MotherShip by Sam Wise ___ PLEASE REFRESH PAGE FOR WEB FONTS

Friday, 18 January 2013

Monstaville Book I. Dedication & Opening Quote




"From understanding comes LOVE." – Rumi.

Acknowledgements

St. Germain and the team at Awakening From Within, Ganesha, Sekhmet, Isis, Metatron, Ashtar, the Ascension Angels and all Light Beings everywhere, Jon Hare, Lynn Hedges, Roseangela Lefeuvre, Anne Ransom, my father, Craig Cumming, Bob Coleman, the Metropolitan Police, Baba Ruchi for some of the Osho quotes in the book posted in MySpace bulletins and, finally, my cat Xianxian.

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I would like to dedicate this book to Penny Lancaster and Rob Maltby, who were savagely attacked by a gang of youths for ‘looking different’ in August 2007, causing Penny’s death, and to all gentle, sensitive, kind and honest, vulnerable people everywhere who have had to endure bullying at some time in their lives.


“Atisha is really very, very scientific. First he says: take the whole responsibility on yourself. Secondly he says: Be grateful to everyone. Now that nobody is responsible for your misery except you, if it is all your own doing, then what is left?

Be grateful to everyone.

Because everybody is creating a space for you to be transformed - even those who think they are obstructing you, even those whom you think are enemies. Your friends, your enemies, good people and bad people, favourable circumstances, unfavourable circumstances - all together they are creating the context in which you can be transformed and become a buddha. Be grateful to all.
                A man once came and spat on Buddha, on his face. Of course his disciples were enraged. His closest disciple, Ananda, said to him, ‘This is too much!’ He was red-hot with anger. He said to Buddha, ‘Just give me permission so that I can show this man what he has done.’
                Buddha wiped his face and said to the man, ‘Thank you, sir. You created a context in which I could see whether I can still be angry or not. And I am not, and I am tremendously happy. And also you created a context for Ananda: now he can see that he can still be angry. Many thanks, we are so grateful! Once in a while, please, you are invited to come. Whenever you have the urge to spit on somebody, you can come to us.’
                It was such a shock to the man, he could not believe his ears, what was happening. He had come expecting that he would anger Buddha. He had failed. The whole night he could not sleep, he tossed and turned and could not sleep. Continuously the idea haunted him - his spitting on the Buddha, one of the most insulting things, and Buddha remaining as calm and quiet as he had been before, as if nothing had happened, wiping his face and saying to him, ‘Thank you, sir. And whenever you have this desire to spit on somebody, please come to us.’
                He remembered it again and again. That face, that calm and quiet face, those compassionate eyes. And when he had said thank you, it had not been just a formality, he was really grateful. His whole being was saying that he was grateful, his whole atmosphere was grateful. Just as he could see that Ananda was red-hot with anger, Buddha was so cool, so loving, so compassionate. He could not forgive himself now, what had he done? Spitting on that man - a man like Buddha!
                Early the next morning he rushed back, fell down at the feet of Buddha, and said, ‘Forgive me, sir. I could not sleep the whole night.’
                Buddha said, ‘Forget all about it. There is no need to ask forgiveness for something which has already passed. So much water has gone down the Ganges.’ Buddha was sitting on the bank of the Ganges under a tree. He showed the man, ‘Look, each moment so much water is flowing down! Twenty-four hours have passed - why are you carrying it, something which is no longer existential? Forget all about it.
                ‘And I cannot forgive you, because in the first place I was not angry with you. If I had been angry, I could have forgiven you. If you really need forgiveness, ask Ananda. Fall at his feet - he will enjoy it!’

Be grateful to everyone.

                To those who have helped, to those who have hindered, to those who have been indifferent. Be grateful to all, because all together they are creating the context in which buddhas are born, in which you can become a buddha.”

- Osho (The Book of Wisdom: Discourses on Atisha`s Seven Points of Mind Training, Chapter 5: ‘Sowing White Seeds,’ Commentary from 15 February 1979, am in Buddha Hall, Rebel Publishing House, Pune, India, 1993, p.94-95).

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