
From Dirt To Soil
By Alan Cohen
I met a man who was a devotee of
the miracles that took place near the town of Garabandal, Spain. They
began one night in 1961 when four children were awakened and mystically
drawn from their separate homes to a small glen on the outskirts of
their village. There they beheld an apparition of Mother Mary, who gave
them prophetic messages. This extraordinary phenomenon continued four
years with over two thousand apparitions. Eventually people from all
over the world visited the site, where many miraculous healings have
occurred.
The devotee, Joe, was so moved by this inspiring phenomenon that he
dedicated his life to sharing its message. One evening Joe came to my
study group where he showed a film of the events and offered his
narrative. When Joe opened the floor for questions, I asked him how he
got into all of this.
“As a young man I liked to attend parties where I developed a reputation
as a teller of off-color jokes,” he explained. “Eventually I was invited
regularly to lots of men’s clubs and banquets where I recited my risqué
stories. Since I had been rather shy before all this occurred, the
positive response I received built my confidence and I gained public
speaking skills.”
“When I learned of the Garabandal miracles my life changed and I shifted
onto my spiritual path. After a while I gave up my dirty joke career and
decided to channel my public speaking skills into this ministry.
Needless to say, this work is far more meaningful. Yet I have to
acknowledge that my career as an off-color comedian was a crucial
steppingstone to the valuable work I now do.”
If you or I had met Joe during his risqué comedy stint, we might have
judged him as a crude or sordid character. Yet we would have had no idea
that this phase was not an end in itself, but a preparatory step for a
life work that would bring illumination and solace to many.
Be not hasty to judge yourself for what you believe are your sins or
guilty errors. Evil is an interpretation, not a fact. Everything that
happens is ultimately in the service of awakening, and may be seen as
good.
A Hasidic story tells of a man who came to a rabbi and complained that
three men from the synagogue were up all night playing cards.
“Wonderful!” the rabbi replied with a twinkle in his eye.
The tattler was aghast. “How can you say ‘wonderful’”? he asked. “Is it
not against our religion to gamble?”
“Yes,” the rabbi answered. “But, even more important, these men are
staying up all night to do something they enjoy. When their minds and
hearts turn toward helping others, they will be able to stay up all
night for that purpose.”
The pain in our lives proceeds not from events that occur, but from our
judgments about the events. The part of the mind that thinks it knows
how things should be is extremely limited, confused, self-contradictory,
and basically delusional. To use that ego as the guideline for how to
live is to needlessly limit and condemn ourselves and the world. When,
on the other hand, we suspend our negative judgments, we free ourselves
and each other, open the door to escape from the prison of resistance,
and literally set our feet on the lawns of heaven.
Imagine that you and I took a walk in a field, where I scooped up a
handful of brown earth and asked you, “What is this?” A city dweller
might be quick to answer, “a pile of dirt.” Yet a farmer would knowingly
answer, “soil.” Dirt is a problem; soil is an opportunity. You have to
get rid of dirt, but you grow things in soil. Consider that the stuff
you consider problems, even dirty ones, are actually the platforms upon
which you will build strength and find freedom you would not have
enjoyed had the difficulties not occurred. As Emerson noted, “A weed is
a flower whose virtues have not yet been discovered.”
While we’re on the farm theme, let’s consider the value of manure.
Manure in the wrong place is repulsive and unsanitary. Yet, placed
wisely in a farmer’s field, it will grow life-giving wheat that is baked
into warm, aromatic, and tasty bread. When you butter your toast at
breakfast you hardly think that manure played a valuable role in getting
your fresh bread to you. But it did.
Likewise, the manure of your life is excellent fertilizer. You just have
to know where to put it and how to use it. Even dirty jokes can pave the
way for a sacrament. While my friend Joe was enamored with the miracles
of Garabandal, he may have overlooked the one happening through him.
Alan Cohen is author of
many inspirational books, including his new bestseller Don’t Get Lucky —
Get Smart. Join Alan for a life-transforming seminar, “How Good Can it
Get?” co-presented by Mary Manin Morrissey and musician Karen Drucker in
Sedona, November 2-7. For information on this program or others,
visit www.alancohen.com,
email admin@alancohen.com , or
call 1‑800‑568-3079.
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