The
Fool comes to the foot of an enormous black mountain where reigns a
creature half goat, half god. At his hooves naked people, linked to the
god's throne by chains, engage in every indulgence imaginable: sex,
drugs, food, drink. The closer the Fool gets, the more he feels his own
earthly desires rising in him. Carnal desires, hunger for food and
power, greed and selfishness. "I have given up all such desires!" he
roars at the Goat god, resisting the beast's power with all his might.
He is sure that this is a test of his new spirituality, one where he
must prove that the temptations of the material world cannot sway him.
The
creature responds to his defiance with a curious look. "All I am doing
is bringing out what is already in you," it responds mildly. "Such
feelings are nothing to fear, nothing to be ashamed of, or even to
avoid. They are even useful to helping you in your quest for
spirituality, though many try to pretend otherwise."
The
Fool gestures angrily at the chained men and women, "You say that even
though these are clearly enslaved to the material world?"
The
Goat-god mimics the Fool's gesture. "Take another look." The Fool does
so, and realizes that the chained collars the men and women wear are
wide enough for them to easily slip off over their heads. "They can be
free if they wish to be," the Goat-god says, "They remain here because
they want to be controlled by their base, bestial desires. There are,
however, others…."
At
this the Goat-god gestures upward, toward the peak of the mountain.
"…Others who have used these same impulses to climb to the highest
heights. If they had denied their desires they'd never have gotten
there."
On
hearing this, the Fool sees that he has mistaken the Goat-god. This is
not a creature of evil as he thought, but of great power, the lowest and
the highest, both of beast and god. Like all power, it is frightening,
and dangerous...but it is also a key to freedom and transcendence.
As
the Fool leaves the throne of the Goat God, he comes upon a Tower,
fantastic, magnificent, and familiar. In fact, The Fool, himself, helped
build this Tower back when the most important thing to him was making
his mark on the world and proving himself better than other men. Inside
the Tower, at the top, arrogant men still live, convinced of their
rightness.
Seeing
the Tower again, the Fool feels as if lightning has just flashed across
his mind; he thought he'd left that old self behind when he started on
this spiritual journey. But he realizes now that he hasn't. He's been
seeing himself, like the Tower, like the men inside, as alone and
singular and superior, when in fact, he is no such thing.
So
captured is he by the shock of this insight, that he opens his mouth
and releases a SHOUT! And to his astonishment and terror, a bolt of
actual lightning slashes down from the heavens striking the Tower and
sending its residents leaping out into the waters below.
In
a moment, it is over. The Tower is rubble, only rocks remaining.
Stunned and shaken to the core, the Fool experiences profound fear and
disbelief. But also, a strange clarity of vision, as if his inner eye
has finally opened. He tore down his resistance to change and sacrifice
(Hanged man), then came to terms with Death (Death); he learned about
moderation and synthesis (Temperance) and about power (The Devil). But
here and now, he has done what was hardest: he destroyed the lies of his
life. What's left are the foundations of truth. On this he can rebuild
himself.
On
the bleak landscape where the Tower stood, the Fool sits, empty,
despairing. He hoped to find direction on this spiritual journey, a path
to his spiritual self, but having just learned that most of his life
was a lie, he now feels lost. Sitting on the cold stones, he gazes up at
the night sky wishing for some kind of guide. And that is when he
notices, nearby, a beautiful girl with two water urns. As he watches,
she kneels by a pool of water illuminated with reflected starlight. She
empties the urns, one into the pool, one onto the thirsty ground.
"What
are you doing," he asks her. She looks up at him, her eyes twinkling
like stars. "I am refilling this pool, so that those who are thirsty may
drink, and I am also watering the earth so that more fruit trees will
grow to feed those who are hungry." She nods back to a single fruit tree
that stands nearby, a nightingale singing amid its branches.
"Come," she invites. "Sate your hunger and quench your thirst."
The
Fool plucks some fruit from the tree, then kneels by her and drinks
from the pool. The water tastes wonderful, like liquid starlight, and
the fruit is equally delicious. Both help to heal his wounded heart.
Having
quenched his thirst and sated his hunger, the Fool lays back to gaze up
at the stars. "They're so beautiful," he said, "but so distant."
"Like
possible futures," agrees the girl. "Cool and distant. Yet if you keep
one in sight, it can guide you to your destination no matter how far
away it is." Even as she says this, she began to fade away, like dew,
vanishing. All that remains is a gleam that was at the center of her
forehead. This rises up and up, until it settles in the night sky as a
shining star. "Follow your star," the woman's voice seems to sing from
that light, "and have hope."
