Suddenly his zazen was interrupted by the harsh and demanding voice of a samurai warrior.
At first, as though he had not heard, there was no perceptible response from the monk.
"You wish to know the secrets of heaven and hell?" replied the monk at last.
The samurai uttered a vile curse. He drew his sword and raised it high over his head. His face turned to crimson, and the veins of his neck stood out in bold relief as he prepared to sever the monk's head from its shoulders.
"That is hell," said the old monk gently, just as the sword began its descent.
In that fraction of a second, the samurai was overcome with amazement, awe, compassion and love for this gentle being who had dared to risk his very life to give him such a teaching.
"And that," said the monk, "is heaven."
The old monk sat by the side of the road. With his eyes closed, his legs crossed and his hands folded in his lap, he sat. In deep meditation he sat.
(From A Third Serving of Chicken Soup for the Soul, by Jack Canfield and Mark Victor Hansen)
"Old man! Teach me about heaven and hell!"
But, gradually he began to open his eyes, the faintest hint of a smile playing around the corners of his mouth as the samurai stood there, waiting impatiently, growing more and more agitated with each passing second.
"You who are so unkempt. You whose hands and feet are covered with dirt. You whose hair is uncombed, whose breath is foul, whose sword is all rusty and neglected. You who are ugly and whose mother dresses you funny. You would ask me of heaven and hell?"
He stopped his sword in mid-flight and his eyes filled with grateful tears.
UPDATED ON 10/09/05
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