His name is Ray. On his father’s farm in Maine, there was a
cabin rented out to an American Indian.
Quite elderly, he was called “Old Indian”.
One day Ray’s mother cautioned him, “Don’t call him Old Indian anymore.
Call him Grandfather and go learn from him.” For an eight year old, you can
imagine the thrill he felt.
He rushed out into the woods and gathered some branches to
make a bow and arrow. Not knowing quite
how to do it, he traipsed over to the cabin, “Grandfather, would you please
show me how to make it and shoot it?” Grandfather welcomed him and tears began
to flow because five years earlier he had a vision. An unknown boy came to him
wanting to make a bow and arrow. He knew that this one was his last chance. So
the lad became his apprentice.
One day Grandfather, who was now in his nineties, said,
“Today I’m going to teach you how to run.” Of course at fourteen you think you
can easily handle any old man, They trotted for six hours. The teen was
exhausted. Grandfather hardly had a sweat. Not bad for ninety, eh?
Ray grew up and fell in love with the forest kingdom. He
learned to stalk, fish, and read tracks, interpret sounds, sleep and eat from
the bountiful land in all seasons.
Mostly he learned how to appreciate its majesty. Later, he began giving
outdoor seminars around the country and designated an area near Princeton. MN,
as a special region.
Ray told me the following episode. When
Grandfather was in his fifties, a terrible sorrow overcame him. Nobody wanted
to learn. The Indians could care less; whitey wasn’t interested. He thought his
whole life was a waste of time. Some of us have been there. So full of all this
proven knowledge and nobody wants to harvest
it.
He
went through this turmoil for days. He was on the brink of such despondency of not
knowing what to do. In desperation, he
went for a walk. After three days in the
Maine woods, he suddenly came upon an unfamiliar sight. It struck him that he
had never known that a cabin was in this region. There it loomed. Smoke rose
out of the chimney so he figured somebody’s home. Knocking on the door, a voice
said, “Come on in.” He stood astonished. There reclined Grandfather’s teacher.
The only catch: his teacher had died thirty five years earlier. Here he was in
his recognizable human body.
Grandfather stayed for two days. They talked
about a lot of things. He finally broached
the real issue, the meaning of life for him at this stage. The elder told him, “I can’t give you that answer. It’s
inside you. You have to find it. But I will tell you one thing. Climb the
mountain again.” Grandfather nodded and sensed
it was time to leave, so he thanked his teacher once again. He was so thrilled
to see him in bodily form once more, as he walked off.
After
about an hour, suddenly his whole problem crushed down upon him like a heavy rain. “This ain’t
gonna work, I’ve tried.”
At that instance, the forest illuminated and words rose up
in his inner awareness. “No, I’m not
here to save the world. The elders will bring to me those who need to learn. Don’t
worry about numbers.” The vexing pity crumpled. “Yeh, just do the best you can” as the voice
kept energizing him. “Don’t worry about
attracting crowds . That’s not
the issue. Those who are meant to come will arrive. Meet them where they’re at.”
All the heaviness and anxiety gone. He felt so
elated he decided to go back and rethank his teacher. He turned and
rapidly walked another hour. When he reached the area, only a peaceful
silence greeted him. There was no cabin.
Ray, himself, was drafted into the military in the Viet Nam
era. When the Army found out here was a man who could live independently in the
woods, they put him in a special reconnaissance group which would scatter into
the jungle for months at a time. Each was on his own and had their own rules.
They were to reconnoiter and spy on the Vietcong. One morning as he was making
his way through the under-brush he came upon a clearing not on his map. An
entire village was standing there with smiles on their faces. He walked up to
them , “We’ve been waiting for you.” “You have?” “Yes, come on in.”
This indigenous tribe was the last remnant of its kind in
Vietnam. Even the government didn’t know
they still existed. Ray spent a whole year with them. They trained him. They
poured everything they loved about Nature into him. Toward the end of the
twelfth month, one of the elders approached, “Ray, we are going to be
assassinated soon. The Vietcong are going to wipe us out. We know its coming.
You have a choice. You can stay with us but you will be killed or you can go
back home and take what you’ve learned and bring it to your people.” He hid out and witnessed the slaughter.
With his discharge, Ray resolved for the rest of his life to
evoke the significance of Nature for
human development.
Some
years ago, and it wasn’t the only time,
I came upon Swami Rama alone
walking down the hall one night shaking his head with a certain anguished muttering
in his voice, “There’s nobody for the
truth---nobody really wants to learn, and practice it. I can’t just give it out
like an information sheet. You’ve got to do it in order to make it come alive.”
Any
takers for the mountain…again.
The Wanderer
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