Recently, I was involved in a conversation that explored Integrity. I walked away feeling a little disappointed
after hearing the sense of pride that some had shown in their ability to cheat
the system. Following a little thought
on the subject, I realized I was quick to condemn.
Over the past while in order to log 1000 acts of kindness I
have held more doors and let more people into traffic than I ever have before. Why is it that I walked past a piece of
garbage 100 times before, but now seeing it as an opportunity to tally an act
of kindness, I pick it up? What is this separation
between moral obligation and personal gain?
This bothered me and led me into a process of self
reflection. I am actually committing
some brain power into every act I do, and reflecting on the real reason I am
doing it. I am finally realizing the
importance of becoming more aware of where I am, what I am doing, and now Why.
I am beginning to realize every person holds a ‘moral
container’. Some people carry a larger
container than others. Mother Theresa
had the burden of hauling around an Olympic sized swimming pool, while others
skip along with a thimble. More to this
though, is how the container is filled.
If we fill the container with acts of kindness to strictly fill the
obligation of the I Ho Chuan we eventually reach capacity and it spills
over. If we reflect on what we are
doing, become aware of why we are doing it, and see the change it causes; the
container grows with every filling. We
re-weave our moral fabric and increase our integrity.
I am just starting to realize why the I Ho Chuan
requirements are the requirements. I am
realizing that they have been set very deliberately, and for more than just
inflicting physical pain and inconvenience.
They have been carefully chosen because they force us as martial artists
into self reflection and awareness.
What a perfect perspective, thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteSifu Masterson