Don't Know

The other day, my Far Side Daily Calendar had a cartoon dog
praying at bedtime. He prayed that he and his dog family would be able to see
colour. I found the cartoon funny on many levels.
And then I wondered, if the prevailing theory is true that
dogs only see in black and white, how could Rover even know that there is
anything beyond black and white - that colour exists? How could he find out?
He couldn't just ask the dog down the street. Could he?
And then I wondered how much is out there that we do not
know - that we can't know because our world view is limited to the karma we
have brought into this life. For example, being human, I can't know what it's
like to think like a dog. I can empathize. I can guess. I can speculate. I can
observe. But I'm not a dog, so I can't really fully "get" how Rover
thinks.
We can get glimpses of the unknown. In meditation, we
sometimes rise above our limitations long enough to feel/know something
different. But even then, unless we have some sort of framework to put a new
experience in, we may dismiss it as unimportant or dismiss it as unreal.
To avoid that, maybe we could have a "don't know" category
where we could mentally place the information. With no need to rush into an
opinion about the experience, we store it as potentially relevant. We don't
have to do anything about it right away or make any decisions. It can wait.
Rather than deciding, we wonder. Rather than settling on an opinion, we stay
curious.
We may never find the answers to our questions, but that's
a good thing. Wisdom is flexible. And joy rises out of the mysterious.
One day I may find out if dogs see in colour or black and
white. And I may not. Much of dogness is a mystery to me. But I wonder, could
Rover could really ask the dog down the street about seeing in colour? Is such
a thing possible?
Maybe.
I don't know.
Stories like these are a regular feature of my free monthly Ezine, Starry Night.
Subscribe today!
|