from The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyâm
The Moving Finger writes; and, having writ, Moves on: nor all thy Piety nor Wit Shall lure it back to cancel half a Line, Nor all thy Tears wash out a Word of it. OMAR KHAYYAM
Omar Khayyám was a scholar and astronomer who lived in Iran. His poetry reflects his thoughts about the deity, good and evil, spirit, matter, and destiny.
Almost
a thousand years have passed since the birth of Omar, the world’s most
famous tent-maker, poet, and astronomer all rolled into one brilliant
philosophical storyteller.
This particular quatrain from the Rubaiyat contains
a lesson that has not dimin ished at all in the passing of a
millennium. These famous words embrace a subtle truth that escapes many
people.
One way to understand the wisdom of this quatrain is to imagine your body is a speedboat that is cruising through the water at forty knots per hour. You stand on the stern of that boat and peer down at the water. What (The boat represents you “cruising” you would see in this imagi nary scene through your life.) The answer is “The is the wake. Now I ask you to philosophize about the following three questions.
Question #1: What is the wake? You probably will conclude that the wake is the trail that is left behind, and nothing more.
Question #2: What is driving the boat? boat and peer down at the water. What (The boat represents you “cruising” you would see in this imagi nary scene through your life.) The answer is “The present moment energy being generated by the engine, and nothing more, is responsible for making the boat go forward.” Or, in the case of your life, the present moment thoughts that propel your body to move forward, and nothing more!
Question #3: Is it possible for the wake to drive the boat? The answer is obvious. A trail that is left behind can never make a boat go forward. It is just a trail and nothing more. “The Moving Fin ger writes; and having writ, moves on…. One of life’s greatest illusions is the belief that the past is responsible for the current conditions of our lives. Often we assign this reason to explain why we cannot get out of our ruts. We insist it is because of all the problems that we faced in our past. We take wounds that we experienced in our youth, bond ourselves to them, and continue to blame those unfortunate experiences for our current miserable circumstances. These, we insist, are the reasons we can’t move forward. In other words, we are living the illusion that our wake is driving our lives.
Think of when you have had a physical injury, such as a cut on your hand. Your body’s nature takes over immediately and begins to close up the wound. Of course, it has to be cleansed to heal, as do emotional wounds as well. Healing takes place rather quickly then because your nature says, “Close up all those wounds and you will be healed.” Yet when your nature also says, “Close up all those wounds in your past,” you often ignore your nature and instead create a bonding to those wounds, living in your memories and using those ripples out of your past to live the illusion that this is the source of your immobility or failure to move on.
The moving finger that Omar
Khayyâm refers to is your body. Once it writes it is complete, and
there is absolutely nothing that you can do to unwrite it. None of your
tears will erase a single word of your written story. No amount of wit,
prayer, and piety can change a single drop of your wake. It is a trail
that you have left behind. While you may benefit by reviewing that
trail, you must come to a knowing within you that only your present
moment thoughts of how you process the wake are responsible for your
life today.
It has been said many times that circumstances do not make a man, they reveal him. The tendency to blame our past for our current shortcomings is tempting. It is the easy road, in that we have a ready excuse for refusing to take the risks involved in dri ving the boat ourselves. Everyone, and I emphasize everyone, has conditions order are all glaring at us just below and experiences in the past that the surface in the wake of our lives can be used as excuses for inaction.
The wake of all our lives overflows with the debris of our past history.
Parental
shortcomings, addictions, phobias, abandonment issues, dysfunctional
family members, missed opportunities, bad luck, lousy eco- nomic
conditions, and even birth and I emphasize everyone, has
conditions order are all glaring at us just below and experiences in the
past that the surface in the wake of our lives. And yet the moving
finger has written the story and nothing can be done to unwrite it.
Omar
Khayyâm reminds us from another place, another time, and another
language of the simple common sense that the past is over, and not only
is it over, but it is not subject to rewind or recall. Furthermore, it
is an illusion to believe that the past is what drives or fails to drive
your life today. That finger is still attached to your heart, and can
write anything it chooses, regardless of what it wrote yesterday. Wake
up and get out of the wake, and listen to the wisdom of Omar the
tent-maker!
The essential lessons of this quatrain include:
Live today. Let go of all your attachment to your past as an excuse for your life conditions today. You are the product of the choices you are making right now, and nothing in your wake can affect you today if you heed this common sense. Remove all blame from your vocabulary. Catch yourself when you find yourself using your past history as a reason for your failure to act today, and instead say, “I am free now to detach myself from what used to be.” Let go of your tears that have been a symbol of your attachment to the past. The sadness and self-pity will not wash away one tiny fragment of your past. Gently remind the wounded part of yourself that that was then and this is now. Learn from those experiences. Bless them as great teachers, and then come rush ing back to the working unit of your life, now!
There is a past, but not now. There is a future, but not now! From a thousand years ago grasp this simple truth and write your life with it!