Meditations on a New Venture

March 25, 2009

Archery, Success and Inspiration

Filed under: Philosophy — J @ 9:54 pm

These three readings have been in my collection for a long time. I no longer remember the source.

The Art of Archery — I

One day I asked the Master: “How can the shot be loosed if `I’ do not do it?

“`It’ shoots,” he replied.

I have heard you say that several times before, so let me put it another way: How can I wait self-obliviously for the shot if `I’ am no longer there?

“`It’ waits at the highest tension.”

And who or what is `It’?

“Once you have understood that, you will have no further need of me. And if I tried to give you a clue at the cost of your own experience, I would be the worst of teachers and would deserve to be fired. So let’s stop talking about it and go on practicing.”

The Art of Archery — II

Then, one day, after a shot, the Master made a deep bow and broke off the lesson. “Just then `It’ shot!” he cried, as I stared at him, bewildered. And when I at last understood what he meant I couldn’t suppress a sudden whoop of delight.

“What I have said”, the Master told me severely, “was not praise, only a statement that ought not to touch you. Nor was my bow meant for you, for you are entirely innocent of this shot. You remained this time absolutely self oblivious and without purpose in the highest tension, so that the shot fell from you like a ripe fruit. Now go on practicing as if nothing had happened.

The Art of Archery — III

“I’m afraid I don’t understand anything more at all,” I answered, “even the simplest things have got in a muddle. It is `I’ who draw the bow, or is it the bow that draws me into a state of highest tension? Do `I’ hit the goal, or does the goal hit me? Is `It’ spiritual when seen by the eyes of the body, and corporeal when seen by the eyes of the spirit–or both or neither? Bow, arrow, goal and ego, all melt into one another, so that I can no longer separate them. And even the need to separate has gone. For as soon as I take the bow and shoot, everything becomes so clear and straightforward and so ridiculously simple….”

“Now at last,” the Master broke in, “the bow-string has cut right through you.”

All this, especially #II, came to mind while visiting California in search of business.  I can no more “get business” than I can shoot an arrow.  It’s a hard thing to learn: I am not the center of this activity, just its agent.

A few of the events I have attended recently involve listening to successful entrepreneurs talk about their stories, the obstacles they faced and how they succeeded. I know they are supposed to be inspirational stories. They are, in a sense, pornography: living vicariously through others’ success, wishing to be like them. But just as pornography teaches you nothing about how to succeed in love, these entrepreneurship meetings teach you nothing about how you can succeed with your idea in your business in your environment. Inspiration must come from within.

As for success, I used to think there are only 2 teachers: practice and failure. Actually, neither is.

You try and try and try, maintaining the state of highest tension, and then it just happens. Or not.

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