Searching for ‘The One’

First, an old story: Once, at the end of their education, four students who were graduating asked their guru to give them blessings and wealth with which to start off their lives. Each were given

BENGALURU : First, an old story: Once, at the end of their education, four students who were graduating asked their guru to give them blessings and wealth with which to start off their lives. Each were given a few pebbles and told to take a long walk. They were told, that where any pebble fell, they would find wealth. Along the way, when the first pebble fell, they dug and found coal. One of them was thrilled with it, thinking, “I can build an empire with this!” and settled right there, while the others kept walking. 

After a long time, the second fell, and there was copper, and another happy person settled with that, thinking, “This should be surely enough for me for this life.”  A third fell on silver much later, and a relieved person happily settled, saying, “I have spent enough time looking. This is enough.”
The fourth though, kept walking. After a long, long walk, when the pebble fell and there was some gold, it seemed like after all that trouble they went through, surely gold was not enough. That there should be more, if only they strived for more. And so the pebble was picked up and the journey continued. Diamonds were similarly discarded, so was platinum, and lots of other precious aspects. Finally, there was nowhere further to go and nothing more to be found. The pebble rose up and fell on the head, crushing it to smithereens.

What’s the point of this story in a column about love?
If you read this story again, and thought of wealth as love, you might then make a connection. At first read, it might look just like a story about settling down and not being too greedy.  You might find yourself focussing on the hapless fourth who kept going on and on, till at the end of the road, they were crushed by their own greed. That’s fair enough, but a closer read might show you a change of language. Of how the person finding the wealth, changes from being thrilled, to happy, to relieved, to almost desperate. Read it yet again, and you see time passing inexorably. 

As a metaphor for finding ‘The One’, the story then has similarly interesting questions it poses for oneself. Do you find potential, work on it and build up your wealth for yourself? Do you wait to find for more obvious wealth, and then enjoy it for what it is? Do you discard the obvious wealth and strive to find the golden dear, so to say? Or, do you strive beyond it, no matter what cost in time and health, looking for that absolutely perfect, everlasting and inexhaustible source? Running the risk that you never find it and just get crushed in the process?

As all cautionary tales go, this one too only serves to highlight, that searching for love is like searching for wealth. You have a choice to make between multiple dimensions of potential, time, perfection and much else. So, choose wisely!The author is a counsellor at InnerSight

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