Sufi Spiritual Stories: Although developed through a Sufi, mystical perspective,
the short stories related here are applicable to almost any spiritual tradition because the underlying principles of spirituality and mysticism tend to remain largely the same across time, geography, and people ... although the language used to describe the mystical path may vary somewhat from tradition to tradition.
Phoenix Rising
From the first moment she laid eyes on the man, she was
consumed with love for him. She thought about him day and night.
He was in her dreams and fantasies.
Through some complex, strange form of association, everywhere
she looked she was reminded of him by what she saw. When he was
near she was in ecstasy, and when he was away, her being was filled
with sighs and sobs.
She constantly asked the people she met if they had seen him. If
they had not, she moved on in search of someone who had, and if the
people whom she met had seen the man, she would implore them to
give every last detail of their encounters -- often asking them to
repeat some part of the account which she particularly liked.
She only had three problems. First, she already was married.
Secondly, people were beginning to talk and a huge scandal was
brewing because her husband was a very influential and jealous
individual. Thirdly, the man of her affections did not appear to be in
love with her, and even if he were, his spiritual character was such
that he would, God willing, resist any temptation which might be
thrown in his path by her.
And, she did try to seduce him in a variety of ways and on a
variety of levels. But, without success.
These failures did not depress her. In fact, quite the opposite,
since the more her plans did not work, the more determined she
became, and, as a result she was spending all her time, effort, talents,
and abilities focusing on winning him over, and she enjoyed this,
much like a huntress might enjoy a hunt in which early set backs
only made the final conquest all the sweeter.
A time finally came, however, when her husband was fed up with
her antics. More and more, the whole situation had become a huge
source of embarrassment for him because, now, his wife was not even
bothering to hide her obsession from public view anymore, as, at
least, she had done when she first became enamored with, and
mesmerized by, the stranger.
His wife and he had become the talk of the town, both in the
gossip columns, as well as nearly every party and social occasion
being held in the city. He couldn't go anywhere without running in
to those 'funny looks' which bothered and upset so much.
He knew what lay behind those looks - namely, minds tittering
over someone else's misery and difficulty. People heaped ridicule
upon him behind his back, and, then, became excessively quiet
whenever he happened by their hushed conversations, only to begin
chattering again as soon as he walked a 'respectable' distance away,
looking at him recede from them with amusement smeared on their
lips like some uneaten piece of carrion.
The situation was affecting his ability to conduct business and
politics effectively. Enough was enough, so he threw his wife into the
street and by means which were as cruel as they were legally
permissible, he cut her off without a dime and made sure that no one
in the city would give her employment, and, consequently, she
became homeless and a beggar.
Many years passed and the scandal had, more or less, been
forgotten. Occasionally, people in the so-called circles of cultural
refinement played 'Do you remember' and reminisced about lives
which should have been laid to rest long ago but were being dug up
again as a tonic for some ghoulish hunger, much as a grave robber
might go looking for targets of opportunity amidst the shadows of the
soul's darkness, and whenever this occurred, the players would
recount the whole affair once again.
One day, the man who had been the object of the married
woman's obsession was on errand in the center of the city. As he
crossed the street and was waiting for a car to pass by, he looked
toward an alleyway which was next to the store where he was headed,
and he thought he saw a familiar face.
When he got to the far curb, he took a closer look at the person
who was sitting on the pavement, and, his earlier impression was
confirmed. The woman who had fallen madly in love with him so
many years ago, was sitting with a bowl in her lap, her eyes closed,
and her lips seemed to be moving. A sign next to her read: "Please
give alms for the poor."
He took out his wallet and put some currency in the receptacle
on her lap. Her eyes remained closed.
He stood over her, not knowing whether to move on or stay for
a while longer, waiting to see if she would open her eyes. He did not
wish to embarrass her, but he had lost track of her after her husband
threw her out and, often, had thought about her with concern, and
he would have liked to say 'Hello' and see if there was anything he
could do for her.
