Dhammapada Stories - The Wandering Mind
Once there was a Young Monk named Sangharakkhita.
While he was staying in a village monastery, he was
offered two robes and decided to offer one of them
to his uncle who was also a monk and whom he held in
high esteem.
When he tried to present the robe to his uncle,
however, his uncle refused to accept it, saying that
he already had the robes required. The young monk
interpreted his uncle’s refusal as a personal
affront.
He felt so offended that he decided on the spot he
would rather disrobe than be a
part of an order where there were such arrogant
monks as his uncle. Sangharakhitta wanted to leave
the monastery right away but his uncle asked him to
stay and fan him a while since it was a very hot
day.
Sangharakhitta did as his uncle asked, but did so
more out of a sense of duty than out of deference,
for he was still brooding over his uncle’s refusal
to accept his gift. And as he fanned his uncle, his
mind started to wander. “What will I do,” he
thought, “as soon as I become a layman again?”
Well, first he was going to sell the robe and buy a
she-goat. The she-goat would then give him many more
goats and he would sell them and finally save enough
money to get married. Soon his wife would give birth
to a son and they would go to the monastery to show
him off to their uncle. On the way, however, an
argument would ensue between them, for he would want
to carry the child as he drove the cart, but his
wife would insist otherwise.
As he would make a grab for the child, it would fall
off the cart and get run over by one of its wheels.
He would then be so upset that he would start
beating up his poor wife. At that point of his
daydreaming, he accidentally struck his uncle’s head
with the fan. The old monk who was able to read
Sangharakkita’s thoughts admonished him, saying,
“It’s not enough to beat on your wife? You’ve got to
beat on an old monk as well?”
Sangharakkhita was so surprised and ashamed when he
realized that his uncle had been reading his mind
that he wanted to run away. Instead, the good uncle
took him to see the Buddha.
When told what happened, the Buddha spoke gently to
the young monk and said, “The mind can wander off
and think of things that have not yet taken place.
It is best to concentrate on the present instead and
strive diligently to free oneself from greed,
hatred, and delusion.”
One who subdues the wandering mind, which strays
far and wide, alone, bodiless, will be freed from
the bonds of temptation.
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