WISDOM - THE CHESS
GAME
eastern
wisdom
A young man who had a bitter
disappointment in life went to a remote monastery and said to the
abbot, "I am disillusioned with life and wish to attain enlightenment
to be freed from these sufferings.
But I have no capacity for sticking
long at anything. I could never do long years of meditation and study
and austerity; I should relapse and be drawn back into the world
again, painful though I know it to be. Is there any short way for
people like me?"
"There is," said the abbot, "if you
are really determined. Tell me, what have you studied, what have you
concentrated on most in your life?"
"Why, nothing really. We were rich,
and I did not have to work. I suppose the thing I was really
interested in was chess. I spent most of my time at
that."
The abbot thought for a moment , and
then said to his attendant, "Call such-and -such a monk, and tell him
to bring a chessboard and men."
The monk came with the board and the
abbot set up the men. He sent for a sword and showed it to the two,
"O monk, you have vowed obedience to me as your abbot, and now I
require it of you. You will play a game of chess with this youth, and
if you lose I shall cut off your head with this sword. But I promise
that you will be reborn in paradise."
"If you win, I shall cut off the head
of this man; chess is the only thing he has ever tried hard at, and
if he loses he deserves to lose his head also." They looked at the
abbot's face and saw that he meant it: he would cut off the head of
the loser. They began to play.
With the opening moves the youth felt
the sweat trickling down his heels as he played for his life. The
chessboard became the whole world; he was entirely concentrated on
it. At first he had somewhat the worst of it, but then the other man
made an inferior move and he seized his chance to launch a strong
attack.
As his opponent's position crumbled,
he looked covertly at him. He saw a face of intelligence and
sincerity, worn with the years of austerity and effort. He thought of
his own worthless life, and a wave of compassion came over him. He
deliberately made a blunder and then another blunder, ruining his
position and leaving himself defenseless.
The abbot suddenly leaned forward and
upset the board. The two contestants sat stupefied. "There is no
winner and no loser," said the abbot slowly, "there is no head to
fall here. Only two things are required," and he turned to the young
man, "complete concentration, and
compassion.
You have today learned them both. You
were completely concentrated on the game, but then in that
concentration you could feel compassion and sacrifice your life for
it. Now stay here a few months and pursue our training in this spirit
and your enlightenment is sure."
author unknown
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