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So we've come to the last of my miscellaneous thoughts that I jotted down
here and there over the years. If there is a common thread to all my
stuff, it's that, in the final analysis, there is something that unifies
all that is . And I mean everything, from rock and ridge,
bunny rabbits to race horses to the whole of humankind.
A story that Joseph Campbell told on the PBS
Power of Myth series expands upon this idea:
 
In Hawaii ... [t]here is a place there called the Pali,
where the trade winds from the north come rushing through a great ridge
of mountains. People like to go up there to get their hair blown
about or sometimes to commit suicide... . One day, two policemen
were driving up the Pali road when they saw, just beyond the railing
that keeps the cars from rolling over, a young man preparing to jump.
The police car stopped, and the policeman on the right jumped out to grab
the man but caught him just as he jumped, and he was himself being pulled
over when the second cop arrived in time and pulled the two of them back.
... Everything else in his life had dropped off - his duty to his family,
his duty to his job, his duty to his own life - all of his wishes and
hopes for his lifetime had just disappeared. He was about to die.
 
Later, a newspaper reporter asked him, "Why didn't you let go?
You would have been killed." And his reported answer was, "I couldn't
let go. If I had let that young man go, I couldn't have lived another
day of my life." How come?
 
Schopenhauer's answer is that such a psychological crisis represents
the breakthrough of a metaphysical realization, which is that you
and that other are one, that you are two aspects of the one life,
and that your apparent separateness is but an effect of the way
we experience forms under the conditions of space and time.
Our true reality is in our identity and unity with all life.
 
This story points out the universality of the "common good"
that we all participate in. And of the unity that can be realized
immediately in a situation involving just three people.
Realization
I
When we act with great patience,
compassion, and empathy,
we act from the highest good,
move toward the highest excellence.
From the depths of inner realization,
loving the unlovable,
helping the needy,
we fathom the sacred unity of All.
II
In the midst of experience
we sometimes find ourselves
wrapped within soulful boundaries
and inexplicable excellence.
Everything is ultimately united,
joined by the cosmic source
flowing through every strand, string, and quark,
through every stone and boulder,
through every beating heart.
III
When our paths become meditations,
when our trek discovers its bliss,
the universe is our companion.
Traveling this forest of possibilities
in all four directions,
although the future is unknowable,
our partial realizations--magnificent,
of life and light, dread and zest--lie within.
If we can't claim their insights in the flow
of this moment, where else will we find them?
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