
The opportunity for Human Life is rare,’ began the Patriarch, Yen Tzu. ‘So rare that it can be likened to that magical event which occurs just once every four hundred years. The moment when the great mythical sea turtle rises for air. Imagine, that while breaking the surface, the creature places its head through a bamboo ring. A hoop that happens to be floating randomly alone in the vast ocean. What perfect timing that would take! Imagine too that this solitary wooden necklace fitted exactly. What precision that would be! Now imagine that the human physical body is the bamboo circle, and the turtle is the immortal spirit entering it. Then you can imagine the perfect coming together of forces that must happen for our own birth.’
‘It is indeed hard to consider that our life is such a rarity,’ replied his pupil, Lu Chou. ‘Just look at the countless people going about their business in the Imperial city each day!’
‘Just so,’ answered Yen Tzu, ‘and each one of them is just where they should be. For in truth our lives are the result of a synchronicity between the physical and spiritual. As such, each one of us began our lives at the rightly appointed time, and in the correct place intended.’
‘That must be why one person’s timing in life seems infinitely better than another’s,’ commented Lu Chou. ‘Where one man seems to make his fortune, another does not; where one struggles to no avail, another seems to attain easily.’
‘That is not the reason,’ said the Patriarch, ‘for the time and place has nothing to do with a man’s success. The rightness and timing in awaiting the turtle is merely to illustrate that such synchronicity is our birthright. But Man, instead of resolving to
continue to use this natural serendipitous power, has become conditioned do the opposite.
‘In doing so he unconsciously acts against himself, seeking to manipulate and control outcomes according to his own rules. He has forgotten that everything that is to happen for his benefit does so at the right time; and everything that is forced beyond
a natural course of events is either lost or distorted.
‘Even if the outcome is seemingly right it does not carry the power it would have had, or bring the benefit it was intended to bring. The result is that the harder he seems to push towards that which he wants, the further it moves away from him. Such is the plight of all who take the heritage of how they came to be for granted. Yet, in truth, knowing how to harness our natural synchronicity with Life’s opportunities creates the
paradox of the less we do, the more we achieve.’
‘So what can we do to regain this power, this heritage,’ asked the pupil.
‘We must steadfastly resolve to live, trust, accept and have
purpose in whatever we do, at the moment we are doing it. For the nature of being always in the right place at the right time is ours to command.’
This story comes from The Teachings of Billionaire Yen Tzu Volume II Lesson 12.
This is the final lesson of the two volumes and I believe its substance is rather relative to this time of year when Christmas is just about here and we are all very involved in trying to please our family and friends - with unnecessary gifts. According to Yen Tzu 'everything that is forced beyond a natural course of events is either lost or distorted'. We do not need to impress or convince those close to us of our love for them by buying expensive gifts to prove their worth to us. The spirit of giving is within us all and sharing time together in kindness of spirit to each other is far more worthy.