The fishbowl of life
I just watched a wonderful video clip on Michael Mead’s website excerpted from his CD set “The Soul of Change”, in which he tells the story of a woman who had a pet fish. One day, noticing that the water in fishbowl was cloudy, she put the fish in the bathtub temporarily while she cleaned the bowl. Watching the fish in the tub, she noticed that it swam in exactly the same size circle that it had in the fishbowl, despite that it was in a large tub of water. She immediately understood that this was also our condition, psychologically.
Both psychology and spirituality have pointed out that we live in a very limited internal world. Not just our behavior, but even our identities, have been shaped by our environmental conditions. For the most part, what we think of as ourselves is largely a set of psychological habits. It is as if we are living in a trance.
The promise of this story is that we potentially have a much larger domain of experience available to us if we can find a way to break the spell.
Tags: healing, Psychotherapy, Unconsious
I love this story. This is one of the reasons I have always enjoyed traveling in other countries, especially countries where I do not know the language or customs. It is impossible to remain in your fishbowl when you have to get outside it just to figure out how to go from point A to point B, how to find shelter, and how to get food.
Anyone for a trip to a Monster Truck rally? 😉