“When
you do things from your soul, you feel a river moving in you . . .”
(Coleman
Barks)
Once upon a time there was a town that
was built just beyond the bend of a large river. One day some of the children
from the town were playing beside the river when they noticed three bodies
floating in the water. They ran for help and the townsfolk quickly pulled the
bodies out of the river. One body was dead so they buried it. One was alive,
but quite ill, so they put that person into the hospital. The third turned out
to be a healthy child, who they then placed with a family who cared for it and
who took it to school.
From that day on, every day a number of
bodies came floating down the river and, every day, the good people of the town
would pull them out and tend to them – taking the sick to hospitals, placing
the children with families, and burying those who were dead.
This went on for years; each day brought
its quota of bodies, and the townsfolk not only came to expect a number of
bodies each day but also worked at developing more elaborate systems for
picking them out of the river and tending to them. Some of the townsfolk became
quite generous in tending to these bodies and a few extraordinary ones even
gave up their jobs so that they could tend to this concern full-time. And the town itself felt a certain healthy
pride in its generosity. However, during all these years and despite all the
generosity and effort, nobody thought to go up the river, beyond the bend that
hid from their sight what was above them, and find out why, daily, those bodies
came floating down the river.
(Source/Author Unknown)
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