She had been a beautiful woman back then. If she had been
single, he would have married her in a fraction of a New York
second, but since she was not, all he could do was resist her advances,
try to avoid her when possible, and feel badly for both her and her
husband since the woman obviously had been struck by a force
which transcends all reason.
The years -- and street time weighs more heavily on humans than
can be measured even in dog-years -- had taken an obvious toll on the
woman. She was no longer either young or beautiful. Creases lined
her face and grey eddies ran through her hair.
He was about to leave when she stirred, shifted her position
slightly, and, then, opened her eyes. She had the look of someone who
had been far away without having gone anywhere.
She squinted against the sudden glare of light and looked
upward. A smile of recognition came across her lips, and a twinkle
came into her gaze. She said: "How are you?"
He crouched down, to be level with her, and put his hand on her
shoulder. "I'm fine, and how are you?"
She replied: "I am as you see me, and, praise be to God, I am
happy despite my worldly circumstances."
Feeling empathy for her well up in his heart, he realized he still
loved this woman although he could never have confessed to her back
when without helping an already impossible situation to deteriorate
further into chaos and madness. He spoke to her of the love which he
used to have, and still had, for her and why he been silent about it all
these years.
She said nothing, and just looked at him with affection. There
was an aura of satisfaction which had gathered about her like
morning mist around a field.
He said: "I heard long ago that your husband divorced you. I've
often searched for you, but always without success ... until now. And,
since you are an eligible woman, if you wish, I would be very happy
if you would become my wife and let me take you away from all this"
-- and as he said this, he moved his hand in a general reference to her
immediate physical circumstances.
She lowered her head and, then, raised it again and looked into
his eyes. She said: "Well, I am single, but I am not eligible."
Not sure what she meant by her remark, he said: "I'm sorry, I
don't understand."
She closed her eyes and began to talk. "Back when I was caught
up in my madness concerning you, I did not comprehend what was
going on. I didn't realize that the source of my overwhelming love
was not you, per se, but rather, you were the locus of manifestation
through which something else shone, and I confused you with that
which was shining through you.
I realize, now, I was like a deer caught in the headlights of
Divinity, and you were merely the car which brought that light
toward me. You were the candle, but God was the flame."
She opened her eyes and although she looked down the street,
her vision was somewhere else. As she stared at that which was both
near and far, she continued to speak: "I no longer have need of an
external candle, because the flame burns within me now. The light
that shone through you has ignited something within me which, God
willing, is self-sustaining, and I am happy with the warmth and joy
this inner light gives to me. This has been my Companion all these
many years ... this is what has, and continues to, sustain me."
She returned her gaze to him. "You are very loving and sweet to
offer your hand in marriage. Indeed, your very loving and kind
nature was the wax that formed the candle which, all those many
years ago, permitted the Divine light to shine through and melt my
heart. But, I am fine ... now, go back to your life with peace, secure
in the knowledge that the woman you worried about all these many
years has been, and is, happy and content with her life's destiny."
She looked at him for a few more seconds, and, then, closed her
eyes and her lips began to move again in a silent hymn. He stood,
looked down at her with a sense of awe and admiration, and, then,
turned and walked away.
But, the story does not end here. For always, that which unfolds
is continuously unfolding.
Several more years passed. The human candle had just come out
of a store and was thinking about whether he should walk home or
hail a cab -- the weather had been unsettled for most of the day and
rain seemed to be hiding in the air, ready to spill down.
He felt a tug on his arm, turned around and, once more, was
looking into the face of the same beggar woman. Without any
preliminary chit-chat, she said: "If the offer of marriage still stands,
I accept."
The man laughed, as much out of the unexpectedness of her
words as out of his sense of joy with respect to the potential
completion of a chain of events which had been set in motion so long
ago. He asked: "Why the change of heart?"
She replied: "My heart has not changed. But the light within me
has informed me that if I wish to serve That which makes such light
possible, then, first, I should love human kind, and I can think of no
better person to start with than you."