TWO SIDES OF A PRISON WALL
by Alan Cohen
A young Japanese man named Shui was
riding on a crowded train when a belligerent drunk made his way through
the train car and began to rough up passengers. Shui had studied martial
arts for many years, yet never before had he been forced into a public
confrontation. Shui felt his blood begin to boil, and realized the
ruffian needed to be stopped before he hurt someone badly.
Shui stood up, blocked the fellow’s
path, and the two exchanged angry words. As the men were about to square
off, Shui felt a hand on his arm. He looked down and saw a frail old
man. "Let me handle this," the elder insisted.
Shui watched in amazement as the old man
invited the heavy to have a seat next to him. Strangely, he acquiesced.
The elder began to engage the fellow, asking him questions about his
life and looking him in the eye with kindness and compassion. After a
while the thug confessed that his wife had just died and he was in great
pain; he had gone out and gotten drunk to numb his agony. The old man
placed a comforting hand on the fellow’s shoulder, and he began to
weep. Before Shui’s eyes the intruder was transformed from a villain
into an innocent child.
When the train arrived at the next
station, the tough guy thanked the old man and exited the car. Shui,
stunned, sat down next to the old man and asked him, "Why did you
stop me?"
"You were about to meet that man’s
violence with your own," answered the old man. "In true
martial arts, if you hurt your opponent in any way, you cannot call your
act a victory."
We have all encountered people whom we
feel we must protect ourselves from. Yet there is a way to keep
ourselves safe without hurting others. It is the strongest way to
protect our peace. Although we have been taught that we must wield pain
as a weapon to keep others at a distance, it is not so. We gain all
together or not at all. To wish ill upon anyone is to hurt ourself.
I used to visit a prisoner named Ron.
Years earlier, in college, Ron had a girlfriend named Jen. One night the
couple had an argument, and in a fit of rage, Ron beat her up.
Tragically, she died. Ron was convicted of man-slaughter and sentenced
to many years in prison.
I met Ron when he was up for parole after
nine years of incarceration. In contrast to his violent act, I found him
to be a gentle soul. He was contrite about his crime and he had used his
time in prison to advance his spiritual growth. Ron studied A Course in
Miracles, he was active in the prison church, he was liked by the other
prisoners and staff, and he had worked his way up to a responsible
position managing the prison laundry. When I visited Ron, I sensed no
cruelty in him and he certainly did not seem like a dangerous criminal
to me.
Ron told me that he had been denied
parole repeatedly because Jen’s parents had mounted a citywide
campaign to keep him in jail. Each year when Ron was eligible to be
released, Jen’s parents took out newspaper ads, exerted their
political influence, and orchestrated a concerted community effort to
"keep this killer off the streets." Yet, looking at this man,
I did not see a killer at all. I saw a basically good man who had made a
heartbreaking mistake.
"So how are you dealing with Jen’s
parents?" I asked Ron.
"I send them love and prayer,"
he answered. "I understand that they are very angry and they must
be in great pain. If I could go back and undo my act, I surely would.
More than anything, I wish I could bring Jen back. But I can’t. So I
am just deepening my relationship with God right where I am and trying
to be a blessing to the world."
As I left my meeting with Ron that day, I
wondered who was really in prison. Ron was locked up physically, but his
soul was soaring. Meanwhile, Jen’s parents were quite wealthy and
enjoyed unlimited physical freedom, yet they were consumed by anger and
vengeance. It seemed to me that their wrathful thoughts were creating
walls more formidable than those encasing Ron.
Because we are spiritual beings at our
essence, what we do with our spirit influences us more profoundly than
what we do with our body. Heaven and hell are not places we go or
conditions the outer world imposes on us; they are experiences we create
with our thoughts and beliefs. A Course in Miracles tells us, "I am
affected only by my thoughts." Where our mind goes, there we are.
The desire to hurt brings us instant pain, while the desire to heal
brings us instant freedom.
If you are angry with anyone, or involved
in a conflict, keep reaching for a solution that leaves everyone whole.
If you feel you need to hurt someone or take something away from them to
make things even, you do violence mostly to yourself. Instead of seeing
them as a villain, regard them as wounded or calling for love. No one
does anything mean or foolish unless they are in great pain. To try to
inflict more pain only exacerbates their sense of disconnection. As you
connect with your own sense of peace, you invite them to claim theirs.
Only then can you say you have won.
Alan Cohen is the author of the best-selling, The
Dragon Doesn’t Live Here Anymore, the award-winning, A Deep Breath of Life,
and the acclaimed, Why Your Life Sucks and What You Can Do About It. This August
join Alan in Maui for his life-transforming Mastery Training. For information on
this seminar and a free catalog of Alan’s books, tapes, and seminars, phone
1-800-568-3079, visit www.alancohen.com,
email admin@alancohen.com , or write P.O. Box 835, Haiku, HI 96708.
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