I thought it was a wonderful idea -to touch and feel the snow or just
listen to the snow crackle and understanding its presence in silence.
Beautiful and very poetic. I think the blind man analogy is basically
for effect. 

Subramani 


-----Original Message-----
From: accessindia-boun...@accessindia.org.in
[mailto:accessindia-boun...@accessindia.org.in] On Behalf Of Kotian, H P
Sent: Monday, August 17, 2009 10:35 AM
To: accessindia@accessindia.org.in
Subject: [AI] How could a blind man watch the snow?

Hello all

I am allowing this posting for members to reflect on the mindset /
enquiry;  prevailing about  prevalent notions on visual disability.
Harish Kotian
Moderator


hi

not sure whether this is an OT. Thought this might interest some of AI
members. If you share this view please post it.
regards
rohith

Saying it with silence

There was this very beautiful line that I read in Orhan Pamuk's novel,
'My Name Is Red'. He wrote about a blind man watching the snowfall and
smiling to himself. That line stayed with me for a long, long time.
How could a blind man watch the snow?

I pondered. I know that when the sight is taken away, the other senses
become sharper. The blind man must have felt the cold air around him
with the tiny snowflakes brushing his cheek; he must have caught a
puffy, wet ball in his hand and had felt it melt in his palms. But did
he hear the snow falling?

Somehow I believe that he actually listened to the snowfall, more than
he felt it. He must have listened to the silence of the falling snow.
He listened, because he was silent inside, in his own wonderful and
special way.

Often silence makes people uncomfortable, accustomed as they are to the
noise and commotion of the world, but silence is all about coming home
to ourselves.

When we sit in silence we relax and slip into an exquisite nothingness.
We look within and drop our opinionated mind and learn to feel
everything around us more deeply.

When the incessant chatter of the mind stops and we let the quietness
around submerge us, something sacred is born within. Nietzsche said that
our greatest experiences are our quietest moments.

Needless to say, it is only in silence that we are capable of listening.
Like that blind man watching the snowfall and smiling to himself, we
learn to listen more when we are silent.

Silence is the basic ingredient for entering into our intuitive mind and
to resist the cacophony of meaningless noises outside.

It is interesting to note how Silent and Listen have same letters but
are arranged differently.

We humans have a tendency to talk more and listen less; much of it is
because we have forgotten the art of waiting and allowing ourselves to
grow silent within.

Nature has no trouble in remembering this art. Nature thrives on
silence. We never hear the footsteps of moon when it appears on the sky.
We don't hear a loud bang when the sun comes out and the stars burst
open in the sky. Their arrival is always wrapped in a glorious silence.
Look how the tree knows it! It remains bare, beautiful and still;
waiting for the new leaves, knowing that the old has gone and the new
will soon be coming. The tree waits in silence.

Just like tree, when we are silent and waiting, something beautiful
inside us keeps on growing and it is this stillness and silence that
gives birth to creativity.

Often it happens that when we wait in silence, life rushes back to fill
those crevices in our souls. There are times when silence becomes the
most potent way of communication and is more effective than words.
We all have at least one memory when we have faced that eloquent silence
of our elders such as parents or teachers when we have felt a cold fear
at the bristling silence of their fury. When their silence had scared us
more than angry words. When just one quiet look had had us behaving
better than a harsh reprimand or scolding.

Lovers all over the world are said to communicate with silence.
Understand each other's silence. The famous telepathy between two people
who have strong feelings for each other happens in a compelling silence.

In a business world the salesmen are taught the art of persuasive
silence. After he has urged the potential client to buy some product and
the customer is contemplating quietly over what the salesman has
described, the well trained salesman remains absolutely silent during
this important hiatus. Often he gains his sale by using this important
tool.

Undeniably, silence needs a special kind of power and authority of mind
and saying it with silence needs a certain 'command of language'.
To say nothing is often more difficult than expressing the anger, love
and betrayal with words.

However, being silent with a natural and calm stillness within is like a
spiritual reflex. Analyze it too much or think too much about it and it
degenerates itself into something superficial and edgy. If we become
self-conscious about silence then we begin to work against it.
We rush to fill it with inane talks and nervous gestures, and the
silence loses its value.

But we can certainly develop this powerful way of communicating by
practicing a calm mind. By realizing that between stimulus and response,
there is a space and in that space is our power to choose our response
because in our response lies our growth and our freedom.
That "space" is silence.

The French mathematician Blaise Pascal said "All man's miseries derive
from not being able to sit quiet in a room alone."

As these beautiful lyrics of the song 'Sounds of silence' by Simon and
Garfunkel say:

"People talking without speaking,
People hearing without listening,
People writing songs that voices never share And no one dared Disturb
the sound of silence.

Hear my words that I might teach you;
Take my arms that I might reach you.
But my words like silent raindrops fell, And echoed In the wells of
silence."

Each time when I feel that I just cannot take another step forward in
life, I seek refuge in silence. And sure enough I get recharged with
fresh dose of faith, hope and confidence.



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