From tyagi@bjt.net Sat Aug 23 11:21:09 1997 Received: from bay1.bjt.net (tyagi@bay1.bjt.net [207.201.6.1]) by bay2.bjt.net (8.8.5/8.8.5) with ESMTP id LAA22250 for ; Sat, 23 Aug 1997 11:21:08 -0700 Received: (from tyagi@localhost) by bay1.bjt.net (8.7.5/8.7.5) id LAA09743; Sat, 23 Aug 1997 11:21:08 -0700 Date: Sat, 23 Aug 1997 11:21:08 -0700 Message-Id: <199708231821.LAA09743@bay1.bjt.net> To: tyagi@bay2.bjt.net Newsgroups: alt.magick.tyagi,alt.sufi,alt.islam.sufism,talk.religion.misc,talk.religion.newage,uk.religion.islam,alt.religion.islam,alt.islam Subject: PSKooshesh: (Sufi Story) The Wise Hakim From: nagasiva@yronwode.com (nagasiva) Reply-To: savushoon@juno.com (Parichehr S Kooshesh mekonam) X-Newsreader: NN version 6.5.0 (NOV) Status: RO [from tariqas@world.std.com: savushoon@juno.com (Parichehr S Kooshesh mekonam)] {This is a story from Mariam's Storypark} The Story Of The Wise Hakim A sultan was on a ship with some of his best courtiers. One of the courtiers who had never taken a voyage before and was a child of the mountains, had never seen the coast. He sat in the empty belly of the ship and screamed, cried, trembled, and wailed. All were kind to him and tried to calm his fears, but their kindness reached only his ears and not his fearful heart. The sultan could hardly bear to hear the courtier's cries any more, and the voyage through blue waters under the clear blue sky was no longer a pleasure for him. Then the wise hakim, the physician, approached him and said, "Your Highness, with your permission, I can calm him down." Without a moment's hesitation, the sultan gave his permission. The hakim ordered the seamen to throw the courtier overboard. They did, only too gladly. The courtier thrashed about in the water, grabbed for air, clutched the side of the ship, and begged to be taken on board again. So the seamen pulled him out of the water, and from then on he sat very quietly in a corner. No one heard another word of fear from him. The sultan was amazed and asked the hakim, "What wisdom is contained in this action?" The hakim answered, "He had never tasted the salt of the sea, and he didn't know how great the danger was in the water. So he couldn't know how wonderful it is to have the sturdy planks of the ship under him. Only he who has faced danger can know the value of peace and composure. Note: The story above by Sadi of Shiraz, is an example of ancient anxiety therapy. Warning: Please do not try such therapy in the 20th Century! :-) The story is from, "Oriental Stories As Tools In Psychotherapy" by Nossrat Peseschkian. I titled and rewrote it in parts. EOF