The Land of Truth

A certain man believed that the ordinary waking life, as people know it, could 
not possibly be complete. He sought the real Teacher of the Age. He read many 
books and joined many circles, and he heard the words and witnessed the deeds 
of one master after another. He carried out the commands and spiritual 
exercises which seemed to him to be most attractive.

He became elated with some of his experiences. At other times he was confused; 
and he had no idea at all of what his stage was, or where and when his search 
might end.

This man was reviewing his behavior one day when he suddenly found himself near 
the house of a certain sage of high repute. In the garden of that house, he 
encountered Khidr, the secret guide who shows the way to truth.

Khidr took hihm to a place where he saw people in great distress and woe, and 
he asked who they were. "We are those who did not follow real teachings, who 
were not true to our undertakings, who revered self-appointed teachers," they 
said.

Then the man was taken by Khidr to a place where everyone was attractive and 
full of joy. He asked who they were. "We are those who did not follow the real 
Signs of the Way," they said.

"But if you have ignored the Signs, how can you be happy?" asked the traveler.

"Because we chose happiness instead of Truth," said the people, "just as those 
who chose the self-appointed chose also misery."

"But is happiness not the ideal of man?" asked the man.

"The goal of man is Truth. Truth is more than happiness. The man who has Truth 
can have whatever mood he wishes, or none," they told him. "We have pretended 
that Truth is happiness, and happiness Truth, and people have believed us, 
therefore you, too, have until now imagined that happiness must be the same as 
Truth. But happiness makes you its prisoner, as does woe."

Then the man found himself back in the garden with Khidr beside him.

"I will grant you one desire," said Khidr.

"I wish to know why I have failed in my search and how I can succeed in it," 
said the man. "You have all but wasted your life," said Khidr, "because you 
have been a liar. Your lie has been in seeking personal gratification when you 
could have been seeking Truth."

"And yet I came to the point where I found you," said the man, " and that is 
something which happens to hardly anyone at all."

"And you met me," said Khidr, "because you had sufficient sincerity to desire 
Truth for its own sake, just for an instant. It was that sincerity, in that 
single instant, which made me answer your call."

Now the man felt an overwhelming desire to find Truth, even if he lost himself.

Khidr, however, was starting to walk away, and the man began to run after him.

"You may not follow me," said Khidr, "because I am returning to the ordinary 
world, the world of lies, for that is where I have to be, if I am to do my 
work."

And when the man looked around him again, he realized that he was no longer in 
the garden of the sage, but standing in the Land of Truth. 

 




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