Sunday, July 3, 2011

TEACHING STORIES

TEACHING STORIES
By
VIKRAM KARVE

Once upon a time, long long ago, an old wise man walked past a shipyard. Seeing a fire, which he had not expected to be associated with the sea, he asked a workman why they had lit a fire.

“We make tar,” said the workman, “and cover the cracks in the underside of the boat. That makes the vessel go faster.”

The wise man went straight home and made a bonfire. Then he tied up his dog and melted some tar in a pan. As soon as he brought the smoking hot tar near the underside of the mortified animal, the dog broke loose and ran like the wind.

“It works all right!” observed the wise old man.

Don’t we see it happening all around – trying to apply the right solutions to the wrong problems (or maybe the wrong solutions to the right problems?).

This is a Teaching Story. Teaching stories have a special quality – if read in a certain kind of way they enlighten you. 

There are three ways to read teaching stories:-

·                    Read the story once. Then move on to another. This manner of reading will give you entertainment – maybe produce a laugh, like jokes do.
·                    Read the story twice. Reflect on it. Apply it to your life. You will feel enriched. 
·                    Read the story again, after you have reflected on it. Carry the story around in your mind all day and allow its fragrance, its melody to haunt you. Create a silence within you and let the story reveal to you its inner depth and meaning. Let it speak to your heart, not to your brain. This will give you a feel for the mystical and you will develop the art of tasting and feeling the inner meaning of such stories to the point that they transform you.

Teaching stories relate events that are funny, foolish, bemusing, even apparently stupid. But they usually have deeper meanings. A good teaching story has several levels of meaning and interpretation and offer us opportunities to think in new ways. At first you may just have a good laugh but as you think and reflect, the significance becomes more and more profound. 

Each story veils its knowledge and as you ruminate, the walls of its outer meanings crumble away and the beauty of the previously invisible inner wisdom is revealed, and you begin to identify yourself in the story, and to acknowledge that you too could be as foolish or as lacking in discernment as the characters in these classic tales.

From time to time, I will try to regale and illuminate you with a few of my favorite Teaching Stories in my blog. And we shall have an enlightened laugh together!

VIKRAM KARVE



4 comments:

My Unfinished Life said...

i liked the story....

Nicky said...

Great to meet you Vikram! I found you through the Ultimate Blog Challenge!

Vikram Waman Karve said...

Do read my teaching stories and comment

Sairam said...

Good story. I wlll watch out for this column.