
For those following my posts, you may have noticed a slight slant toward story or poem or even what one might call, a subjective voice. I find this voice muted in Western thought and reason becomes king over intuition and insight although man's reason is far from infallible and is sometimes trustworthy only on the short haul. If we are trying to 'haul' for something beyond our noses - our reason may let us down.
There is a Mullah Nasruddin story that I love. It is told several ways - this is my version: Mullah Nasruddin was on his hands and knees under the street lamp and his friend passed by asking,
"Nasruddin, what are you doing on your hands and knees, did you lose something?"
"Yes," answered the Mullah. I lost an important key."
"Where did you lose it?" inquired the friend.
"I lost it back there in the dark," replied Nasruddin.
"Then, why, may I ask, are you searching for it here under the lamp?" the friend wondered.
"Do you think I have any chance of finding it back there in the dark?" demanded the Mullah.
It is reasonable to assume that we can find things under the known light of reason easier than it is in the dark. We are comforted by the scientific method and a rational world. But the dark is that area in which we must carry our reason to have any hope of finding the key we have lost. In today's Western world, and particularly in America, we avoid the dark, the doubt, the fear. We search in the best light and then wonder why we cannot find the answers.
A common reaction to the dark is to believe that the key is under the light. In fear of our doubt and anxiety we frantically demand that others find this key where we say it is. We silence all doubt in ourselves and in the world around us by asking others to have 'faith' in a key under the lamp. We are willing to give up our lives in certain situations in order to silence that voice of doubt in ourselves and others, and we are willing to demand that others see our faith as we see it.
Deep in our souls we know that the lamp flickers and that we walk on unfirm ground, and that, then, rules our fear and our futures. The idea that our globe may need tending in order to lesson the damage that the foot of man has caused is in the darkness but a light has been shone upon it by our science. "Keep looking under the lamp!" We implore. Don't doubt! Look under the lamp"
But doubt is a part of faith. Thoreau said, "If I could not doubt, I could not have faith." Each doubting step can bring us closer to the darkness and open our eyes to another step we might take, carrying our doubt with us. The search is all. The more the darkness closes over us and our reason is joined by our intuition, and instincts, the closer we come to an amalgum with the plane of life - the universal, intuitive, searching energy that is the stuff of all life. The key is in the darkness.
I will go to my grave with doubts. But I also go with the knowledge that I have had the courage to live in spite of my doubt, to search, to find connections and analogies - finding some answers that I would have not seen had I not looked in the dark. This is the courage to doubt.