The
Name of the Fruit
The
fruit that you offered to the monks: I don’t know its name, but I know that its
flavor is sweet and delicious. That much I know, but I don’t know what it’s
called—and it’s not really necessary. All that’s necessary is knowing that its
flavor is sweet and delicious. Right? That’s really necessary. “What’s the name
of this fruit?” That’s not really necessary. If someone tells you, you can remember
it. But if you don’t know the name, you can let the matter go. After all, knowing
the name doesn’t increase the sweetness or make the fruit more sour.
The
knowledge that comes from the practice: We practice so that we’ll know. It’s
knowledge that knows all the way in. Once you know all the way in, you let go.
The knowledge that comes from the practice, once it knows all the way in, lets
go. The knowledge that comes from studying doesn’t let go, you know. It fills
us up until we’re stuffed tight. It ties us down even more.
(The
Teachings of Ajahn Chah)
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