|
The Te
of Piglet
“Thousands of years ago, man lived in
harmony with the rest of the natural world. Through what we
would today call Telephathy, he communicated with animals,
plants, and other forms of life – none of which he
considered “beneath” himself, only different, with different
jobs to perform. He worked side by side with earth angels
and nature spirits, with whom he shared responsibility for
taking care of the world.
The earth’s atmosphere was very different
from what it is now, with a great deal more
vegetation-supporting moisture. A tremendous variety of
vegetable, fruit seed, and grain food was available. Because
of such a diet, and a lack of unnatural strain, human life
span was many times longer than what it is today. The
killing of animals for food or “sport” was unthinkable. Man
lived at peace with himself and the various life forms, whom
he considered his teachers and friends.
But gradually at first, and then with
increasing intensity, man’s Ego began to grow and assert
itself. Finally, after it had caused many unpleasant
incidents, the consensus was reached that man should go out
into the world alone, to learn a necessary lesson. The
connections were broken.
On his own, feeling alienated from the
world he had been created from, cut off from the full extent
of its abundance, man was no longer happy. He began to
search for the happiness he had lost. When he found
something that reminded him of it, he tried to possess it
and accumulate more – thereby introducing Stress into his
life. But searching for lasting happiness and accumulating
temporary substitutes for it brought him no satisfaction.
As he was no longer able to hear what the
other forms of life were saying, he could only try to
understand them through their actions, which he often
misinterpreted. Because he was no longer cooperating with
the earth angels and nature spirits for the good of all, but
was attempting to manipulate the earth forces for his
benefit alone, plants began to shrivel and die. With less
vegetation to draw up and give off moisture, the planet’s
atmosphere became drier, and deserts appeared. A relatively
small number of plant species survived, which grew smaller
and tougher with passing time. Eventually they lost the
radiant colors and abundant fruit of their ancestors. Man’s
life span began to shorten accordingly, and disease appeared
and spread. Because of the decreasing variety of food
available to him – and his growing insensitivity – man began
to kill and eat his friends the animals. They soon learned
to flee from his approach and became increasingly shy and
suspicious of human motives and behavior. And so the
seperation grew. After several generations, few people had
any idea of what life had once been like.
As man became more and more manipulative
of and violent toward the earth, and as his social and
spiritual world narrowed to that of the human race alone, he
became more and more manipulative of and violent toward his
own kind. Men began to kill and enslave each other, creating
armies and empires, forcing those who looked, talked,
thought, and acted differently from them to submit to what
they thought was best.
Life became so miserable for the human
race that, around two to three thousand years ago, perfected
spirits began to be born on earth in human form, to teach
the truths that had largely been forgotten. But by then
humanity had grown so divided, and so insensitive to the
universal laws operating in the natural world, that those
truths were only partially understood.
As time passed, the teachings of the
perfected spirits were changed, for what one might call
political reasons, by all-too-human organizations that
inherited them. Those who came into prominence within the
organizations wanted power over others. They downplayed the
importance of non-human life forms and eliminated from the
teachings statements claiming that those forms had souls,
wisdom, and divine presence – and that the heaven they were
in touch with was a state of Unity with the Divine that
could be attained by anyone who put aside his ego and
followed the universal laws. The power-hungry wanted their
followers to believe that heaven was a place to which some
people – and only people – went after death, a place that
could be reached by those who had the approval of their
organizations. So not even the perfected spirits were able
to restore the wholeness of truth, because of interference
by the human ego.”
Hoff, Benjamin. 2002. The Tao
of Pooh and the Te of Piglet. Egmont Books Limited. London.
|