Where Is Freedom?

JapanBird

A little one on one with my bird

I bought a caged finch in Japan years ago. I took it home and left the cage door open so it could fly around if it wished. It wouldn’t. It just stayed contentedly in its cage. Weeks or months (I forget which) passed before it ventured out. I left the window open too, and soon it would go out, fly about, and return home. The Bird stayed away longer and longer until one day it didn’t return.

I notice a parallel here between me and that bird. I spent years, more or less inside civilization’s paradigm, venturing out of society’s cultural cage from time to time.

I venture out more frequently now, and can’t image giving up the ‘freedom’ to return. However, truth be told, it is a toss up. There is also the ‘freedom’ of safety and comfort within the paradigm, while outside of it there is often a fearsome sense of awe and mystery. Which is the greater freedom? One offers freedom to feel safe and comfortable, the other offers the freedom to feel awe and, well, more tentative, as if fording a river in winter.

Personally, like the bird, I could never return to the freedom of my former safe and comfortable cage. On the other hand, I could never recommend someone giving that up either. In life we simply go with the ‘toss up’ we are given at the time. I guess, like that bird, we leave the ‘cage’ when we can no longer stay. To stay or leave, that is the question. As it happens (to paraphrase chapter two) staying and leaving  produce each other. Like  Australians says, “No worries mate”. It truly does happen to us naturally.

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4 Responses to “Where Is Freedom?”


  • Where’s the “Like” button?

    I scare myself sometimes thinking what if what I’m doing is not the thing I should be doing. I have my doubts about…everything, really. I’m not much of a believer and I stand on a groundless ground. Help! No, I’m usually pretty okay there. Just some days….

    So it’s nice to hear that everything is just as it is and that’s good enough for me. Who could argue that it isn’t? No worries indeed.

  • very fine post ..
    I am convinced too that freedom is essentially to fall all mental cages; no convictions, certainties, cultural, religious and social “mind-structures” but only a great emptiness in which to fly.
    ciao e grazie
    elio

    p.s.
    sorry for my english.

  • Thank you Elio. I think the more we acknowledge that we have those mind structures and that they are part of our very nature, the more we can see through them to the emptiness. I don’t know if I’ll ever be free of them, but as they say, what you resist persists, so I resist not!

  • This kind of reminds me of the red pill/blue pill choice:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redpill

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