This attack may not be
not a life-threatening issue, but rather a
metaphorical shove to the sense of self that oftentimes feels like it.
Ritual and path create a comfort level, and comfort reduces stress.
The ritual assures us we are doing the “correct” things via
experience or authority, and the path gives us direction.
No biological
life is designed for a constant state of alert or stress, it’s too
psychologically and physically taxing; most life is designed for rest.
Being in a state of stress is the opposite of ritual and path. The
modern world is a minefield of shifting ritual, and paths, invalidations,
and condescension, ad infinitum… Rest and ritual build assurances
into the day that allows for a lower ambient state of alertness, a
manageable level of stress.
Ritual and path are necessary for human life. Ritual can be religious
in nature such as a communal prayer, or as secular as watching a
popular television show in the evening. Regardless, it is essential.
Every path contains its ritual. The more ingrained the ritual becomes,
the more essential it becomes to the path.
Consequently the path
and the ritual often become confused and incorrectly inseparable.
Alfred Korzybski, a leader in the study of semantics coined the
phrase, “The map is not the territory.” I will go further and say the
ritual is not the territory. The path is not the knowledge.
Musashi took a discipline, the way of the sword, and made it his own
by breaking the rules. He broke from his teacher, an incredibly anti-
social act in his time and culture.
He left his family, again a deep
statement especially in a society that placed the family name before
the individual name. Musashi decided that one hand on two blades
was better that two hands on one blade and began to fight with two
swords, clearly unorthodox.
Musashi forged his own path and, as a result, we know of him today.
Yet he admonishes us to never stray from the path. Incongruent
don’t you think? I submit that Musashi was really telling his students
was to understand why they were doing what they were doing, to not
get distracted with extraneous actions, to focus.
A
man once said to a monk, “That was a beautiful prayer, may I
come back to the monastery and see your prayer tomorrow.” The
monk responded, “You have never seen my prayer, you have only
seen what I do in preparation of prayer.” Never confuse the map for
the territory, as the territory of ritual and path is where you live, and
for
the most part, never seen.
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