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To Fill A Sieve
A group of devotees invited a master of meditation to the house of one of
them, to give them instruction. He told them that they must strive to
acquire freedom from strong reactions to the events of daily life, an
attitude of habitual reverence, and the regular practice of a method of
meditation which he explained in detail. The object was to realize one
divine life pervading all things.
"In the end you must come to this realization not only in the
meditation period, but in daily life. The whole process is like filling a
sieve with water."
He bowed and left.
The little group saw him off and then one of them turned to the others,
fuming, "That's as good as telling us that we'll never be able to do
it. Filling a sieve with water, I ask you! That's what happens now, isn't
it? At least with me. I go hear a sermon, or I pray, or I read one of the
holy books, or I help the neighbors with their children and offer the
merit to God, or something like that and I feel uplifted. My character
does improve for a bit -- I don't get so impatient, and I don't gossip so
much. But it soon drops off, and I'm just like I was before. It's like
water in a sieve, alright. But now he's telling us this is all we shall
ever be able to do."
They pondered on the image of the sieve without getting any solution
which satisfied them all. Some thought he was telling them that people
like themselves in the world could expect only a temporary up-lift-ment;
some thought he was just laughing at them. Others thought he might be
referring to something in the classics which he had expected them to know
-- they looked for references to a sieve, without success. In the end, the
whole thing dropped away from them all except for one woman, who decided
to see the master.
He gave her a sieve and a cup and they went to the nearby seashore,
where they stood on a rock with the waves breaking around them. "Show
me how you fill the sieve with water", he said. She bent down, held
the sieve in one hand, and scooped the water into it with the cup. It
barely appeared at the bottom of the sieve and then was gone.
"It's just like that with spiritual practice, too", he said,
"while one stands on the rock of I-ness, and tries to ladle the
divine realization into it. That's not the way to fill a sieve with water,
or the self with divine life". "How do you do it then?",
she asked.
He took the sieve from her hand, and threw it far out into the sea,
where it floated momentarily and then sank.
"Now it's full of water, and it will remain so", he said.
"That's the way to fill it with water, and it's the way to do
spiritual practice. It's not ladling little cupfuls of divine life into
the individuality, but throwing the individuality far out into the sea of
divine life."
~Trevor Leggett~
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