MIND YOUR LANGUAGE
     
        
     
        A young man had a very bad temper. His speech was tempered with abuses 
and insults. He would argue with his parents over trivial issues and utter 
scathing words. His parents tried hard to put up with his temper and reform him 
too, but he was quite incorrigible. 

        One day, he quarreled with his. The young lad hurled abuses at his 
father and walked out shouting, "I'll never come back! You shall regret this 
when you are old and have no one to look after you." He stomped out of the 
house, banging the door behind him. He loitered on the street, waiting for his 
mother to come running out, to beg him to come back. She always did that and he 
expected it. But inside the house, the father held on fast to his wife's hand 
and said, "No, my dear! Enough is enough! Let him go. He has to learn the hard 
way!" 

        The boy spent the night on a bench in the park. He was hungry and cold. 
But he was too high headed to return home and apologize. He roamed the streets 
and bought himself food. A few days passed with the little money he had. He 
asked for a job at shop and was given a dishwasher's job. He looked so shabby 
and malnutritioned by now, that he didn't look fit for a better job. His job 
was to serve tea to all the staff at the shop and then clear and wash the tea 
cups. One day as he was serving tea, the tray tilted and the tea spilt on to an 
officer and her files. She screamed, "What are you doing? Are you blind?" That 
was it. The boy shouted back at her, the choicest of words that were in his 
vocabulary. Needless to say he lost his job. Time passed, he hopped from one 
job to the other, but every time his tongue and his temper got him out of his 
job sooner than later. 

        He had moved to another town and was utterly miserable, but he still 
had no control over his fork edged tongue. One day he was very hungry. As he 
roamed around in search of work, he saw an old man cleaning paddy. He begged 
him, "I am hungry, please give me some money." The old man took pity on him and 
said, "Son, I don't have any money but I can give you some rice, here.... take 
it." The old man picked up a fistful of raw rice and put it into the 
outstretched hands of the hungry boy. The boy walked further trying to figure 
out a way to cook the rice. He saw an old woman lighting a small log fire. He 
said to her, "Please boil this rice for me, I am starving. An old man took pity 
and gave it to me." 

        The old woman smiled warmly and took the rice from the boy and put it 
into a pan along with some salt and water. While the rice cooked, the boy sat 
down on the floor, resting his tired head in his hands. The old woman asked him 
how he had gotten himself into this plight. It was the first time anyone had 
spoken a kind word to him in a long time and somehow the old woman reminded him 
of his mother. So he started pouring out his story from the time he used to 
live with his parents and how he'd left home and further on from one job to the 
next. The old woman looked at him thoughtfully and said, "So, it's always been 
the fault of your uncontrollable temper and your evil tongue that has led you 
from one problem to the other. So why don't you learn to mind your language?" 

        The boy glared at her and shouted, "You old hag! Who do you think you 
are? How dare you speak to me like that?" The old woman got up and picked up 
the vessel in which the rice was cooking. She said angrily, "You shall never 
learn, you foolish boy! Take the rice, I won't have you around, at my hearth. 
Extend the hem of your Kurta. I said; hold it ... now ... right now!" 

        He held out the two edges of his kurta, gaping at the angry old woman, 
as she poured out the entire contents of the vessel into the fall of his Kurta! 
Then she said, "Now, out you go. You don't deserve any kindness." 

        The boy walked out into the street, holding the half cooked rice in the 
hem of his Kurta. The hot water flowing down through the weave of his kurta and 
the hot steam rising up to meet the tears flowing down his cheeks! 

        A little boy in the street asked him, "Hey! What's that dripping 
through your Kurta?" He swallowed the lump in his throat and whispered, "Alas! 
It is the juice of my speech, dripping through my Kurta!" 

        Baba says, Do not contaminate the air by voices of acrimony, scandal, 
insult or slander. Keep silent when you feel like expressing such ideas, that 
itself is a service to yourself and others. If your foot slips, you earn a 
fracture; if your tongue slips, you fracture some one's faith or joy. That 
fracture can never be set right; that wound will fester forever. 

     

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