Dhammapada Stories - Abandon Attachment
Once a Wandering troupe of circus performers were
in vited to the palace to perform for the king and
his court. Among the troupe’s jugglers and acrobats
was
a charming young lady who danced with grace and
agility on the top of a long pole.
One of the young men in the audience, named Uggasena,
fell in love with her and even tually married her.
Finally when it was time for the troupe to move on
to another town, he and his new wife decided to move
on with them.
Uggasena, himself, though, did not have any special
talent that the troupe could use, and so was
relegated to moving and packing crates, driving
carts, and other menial tasks. This displeased his
wife.
After some time, they had a son. One day, Uggasena
could not help but overhear the lullaby his wife was
singing to their child: “You poor child, your father
can only carry boxes and drive carts. Your father is
truly worthless.”
Thinking that his wife’s arrogance was due to her
skill as an acrobat, he decided to become one
himself. He asked his father-in-law to train him,
and not long after, he was ready to perform. On the
day of his performance, he climbed up his pole with
facility, and once on top, did somersaults that left
the audience gasping in horror but utterly
delighted.
While he was performing, the Buddha happened to pass
by and saw that Ugassena was ripe for arahatship. So
he drew the audience’s attention away from Ugassena
by his will power and left him stranded on top of
his pole with no applause. “My wife will laugh in my
face,”
Uggasena thought, “if she finds out that the
audience lost interest in my act even before I was
half way through it?” Feeling distraught, he just
sat on his pole and sulked. The Buddha then called
up to him and said, “A wise man should work
diligently toward abandoning all forms of attachment
and thus be free from having to be born again.”
Uggasena reflected on the Buddha’s words and
attained arahatship while still sitting on top of
his pole.
Give up the past, give up the future, give up the
present. Having reached the end of existences, with
a mind freed from all conditioned things, you will
not again undergo birth and decay.
|