dipper 
Bamboo
dipper, granite basin.
Crust of ice over inky reservoir.
Moon shimmers in the dipper
Until fullness drains away.
Some people are like dippers. No matter what they
try to gather up, it
ends up flowing out again. For such people it is exceedingly difficult
to accumulate anything in life.
If you are like the dipper, that is all the more
reason to concentrate
the resources that you have. Poverty of any kind need not be a
deterrent if you know how to utilize the wealth you possess. You must
embrace your fate, work with it, and take advantage of it.
Ultimately, we cannot truly grasp anything
permanently in life. We are
born naked, we die naked, and in point of fact we live naked. What we
take to us—our clothes, our wealth, our relationships—are all external
to us. They are easily taken away from us by bruising fate.
We try to internalize our experiences and our
understanding. Even that
can be taken away by stress, senility, poor memory, disorganized
thinking, drugs, or shock. Truly, we are all dippers. The little that
life offers us dribbles away.
Perhaps even the poorest of situations is rich,
because all the
futility of life leads us to embrace Tao. After all, it is bigger than
all infinities and more subtle than the slightest wisp. To feel it
requires great strength. To sense it requires a dragonfly’s delicacy.
When you tire of trying to hold on to life, you will find the means to
enter Tao.
dipper
365 Tao
daily meditations
Deng Ming-Dao (author)
ISBN 0-06-250223-9
.
Thatched
Cottage of Dadi 1942
by Fu Bao Shi
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