[无量香光 · 显密文库 · 手机站]
fowap.goodweb.net.cn
{返回首页}


Just a Fly in My Tea
 
{返回 A Collection of Buddhist Stories 文集}
{返回网页版}
点击:1796

Just a Fly in My Tea

"On this particular afternoon a fly fell into my tea.  This was, of course, a minor occurrence.  After a year in India I considered myself to be unperturbed by insects -- by ants in the sugar bin, spiders in the cupboard, and even scorpions in my shoes in the morning.  Still, as I lifted my cup, I must have registered, by my facial expression, or a small grunt, the presence of the fly.  Choegyal Rinpoche, the eighteen-year-old tulku leaned forward in sympathy and consternation.

"What is the matter?"

"Oh, nothing," I said.  "It's nothing -- just a fly in my tea."  I laughed lightly to convey my acceptance and composure.  I did not want him to suppose that mere insects were a problem for me; after all, I was a seaseoned India-wallah, relatively free of Western phobias and attachments to modern sanitation.

Choegyal crooned softly, in apparent commiseration with my plight, "Oh, oh, a fly in the tea."

"It's no problem," I reiterated, smiling at him reassuringly.  But he continued to focus great concern on my cup.  Rising from his chair, he leaned over and inserted his finger into my tea.  With great care he lifted out the offending fly -- and then exited from the room.  The conversation at the table resumed.  I was eager to secure Khamtul Rinpoche's agreement on plans to secure the high-altitude wool he desired for the carpet production.

When Choegyal Rinpoche reentered the cottage he was beaming.  "He is going to be all right," he told me quietly. He explained how he had placed the fly on the leaf of a branch of a bush by the door, where his wings could dry.  And the fly was still alive, because he began fanning his wings, and we cold confidently expect him to take flight soon...

That is what I remember of that afternoon -- not the agreements we reached or plans we devised, but Choegyal's report that the fly would live.  And I recall, too, the laughter in my heart.  I could not, truth to tell, share Choegyal's dimensions of compassion, but the pleasure in his face revealed how much I was missing by not extending my self-concern to all beings, even to flies.  Yet the very notion that it was possible gave me boundless delight."

-- Joanna Macy


{返回 A Collection of Buddhist Stories 文集}
{返回网页版}
{返回首页}

上一篇:Carrying and Leaving
下一篇:Esarhaddon, King of Assyria
 Man Wounded by an Arrow
 The Blind Men and the Elephant
 Esarhaddon, King of Assyria
 Delusion
 Angulimala
 A Lesson from Ryokan
 Milarepas Last Testament
 Easier Known Than Done
 The Brave Little Parrot
 Fate Is in Your Own Hands
全文 标题
 
【佛教文章随机阅读】
 何谓善知识?[栏目:宣化上人]
 初学坐禅于坐中如何用功?[栏目:佛光·禅修释疑]
 佛法的温度[栏目:传灯法语·乘宗法师]
 摄大乘论 第70讲[栏目:韩镜清教授]
 究竟实相[栏目:静思晨语·证严上人]
 观察生灭乃至无常[栏目:体方法师]
 菩萨如何修奢摩他[栏目:探究真心·圆觉文教基金会]
 No Ajahn Chah《068》[栏目:何来阿姜查 No Ajahn Chah]
 04-115佛法的悲心[栏目:海涛法师弘法讲义-2004年]
 如何理解“视师如佛”?[栏目:阿贝迦那伽罗仁波切]


{返回首页}

△TOP

- 手机版 -
[无量香光·显密文库·佛教文集]
教育、非赢利、公益性的佛教文化传播
白玛若拙佛教文化传播工作室制作
www.goodweb.net.cn Copyrights reserved
(2003-2015)
站长信箱:yjp990@163.com