
There’s a saying that’s supposed to be inspirational – “Do not forget in the darkness what you learned in the light.” Trust me, when you’re in darkness, you don’t really remember anything other than to somehow breathe and try to get through.
But I shouldn’t scoff too much, there is much truth there. I also think the converse principle is true, maybe even more so. That you learn quite a bit in the darkness. Maybe even more.
There’s something about darkness that makes everything clear. What matters, who you are, what you believe in, etc. I would say few better teachers.
One of my favorite characters is the Taoist monk in the Marco Polo series. A kung-fu master who almost single-handedly resists the Mongol takeover of his temple, he gets captured. After an unsuccessful escape attempt (where he kills the original Subutai’s son – props to the writers for this reference), Kublai Khan blinds him with a poisonous snake.
The monk is gutted, he can barely stand up, much less fight. But slowly and surely, he somehow finds it in him, in both figurative and literal darkness, to regain his skills. In fact, he is even better than before.
He tells the Khan that the physical blindness inflicted was a gift, that he now sees the world with a hundred eyes. And in true warrior monk fashion refuses tea and demands wine instead, insisting that he not be confused with the Khan’s other Buddhist priests.
There’s also this song by the Hours “Ali in the Jungle” once used by Nike in a great commercial (unfortunately had to be pulled because it featured Lance Armstrong and Oscar Pistorius). The lyrics reference people who faced tremendous odds and prevailed – including the blind Helen Keller and deaf Beethoven.
Learning to see with a hundred eyes.








