I woke up earlier than usual on darshan day. The time must have been a little after midnight.
Something seemed different that day. With difficulty I lifted my head and peeped out of the small
window of my hut. Although I could not see anything due to the pitch darkness of the night, I sensed
some activity in the trees. I closed my eyes and listened. To my surprise I sensed the trees were in the
same jovial mood as they were when spring was approaching. Winter had just started, it would be
months before even the slightest hint of spring. I lay down my head back on the pillow and realized
that I too was in a jovial mood - my heart too hinted some hope and excitement. That was quite a
change from the past few years of my miserable and painful existence.
It had been almost twenty years ago that I had been diagnosed with an incurable form of leprosy. This
had been the first such case in the memberable history of my village and the people did not know what
to do with me. I had been quite a cheerful and promising young boy before the village doctor noticed
the state of the perpetually open wounds on my back. After he announced my disease, my life changed
drastically.
The elders banished me despite my family's (particularly my mother's) heart breaking pleas. My brother
and uncles built a hut for me three miles from the village and promised me daily visits. At first, all my
relatives and friends came each and every day, and brought me gifts and tried their best to lift the dark
and heavy depression that was suffocating me, but due to my negative and cynical view (and because
love is rarely true amongst worldly people), the number of people visiting me reduced to one - my
mother.
She would bring food for me two times a day. She would come and clean my hut, bathe and feed me.
At first, I eagerly awaited her visits. I asked her about all my friends. But gradually, it only pained me
to listen to her.
Soon after, I started bolting the door and would ask her to leave the food outside and go away. I also
asked her to come only once a day since I realized it was hard for her. With much reluctance, she
agreed, but she could not understand my isolation from her. This continued for over ten years. My
condition was only getting worse. Although I was in my early twenties, I felt like an old man. Laying
all day in bed and being angry and depressed had certainly taken their tolls. I had a hard time even
going to the nearby river to get my supply of water. My bones would groan and creak at every effort.
My mind had turned into a dull and a stagnant vessel which would not hold any thoughts except for the
immediate bodily needs.
Then one day things changed. My mother was taken seriously ill with tuberculosis. Even in her illness,
she prepared food for me, but she did not have enough strength to deliver it to me. She asked my
nephew to accomplish that task. Consider it fate, but for reasons known only to my nephew, the food
was not delivered to me. The first day without food, I cried like a baby and shouted out to my mother.
I had tried to eat berries from a low hanging bush, but due to ignorance, had eaten poisonous ones.
This only made the situation worse. After three painful, lonely and sleepless days I assumed my mother
was dead and I would never again see another human.
I decided to end my life. It was the middle of the night and death seemed like an inviting and pleasant
escape. I slowly and painfully got up from the bed and made my way towards the river. I envisioned
myself jumping in and drowning. I had made it half-way to the river-bed when I tripped on a bush and
fell heavily on my face. Due to my general poor health and lack of food, I could not lift myself up
again. Only with a tremendous amount of effort, I turned and lay on my back. Miraculously, I fell
asleep.
In that wonderful sleep I dreamt that a man with a beard and a blue piece of cloth wrapped on his head
took my hand and led me to two big doors. Although I could no see the man, he appeared to radiating
grace and elegance. With his hands he pushed open the doors. A ball of white light immediately
engulfed me and with a jerk lifted me a few feet out of my body. The jerking movement woke me up. I
was breathing slowly and deeply. I felt light and joyful. To my joy, I realized I was still hovering
slightly above my body. I had heard several times from the village pundits that the soul was an entity
distinct from the body, but I had given it as much thought as I suspect they did. But that day in an
instant my life changed. I cannot express the relief I felt at the thought that this deformed and rotten
body was not me.
Since then, my life had revolved around getting that sensation back. I have tried all the methods that I
have heard about to gain that light feeling. But even though I have become still inside, and can listen to
myself and nature more easily, that wonderful feeling never graced me. Most of my days were still spent
drowned in thought and depression.
But that darshan day felt different. I couldn't go back to sleep no matter how hard I tried. Finally at
dawn, I got out of bed and looked out of the window. The sun had just risen making everything golden.
The birds and the wind were joyfully singing songs of love. I stood there for a long time bathing in
freshness. And for the first time in about twelve years I decided to go for a walk during daylight. I was
an avid walker once but the horrified looks of a boy who had accidently seen me had locked me inside.
But that day, all that didn't matter.
I felt a trace of life in me. I spent the whole day seeped in nature and waiting for something to happen.
At the end of the day, I was more surprised than disappointed that nothing had happened. I lay on my
bed and dozedoff.
In my dream, the same man with a blue turban appeared again. This time he held me by my hand and
took me to the river. He signaled me to go into the water. I went in. I looked at my reflection in the
water and with a shock realized that I had been cured. I looked for the man but he had entered a hut. I
ran and knocked on his door. No answer. I knocked again... With a start I woke up. Someone was
knocking at my door. I opened the door and saw a sight that filled me with wonder and awe.
