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[Mooji] The first year we had satsang
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people were hanging over the side of the building.
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I said, No, let's hurry up
and finish quickly, please. No accidents!
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[laughter]
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Let Go!
(with subtitles)
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[laughter]
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Oh yes, maybe I will tell you that joke,
Thomas's joke.
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It is a good one, isn't it?
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[Mooji] But everybody knows it, no?
[Sangha] No.
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[Mooji] Ah, OK.
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Thomas tells this joke. He says ...
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Thomas tells this joke. He says,
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'Once a pilgrim was on his way ...'
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This is my version. I have to speak my version.
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I don't know. I make things up.
[laughter]
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This pilgrim is on his journey to some place.
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He is walking through the mountain range
in the night and he slips.
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He tumbles down the side of the hill,
'Putam-pum-pum-pum-poof!'
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In the last tumble, at the very edge of the cliff,
he is hanging on.
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He is hanging on, dangling,
just holding on to the root of a tree.
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And down below is a big drop!
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And he is hanging there all by himself.
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He is there for a while and he is shouting,
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'Help! Help! Is anybody there? Help!'
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Then minutes go past and his arm is hurting.
'Help!'
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He doesn't have enough strength
to pull himself up.
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'Is anybody there?'
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Then finally a voice comes, 'Yes'.
[with echo sound effect]
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'Ah', he says. 'Help! Who is there?'
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So, the voice says, 'God'.
[with echo sound effect]
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[laughter]
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He is making special effects.
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[laughter]
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Nataraj! [laughter]
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The voice says, 'God'.
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He says, 'God? God?' He is still dangling.
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He says, 'God, help me! Thank you for coming.
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What should I do to come up?'
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So, the voice says, 'Let go'.
[with echo sound effect]
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[laughter]
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So, so ... [laughter]
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So he says, 'Let go? No! Let go?
If I let go, I am dead.
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I am dead! Please, Lord, God, help me.
What should I do?'
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The voice says,
[laughter]
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'Let ...' [laughter]
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The voice says, 'Let go'.
[with echo sound effect]
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[laughter]
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He says, 'Let go? God! Help me! Please, please!
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What should I do? Help me.'
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'Let go.' [with echo sound effect]
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So, he is hanging.
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Minutes pass, again his hand is burning.
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His fingers are losing their power.
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He says, 'Hello?' [laughter]
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'Help! Hello? Hello-o?
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Is anybody there?'
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[laughter]
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No voice comes.
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'Hello! Help! Is anybody there?'
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The voice comes again, 'Yes'.
[with echo sound effect]
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'Who is it?'
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'God.' [with echo sound effect]
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'Ah', he is hanging.
He says, 'Is anybody else up there?'
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[laughter and applause]
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And I ...
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OK, enough of the echo.
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I like this story, because in some ways
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it has a deep truth about how we are.
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There is a very famous prayer.
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It says, 'Thy will be done'.
It finishes like this, 'Thy will be done'.
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But secretly we are thinking,
'May my will be done'.
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[laughter]
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You see?
So sometimes it is not the option that we want.
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Sometimes it is not what we want.
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If we were free of wanting ...
If we are free of wanting,
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which gives rise to projection, desire,
dissatisfaction, discontent ...
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If we are free of these, we are free.
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To be free of want, is to be free.
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'I have another desire.
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Life is not going according to my projections,
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therefore I suffer;
therefore life is cruel, life is hard.'
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So we have not learned,
even after thousands and thousands of years.
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We are developed and sophisticated.
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Our abilities to create and to invent
know no bounds.
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But in the simplicity of being still,
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the old tendencies still lurk there.
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This was a funny story,
but I think a very truthful one.
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'Is anybody else up there, apart from God?'
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OK. Does anybody have something to say?