Fwd: Walk Lightly Through Life From Owlfin and so was the last one Sorry Again!!

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Jodi Trotter

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Dec 19, 2005, 1:58:03 AM12/19/05
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Walk Lightly Through Life



Forgive and Forget, or Live in Regret!



In this life . . we are unable to forget whatever remains unforgiven.
So, if we won't let go of some pain -- whose time has now past -- then
who is to blame for the weight of this burden still being carried on our
back?



Walk Lightly Through Life



Whenever you come upon a healing idea or a rescuing truth, it is almost
always a surprise that you could have missed something that was so
obvious for so long. Do you know the feeling? More than anything else, a
glimpse of a Timeless Truth is a lot like rounding a bend and suddenly
seeing something you know you knew a long, long time ago; like
discovering all over again a special place you once loved.



You can't explain it but these out-of-the-blue higher moments seem as
much a trusted memory as they do a gateway to a new and exciting
understanding. Our life is intended to be filled with magical moments
such as these. Settling for anything less is an unseen compromise that
suffers the Spirit. This is why the real successes in life are more an
awakening than they are an arrival at a thrilling but temporary
destination. Let the following short story stir you to remember
something your true nature has never forgotten.



It seemed he had been walking for a very long time. But even more than
his weary legs he was aware of his hands. They were starting to feel
like they were part of the bags he was carrying.



"This is no better," he thought to himself, as he tried to shift some of
the baggage's weight from one aching part of his hands to another. He
wished he could put them all down, but he was in a hurry.



It was hard to believe that only a few hours had passed since he had run
into that nice man selling bags along side the road. The bag-seller had
promised him that buying one of his bags would make carrying all of the
other bags a lot easier. But, as he walked along, he could think of a
lot of other words to describe what the addition of this new bag had
done for him.


"Easier" certainly wasn't one of them. And this wasn't the first bag he
had been sold along the road. Not by any means.



As he looked down at his stiffening arms and hands, it seemed to him as
though every bag he was carrying had been guaranteed for one thing or
another. He had a bag of plans for the future; a bag that held keys to
success; a bag of miscellaneous kits for repairing the past; and then
there was the heaviest bag of all: The one that was supposed to keep all
of his other bags safe. The truth was he owned a bag for just about
everything imaginable.



So involved was he in assessing and reassessing the value of all of his
bags that he didn't even notice the stranger sitting in the shade off to
the side of the road. In fact, it was the stranger's voice that made him
look up from his bags. The stranger smiled.



"That's quite a load you've got there. Care to sit a while and take a
break?"



The notion surprised him for some reason but it sounded like a good
idea. "Thanks," he said, "I think I will." And he sat his bags down, one
by one, lined up according to their size. A moment or two passed without
either of them speaking, but it wasn't uncomfortable. The grass was soft
and just damp enough to feel good. The only thing strange was that he
noticed the stranger didn't have any bags with him at all. Not one.
To the best of his recollection this was a first. All of the men and
women he had met along the road carried some kind of bag. How could he
survive? What kind of person was this? How did he meet the challenges of
the road? His mind started racing with one silent question after
another, but he knew it would be too impolite to say anything. He
couldn't believe his own ears when the words jumped out of his mouth.



"I see you don't have any bags."



The stranger smiled back at the man. "No, that's right."



The man waited for further explanation but none came. Finally the
silence became too heavy. "Why not?" he asked.



The stranger had heard many questions like his before from other
travelers he had met along the way. Experience had long taught him that
most of these questions placed before him by others -- as to why he
traveled so lightly -- were not asked in order to hear his answer. No.
Most only feigned interest. What they were really seeking was a way to
tell him their view on the subject. But he sensed that this weary man
across from him was different from the rest.
And so he answered him with the truth.



"One day, years ago, I was taking a break in a shady spot just like this
one when a familiar voice spoke to me. I knew I had heard that voice at
least a thousand times before and yet, right up to that moment, I had
never really heard it."



The stranger seemed to look off into the past but he kept talking. "It
was strange, because the voice just kept saying over and over again,
'I'm so tired, how much further do we have to go?' That's all -- just,
'I'm so tired' and 'how much further?'"



"Who were you with?" the man asked.



"No one," the stranger replied and looked back at him with a deep kind
of self-conscious smile.



"I was all by myself. And I don't know why I should have taken notice of
it just then, but that's when it happened. I realized that for as many
years as I cared to remember, I had been talking to myself about how
tired I was."



The stranger's answer came as an unexpected shock. He wanted to pity
this empty-handed man but instead he was drawn to him and to what he was
saying. His silence was the invitation for the stranger to continue
talking.



"At first I tried to push my sorry realization away by thinking about
another bag I had always wanted. But by this time I was even tired of
those feelings. I didn't know what else to do so I just sat there. I
can't really say for how long.
And then it came to me." The stranger smiled again and the man thought
that maybe he had missed something. But if he had, the stranger didn't
pause long enough for him to ask. "It wasn't so much that I didn't feel
like going anywhere as it was I had realized, while sitting there, that
for all of my years on the road I had never really known where I was
going. Only until that day I never knew that I didn't know because, for
all of those same years on the road, I had come to believe that my
search for relief was the same as having a direction in life."



"But why were you seeking relief; I mean, what from?"



"That's the crazy thing," the stranger said starting to laugh quietly to
himself as if he had heard a good joke. "I was looking for relief from
all the baggage I was carrying -- bags that were supposed to make my
walk through life an enjoyable one!"



Now they both laughed the good laugh like two old friends who were in on
a private joke. The warmth of their shared understanding was still there
when the man broke in. "But where are your bags now?"



"That's the whole point," replied the stranger still with a smile on his
face. "Don't you see? If I didn't know where I was going then how could
I possibly know what I needed to get me there?" It was his eyes that
asked for a reply.



"Right," the man said before he knew it.



"So then, why on earth was I carrying all of those bags? The truth is
that I couldn't come up with any good answer so I just left them right
there where I had been sitting."



"Well, what happened next? Where did you go? How did your life change?"



The stranger's look stopped his flood of questions. "It took some time
but gradually I began to see that it wasn't so much my life that was
changing as it was that my view of life had changed. Without the burden
of all of the bags I had been carrying I started seeing life as a
wonderful place to be instead of a task to go through."



The man could sense the truth in the stranger's words and he wanted more
explanation. "A wonderful place to be?"



"Yes." The stranger started to get up and brushed the leaves from his
pants. "For one thing, I found that I was always right where I wanted to
be once I stopped making myself miserable for not being where I thought
I should be." He looked directly at the man. "The truth is, you don't
need to be who you think you have to be. Therefore, you don't have to
carry those things through life you think you need to make you that
person." And with that the stranger said, "See you later," and started
walking away.
The man bolted to his feet, "Where are you going?"



The stranger didn't reply but he wasn't rude.



The man looked down at the long line of his heavy bags and looked back
up at the light step of the stranger as he walked down the road. It only
took another second for him to make up his mind. "Wait for me!"



Think of all the things you feel as though you need to carry through
your life in order to keep your life going according to the way you
think it should go. Now think how nice it would be to let go of all of
that.





-- Guy Finley



 
 



--
Brightest Blessings! Jodi
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