I is a dumb Kentuckian

People seem to be easily impressed by experts from afar, as Robert Ringer called them. Specifically, spiritual experts from foreign lands with hard to pronounce names who act like they are something special must be onto something.

My best friend has been studying the thinking of some guy named Jiddu Krishnamurti. Now, I'm not condemning Mr. Krishnamurti, mostly on the basis that I'm not motivated enough to spend as much time studying him as I would need to in order to make an informed judgment. I'm just skeptical based on my cursory glance that he sounds like another run of the mill Eastern mystic going on about losing our egos.

One big thing that these anti-ego types miss is that it is precisely our egos that motivate us to improve the world, both for ourselves and others. Wanting to make money to buy that mansion on the hill, or to prove that I personally can invent a cure for cancer that will alleviate the suffering of millions, or just a desire to impress the girls and get some uptown coochie causes people to actually DO things. Perhaps this has some explanatory power as to why egotistical American cowboys build and run the world and Eastern mystics do not.

My main purpose here, though, is to run by you this Aesop's fable that was sent to my friend by a Krishnamurti person to illustrate the need of overcoming our egos.

The Bundle of Sticks:
An old man on the point of death summoned his sons around him to give them some parting advice. He ordered his servants to bring in a faggot of sticks, and said to his eldest son: "Break it." The son strained and strained, but with all his efforts was unable to break the Bundle. The other sons also tried, but none of them was successful. "Untie the faggots," said the father, "and each of you take a stick." When they had done so, he called out to them: "Now, break," and each stick was easily broken. "You see my meaning," said their father. Union gives strength.

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Article Author: Al Barger

Unreformed hawkish Hoosier hillbilly Al Barger runs the still squeezin' down the psychodelic Kentucky moonshine at More Things. What with the paranoid religious visions, the Pentecostal music, visions of God and anarchy running amok and such, somebody …

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  • 1 - Blaine Hilton

    Nov 25, 2002 at 11:53 am

    Philosophy is what you make of it, if you don't give a care then is there still philosophy?

  • 2 - Chris

    Nov 25, 2002 at 2:02 pm

    I was innudated with a lot of this crap while in Student Council in high school. Thankfully, I outgrew most of it.

    Although, the OU Baseball team, the year they won the National Championship, did have a cool slogan: "25 Guys Pulling on The Same Rope."

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