So they also had a cow ready
for him. But in India, you can get a cow at any cost. They just walk
around, and maybe you can just take one; some of them are ownerless,
homeless cows.
Anyhow, after much consideration,
the monk accepted the cow. But now he had to milk the cow and all
that. And now he had to go out and beg for straw for the cow. Because
he was a monk, he didn't know what else to do. And he lived in the
part of the Himalayas with not much grass. He had to beg for straw
and build a shelter for the cow.
Now, so far, so good. But then
someone else came along and advised him by saying, "You can't
go on begging forever for straw. Who's going to give you straw all
the time for the cow? We'll feed you, but we're not obliged to feed
your cow and your cat and all that. So, keep a housemate. Or marry
a wife; get married."
So now the monk was having serious
problems. Because he didn't know how to cultivate land. Therefore,
a good adviser said to him, "You can keep a housemate, like a
male farmer. Or, marry a farmer so that you can cultivate the land.
There's so much land around here, all over; you can cultivate it,
and have enough straw for your cow. And also you will have enough
corn, wheat and so on for you to eat."
Now the monk was getting more
and more serious. So he married. And afterwards, he and his wife cultivated
a farm. Then they had children and they had to take care of the children,
and then they had to get a teacher for the children and so on. And
it was getting to be a bigger and bigger business.
So one day, his Master came
back. And he kept asking for the so-and-so monk that was supposed
to have been living in a thatched hut next to the river three years
ago. But no one knew if there was such a monk at all. So he kept asking
his way up to the farm of the monk.
And then he realized what had
happened all because of a piece of loincloth, one extra piece more.
If he had had only one, and wore it, there would have been no problem.
But he had two - one to wear and one to wash - and that's why there
was a problem. So that's what happened, and that's a true story.
The monk had much regret after
his Master came back. But the Master didn't want to stay. He said,
"I told you to practice spirituality. I didn't tell you to keep
cows, dogs, cats, a wife and children." And then he had a whole
farm. He had to hire many farmers, because so many things grew, and
they kept expanding. It had become a farm. He left everything in the
world to become a monk, to be detached from the world and to have
the minimum necessities for his life. And then he ended up wealthy:
a big farmer, with many cattle and a wife and children and many workers.
It was getting bigger and bigger all the time. And he was so busy
counting money and checking the harvest that he had no time for meditation
anymore. It was all finished. The monk's job was finished; he had
gotten another job....Previous
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