Path Without Destination
September 1, 2008
Excerpt from the book: “Path without destination – The long walk of a gentle hero” by Satish Kumar
“One morning I got up early and walked into the forest. It was dawn. There was dew on the grass and leaves. I came to a tall tree with large overhanging branches, sat down cross-legged under the tree, and closed my eyes. I looked into my body and saw a dark tunnel, a deep hollow inside. I went into it, drawn inwards.
Instead of smelling outside, my nose was smelling the inner happenings and my ears were hearing the sounds inside. I could hear the sounds and voices of the ego pushing me in different directions. But I sat quietly. Slowly the battle calmed down, it slowly faded away. Gradually peace came.
I saw the events of my life as one thread, the same thread which united the whole universe and which was each person. I saw a struggle without conflict, a pain without misery. I saw a love so great that it had to remain hidden. I felt myself part of my mother and father, and in all the people through whom I had been expressed. I was being reborn. I felt like a child, like an innocent person, just living and growing, engaged in the journey from action to nonaction, from struggle without to struggle within. Life was an eternal journey, a journey to the center , the source, searching for the soul.
Everything became meditation. I felt a sense of divinity. This newness brought a surrender, a surrender where nothing mattered, where everything was accepted. It was beyond happiness, beyond pleasure. I experienced the zero level of existence, the void, the beauty of the void and the beauty of nothingness: shunyata.
I opened my eyes. I saw a snake about three yards long curled around the trunk of the tree beside me. I sat still. The snake disappeared into a hole among the roots. I must have sat there for six hours, for when I returned it was after then o’clock.”
This book was passed on to me by a friend and once I finish reading it I too will pass it on to:
someone…