There stood a middle-aged man at the door. He had a small bundle of what appeared to be books and
clothes on one shoulder, and a box which appeared to be a case for a musical instrument on the other
shoulder. And a few steps behind him, stood the man from my visions. He was wearing a yellow robe,
wooden slippers and a blue turban. Although His robe was faded and old, He looked like a king of all
kings. Although His beard was mostly white, His face was filled, nay, overflowing with youthfulness.
Although His eyes were half-closed and hidden in the dark, a thousand suns could not match their
brilliance; a thousand moons could not match their serenity; a thousand kings could not match their
splendor.
Instinctively I sank to my knees and bowed. Without a word they both entered my hut and sat on the
bed. I was quite dumb-founded and tongue-tied. I just kept staring at Him. At times, I would quickly
glance at His face, but it proved to be too intense an experience for me and I would quickly revert my
glance back to His feet. I wanted to say words of welcome, I wanted to thank Him for being there, I
wanted to ask for forgiveness for my sinful being, but my throat would not, could not form words.
With His signal, the man with the instrument opened it up and started playing it. Ah, the wonderful
music captivated me. Then ... He sang. The song entered me, nay, flooded and imprisoned me. I drank
His song and lost my thirst. His song opened the dam of tears in me and I wept. With One note of His
song, He gave me enough to fill my life, With one note of His song, I was drenched in bliss. With one
note of His song, my thoughts ceased. With one note of His song, my soul separated from the pained
and diseased body.
He sang about light. He sang about darkness that enveloped me. He sang about the world within. He
sang about sorrow-less and death-less truth. He sang about sorrows and death of untruth. He sang
about becoming truth. He sang about merging within. He sang about the wonderful naam. He sang
about the blissful naami. He sang about One, One, One, One, One, One, One, One ....
After songs there was songs of silence. I was in freedom. My beard was literally drenched with tears of
repressed emotions. Without a word, His companion filled a bowl he was carrying with water from my
water pitcher and started reciting verses. Whereas the songs were rapped in love and longing, the
verses were wrapped in wisdom and One's greatness. I listened. I felt wise and clean. For the first time
in my life I felt pure. At that time everything was pure, my clothes, my hut, the forest around. Blessed
was my bed which was serving them - the angels of One.
How fortunate was His companion. Throughout the songs and recitation the companion gazed at His
face with an intent of a child looking at his mother. I found myself gazing at His companion's face.
Whereas His face was like the sun - much too bright for me - His companion's face resembled the
moon. It was quite a moment. I, staring at the moon, the moon staring at the sun and the sun focused
on the One. The companion finished the verses, took the bowl of water to His feet and dipped His toe in
the water. The companion motioned me to drink the water. To my surprise, it was sweet. I gulped it
down. Never had I tasted such contentment. I felt intoxicated. I felt I belonged to Him and He to
me. I felt His love, His grace, I felt Him in me.
He leaned towards me, and in my ear whispered "Wahe Guru". A thousand bright suns dawned in me, a
thousand blissful winds blew in me, a thousand colorful flowers bloomed in me, a thousand joyful
fountains sprang up in me, a thousand celestial chords played within me, a thousand angels sang in me.
All the suns, winds, flowers, fountains, chords, angels sang waheguru waheguru waheguru waheguru
waheguru waheguru waheguru waheguru waheguru waheguru waheguru waheguru waheguru waheguru
waheguru waheguru waheguru waheguru waheguru waheguru ...
Sunlight on my face brought me back to this world. They had departed. A pain shot through my body at
seeing the bed empty. For a moment I wanted to run and find Him, but the quietness of the trees told
me they had gone far. Slowly I got up from the spot in which I had spent the whole joyful night. What
a night, I thought; the trees were certainly justified in singing about spring. He was spring.
For a brief moment I thought this was all a dream. Perhaps I was still in a dream. But instantly I
realized this was real - on the bed lay a small book. With excitement, I picked it up. It was the verses
His companion had recited. Although I didn't know the language it was written in, I still could read it
because it was in a language similar to one I knew. And the verses written were the same ones His
companion had recited and they were deeply embedded within me. I quickly read the first page. I
turned the page. My heart missed a beat. It wasn't the book but the sight of my hand. It's sores were
dry. I carefully put the book back on the bed and with trembling hand and heart examined my body.
Yes, all my sores were either dry or were getting dry. He had cured me. He, the angel of the One had
cured me. He had come to my unclean abode and purified me. Tears welled up in me when I thought
of His mercy. Me, a sinner's sinner, an unclean, nay, filthy untrue animal had been touched by His
grace.
I bowed to the book, I kissed it and I lovingly pressed it to my heart.
Vahegurooo
ReplyDeleteDhan Guru,Dhan Guru Pyaare!!
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDelete