One Step At A Time–a Story

June 10th, 2009  |  Published in Outer Work

There once was a farmer that owned an older mule. One day this mule fell into an abandoned well on this farmer’s property. Anxious to save this old mule, the farmer called on his friends to help him with the rescue. After several attempts, they failed to pull the mule out. The mule was stuck at the bottom so tightly, the men couldn’t get adequate ropes around him to pull him up. After several hours, the farmer decided that he would have to just bury the old mule, even though he felt bad about it.

The farmer began to shovel dirt into the hole. The dirt landed on the mule’s back. This scared the mule and he shook it off. The dirt fell under his feet and he was able to step up a bit. With each shovel of dirt, the mule shook it off, stepping up each time. This went on for quiet some time until the mule had shaken off so much dirt that he had stepped himself right out of the hole, right out of what looked like his gloom and doom.

 This is what we must do. We can’t let the dirt in our lives bury us. We must shake it off and then step up, step out and move on. Our journeys are all different. Don’t compare yourself to anyone else. It’s inevitable that we are going to have some symbolic dirt thrown on us during our lifetimes. Don’t compare your life’s dirt to someone else’s. The shoes they walk in were meant for them. We each have our own shoes and our own path to walk down.

Sometimes it will seem as if the way out of your deep and dark well, out of your difficulties, is hopeless, or too difficult to bear. It won’t be if you call on the Power Within and allow this Power to work in your life. The dirt will be much easier to shake off if you do.

Remember, we must “trust what we can’t yet see.” With each step we take, a new step will be revealed to us. We’re not meant to have the whole view revealed to us. Faith and trust are developed only where faith and trust are needed. If you can see the whole path–then it’s not your path, its someone elses.

One day I heard:

 “Thank you.”

“For what?” I asked. [I was very surprised that the Divine Intelligence was thanking me.]

 ”Your love and your trust.”

“I didn’t have any choice.” [I was being a bit sarcastic here; of course I had a choice. I was referring to my giving up," letting go and letting God", because my way hadn't been working.]  

“Yes you did.”

“The way to Me hasn’t been a cakewalk for you. I needed your strength—your character— and those aren’t found on easy street.

Oh so true–real character and real strength is revealed through the fire of the hard  and painful work of peeling back the layers. But is the most important work you can do—and the Phoenix of yourself will rise out of the ashes.

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