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Home » Article » Yoga The Maker of Maps - a metaphorical tale
Adam Sargant, Dip.H.Ed (Nursing Studies), Dip.Hyp.,NLP(prac) filed under "Yoga"
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Way back, back further even than before the time of your future
dreams, there was a Map Maker who was regarded as the finest
maker of maps in the city. His maps were known throughout the
land, and people would travel for many days to have a map
prepared by the Map Maker.
One day, a foreign dignitary visited the Map Maker's shop, and
at the dignitary's request the Map Maker prepared him the most
exquisite of maps made of the finest parchment, with the rarest
inks. The Map Maker worked late into the night, ignoring
mealtimes and calls for bed. In the morning, the dignitary
called to pick up the map as arranged and he was delighted.
Reverently he unrolled the map out on the Map Maker's desk.
Beneath their eyes desert lands unfurled in gold, while
green-brown forests and white peaked mountains lay before them.
Delicate lines marked out contours, latitudes and longitudes,
and exquisite letters showed the locations of towns, villages
and cities.
"Map Maker" said the dignitary, pointing to a deep blue river on
the map, "tell me of this area here".
"Sire" replied the Map Maker "I know not of these areas I draw.
My maps are drawn from the words and the maps of others who have
gone before me." And he took the dignitary to a room at the back
of the shop that contained books from travellers, hand drawn
maps, sketches, and all manner of paper and record.
The dignitary hid his disappointment well, but soon after he
left, the Map Maker began to hear disturbing stories. That
people were saying that they could not trust his work. Saying,
that if he simply put together his maps from other peoples work
then however fine they were, how could anyone guarantee their
accuracy? How could anyone who used them know that they would
simply not get lost?
Over the weeks, he noticed a slowing down of business, until his
customers had almost stopped coming in their entirety. Now, this
sorely vexed the Map Maker, for not only was this how he made
his living, but he was a deeply proud man, proud of both his art
and his reputation. And it pained him to the core of his being
that his maps might not actually be as good as he had always
believed them to be. So he resolved to discard his work and to
discard his books and his drawings, and venture out into the
world himself, and learn his art again anew.
So, he sold his shop, his fine pens and his parchments. He sold
his rare ink and his gold leaf, his books, papers and records.
With the proceeds from the sale, he paid of his servants and was
about to put the remaining money in the single bag he had packed
for his journeys when he had a thought. This thought came
unbidden, and he knew not from where, but it seemed important to
him somehow.
"If I am to start out anew then I must go out into the world as
much as a new born child as I am able. Only then will I be able
to immerse myself deep in my art".
And so he gave the remainder of his money to a beggar outside
the shop, and he left his shop and he left his city. As he
walked passed the city gates with only his clothes and his bag
he turned back to look, and it seemed to him as if he was
leaving a strange place.
Many days he wandered and there was much fear in his heart, for
he had no maps to guide him now. But many days there was much
joy too, as he took to sketching with the simple pencils and
paper he had brought with him for the task of relearning his
art. And sometimes he measured, and drew maps, and sometimes he
just sat, deep in a silence. And it would seem to him afterward,
that it was at these times that he was most deeply immersed in
his art, and that it was in this inner sense of silence that he
learned the most.
As he learned to survive, to trade his physical labour or his
skills as an artist for food, the days when he felt fear grew
less, and the days when he felt joy, grew more. He came to know
the pleasure of rain on his skin, the soft sound of birdsong as
the sun rose in the mornings. He came to learn the ache of
muscles worked hard during a long day. He came to appreciate the
bright crispness of a winter's day, the newborn colours of
spring, the warm joy of summer and the red-gold quiescence of
autumn. He discovered the joys of a simple welcome and of
hospitality, of a giving and receiving, motivated only by a
common humanity.
As he wandered, his muscle grew hard, and his body lean and
tanned. His face became lined and radiated a peace and a gentle
silence that filled the people he met with quiet awe and
reverence. Yet none of this he noticed.
When he came to a new town, he would tell the people there of
his travels, and he would illuminate his stories with pictures
and maps of his own making, drawn both on paper, and in the air
with his arms as he told his tales. And he started to notice a
strange thing; that when he came into a new place, people seemed
to know him, and to have been waiting eagerly for his arrival.
Audiences would gather to hear of his travels, and he would
leave behind maps and pictures for the people, never taking them
on with himself in his journey but always starting out anew with
fresh pencils and plain paper.
As he continued to wander, he came to realise that the maps he
carried in his memory would guide him better than the maps he
drew on paper, because they could change, and in winter, would
have snow and ice, and in summer, fields and desert. So he
started to tell his audience that they did not need his maps,
that the maps that they carried in their heads were much more
useful, because they would change, but only the children seemed
to understand, and so he would still leave maps and pictures for
the townsfolk wherever he wandered.
Time went on, and although he had not forgotten why he had left
the city, his purpose became less and less important to him.
Over time, he noticed that people seemed to treat him
differently. The children would rush toward him still and clutch
at his clothes, begging to hear his stories, and the adults
would welcome him into their homes, offer him work and give him
food, but there was a change. There was an air of hushed
reverence and deference in their treatment of him and gradually
this came to trouble him. One day he stopped at a village that
he knew well, and the people of the village welcomed him with
their usual love and respect, but he asked of them "Why this
change? For many years now I have travelled, and I've come
through your village, and you have always welcomed like a
brother, but this, this is different. Why do you now treat me
like a…?" and he paused, lost for the word.
"Magus, you do not know?" asked one villager. The answer
troubled him further, and he shook his head, so the villager
lead him to the village meeting hall. There, inside, and
surrounded by people, lay one of his maps, left behind from a
previous visit. The villagers parted to let him through, and he
approached the map, only to notice the most curious thing. When
he was here last, he had drawn a map of the land in winter, with
snowcaps and frozen lakes. This, this was a map of the land in
summer, all green fields and flowing rivers. He peered closer,
and was surprised to see movement. If he looked closely enough,
he could see the meeting hall. And if he looked closer still, he
could swear that he could almost see into the hall itself, and
see himself standing surrounded by the awed villagers. He
laughed out loud.
"Do you see, Magus?" the villager asked.
"I see nothing" said the Maker of Maps, kindly, "I see only what
I have told you all along, but only the children understood."
and with that, he picked up the map, and tore it into little
pieces. He turned to the villager, placed his hand upon the
villager's head and asked "And who has the best map, now?"
About the author:
Adam is an NLP practitioner and Hypnotherapist, as well as a
mental health nurse with over a decades experience. He is
passionate about the use of language to effect change, and about
the ability of people to maximise their own potential.
This article is free to use as long as you publish a live link
to http://www.hypnosisaudiocds.com using the link text "Hypnosis MP3s and
CDs"
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