The
power of fear
My first story is
aimed at all those who worry that people might find out who they really
are—especially those who would literally think and feel suicidal thoughts if
people found out. Even death for some hurt souls seems to be a better place
than being truthful and dissolving those bullying thoughts and feelings!
The
Snake in the Cup
One day a businessman was drinking a cup of tea at the house of a
female business acquaintance when he noticed what he thought was a baby snake
in his cup. Not wishing to embarrass his hostess, he gulped down the tea—snake
and all—and hastily left.
The thought of the tiny snake in his stomach really distressed the man.
For the rest of the day he felt nauseated, and when he went to bed that night
he had terrible stomach ache. Fearing that he may have contracted some terrible
disease from the snake, or worse, that the snake was still alive and was
gnawing his insides, he resolved to visit the doctor as soon as possible. Early
in the morning, after a very disturbed night’s sleep, he set out for the
doctor’s surgery.
On the way he passed the house where he had swallowed the snake. His
friend, who happened to be looking out of the window, noticed his miserable
condition and invited him inside. The sick man sat where he had sat before, and
politely accepted another cup of tea, but as he raised the cup to drink, he saw
another snake! He threw the cup to the floor and quickly explained his impolite
behavior to his puzzled friend. She smiled and pointed to the ceiling, where a
short length of rope was dangling. “There’s your snake,” said his friend. “What
you thought was a baby snake was a reflection of a little piece of rope!” The
man’s stomach pain disappeared immediately, and he was back to perfect health
in an hour.
Who, as a child,
feared that the coat hanging behind the door was a burglar? And as the book of
Proverbs suggests: “For as he thinketh in
his heart, so is he.” (Proverbs 23:7, King James Version). Often we let our imagination create those
ghosts, and we stay in fear. So what snakes do you imagine you may have
swallowed into your subconscious mind, which still make you uncomfortable or
even distressed? Now let’s begin a journey together as equals in mind, body,
and spirit.
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