tree Cutter’s Tale