My colleague was on
patrol in the jungles of Burma; he was young, far from home and very
frightened. The scout from his patrol returned to tell the captain the terrible
news. Their small patrol had stumbled into a huge number of Japanese troops.
The patrol was vastly outnumbered and completely surrounded. The young British
soldier prepare himself to die.
He expected his captain to order the men to fight their way out: that was the
manly thing to do. Maybe someone would make it. If not, well, they would take
some of the enemy with them into death; That's what soldiers did.
But not the soldier who was the captain. He ordered his men to stay put, sit
down, and make a cup of tea. It was, after all, the British army !
The young soldier thought his commanding officer had gone mad. How can anyone
think of a cup of tea when surrounded by the enemy, with no way out and about
to die ?
In an army, especially at war, orders had to be obeyed. They all made what they
thought was to be their last cup of tea. Before they had finished drinking
their tea, the scout came back and whispered to his captain. The captain asked
for the men's attention. "The enemy has moved," he announced.
"There is now a way out. Pack your kit quickly and quietly - Lets
go!"
They all got out safely, which is why he could tell me the story many years
later. He told me that he owed his life to the wisdom of that captain, not just
at war in Burma, but many times since. Several times in his life, it was as if
he was surrounded by the enemy, completely outnumbered, with no way out and
about to die. He meant by "the enemy" serious illness, horrendous
difficulty, and tragedy, in the middle of which there seemed no way out.
Without the experience in Burma, he would have tried to fight his way through
the problem, and no doubt made it much worse in the process. But instead, when
death or deadly trouble surrounded him on all sides, he simply sat down and
made a cup of tea.
The world is always changing; life is a flux. he drank his tea, conserved his
energy and waited for the time, which always came, when he could do something
effective - like get safely out.
For those who don't like tea, remember this saying, "when there's nothing
to do, then do nothing."
It may seem obvious, but it may also save your life.
Ajahn Brahm
I think there is another way which is also very effective - that is when we are surrounded by "enemy" or frightened to death, just sit down and do meditation. Even though we are killed, we will die in peace and compassion.
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