The
Fool takes in a breath and rises. It is a dark night, a desolate land.
But for the first time, he has a guiding light to show him the way.
Distant as it is, it restores his faith.
Following
the star the Fool travels through the night. The full Moon rises,
illuminating for him a watery path. And he begins to feel disoriented,
as if walking in his sleep. He passes under the moon, between two
pillars ancient and strange. Suddenly, he looks around to find himself
in another land entirely. When he was in the presence of the High
Priestess, he saw hints of this dark land through the sheer veil draped
behind her throne. And later, when he hung from the tree, he felt
himself between the physical world and this one. Now, he has at last
passed behind the veil.
Here
are the mysteries he sought, the darkest mysteries, ones that have to
do with the most primal and ancient powers. It is a land poets, artists,
musicians and madmen know well, a terrifying, alluring place, with very
different rules. Wolves run wild across this land, hunting along side
maidens with bow and arrows. Creatures from childhood nightmares and
fantasies peer from shadows, eyes glowing.
The
path the Fool was walking is now a river, and he stands hip-deep in the
powerful pull of its salty waters. There is, on the nearby shore, a
small boat, but it has no rudder, no oar. The Fool realizes he has only
two choices. He can lose himself in this desolate, primal land of
madness and illusion, howl with the wolves, be hunted down, or he can
get into the boat and trust himself to the river. The moon will be in
control either way, but in the boat his surrender to the powers of the
unconscious will at least take him somewhere.
Inspiration,
visions and genius are the rewards of such surrender to the Moon's
Magic, as artists, poets and seers know. The Fool gets into the boat,
and shoves off. As the waters sweep him away, moonbeams light his "path"
and he feels the Mistress of this dark land gazing down at him with the
High Priestess's approving eyes.
The
Fool wakes at dawn from his long, dark night of the soul to find that
the river has deposited him in a serene pool. There is a walled garden
around this pond dominated by roses, lilies and splendid, nodding
sunflowers. Stepping ashore, he watches the sun rise overhead. The day
is clear. A child's laughter attracts his attention and he sees a little
boy ride a small white pony into the garden.
"Come!"
says the little boy, leaping off the horse and running up to him. "Come
see!" And the child proceeds to take the Fool's hand and
enthusiastically point out all manner of things, the busy insects in the
grass, the seeds and petals on the sunflowers, the way the light
sparkles on the pond. He asks questions of the Fool, simple but profound
ones, like "Why is the sky blue?" He sings songs, and plays games with
the Fool.
At
one point the Fool stops, blinking up at the Sun so large and golden
overhead, and he finds himself smiling, wider and brighter than he has
in a very long time. He has been tested and tried, confused and scared,
dismayed and amazed. But this is the first time that he has been simply
and purely happy. His mind feels illuminated, his soul light and bright
as a sunbeam, and it's all thanks to this child with his simple
questions, games and songs. This boy has helped the Fool see the world
and himself anew.
"Who
are you?" the Fool asks the child at last. The child smiles at this and
seems to shine. And then he grows brighter and brighter until he turns
into pure sunlight.
"I'm
You," the boy's voice says throughout the garden, "The new you." And as
the words fill the Fool with warmth and energy, he comes to realize
that this garden, the sun above, the child, all exist within him. He has
just met his own inner light.
As
the Fool leaves the garden of the Sun, he feels that he is near the end
of his journey, ready to take a final step. But something is keeping
him from doing this, holding him back. He gazes up, hoping to find
guidance from the Sun; instead he sees above him a fiery angel,
beautiful and terrible.
"You
are right," the Angelic figure confirms, "you have only one last step
on your journey, one final step to completion. But you cannot take that
step until you lay your past to rest."
The Fool is perturbed. "Lay it to rest? I thought I'd left it behind, all of it!"
"There
is no way to leave the past behind," The Angel observes. "Each step
wears down the shoe just a bit, and so shapes the next step you take,
and the next and the next. Your past is always under your feet. You
cannot hide from it, run from it, or rid yourself of it. But you can
call it up, and come to terms with it. Are you willing to do that?"
The
Angel hands the Fool a small trumpet. The Fool is hesitant, but he
knows that the Angel is right. There are certain memories he has a hard
time looking back on as they make him feel guilty, ashamed, angry. He
knows that he's never come to terms with what happened and he must if he
wants to make that final transition.
He
blows the trumpet and it cracks open the Earth. From under the Fool's
feet, the spirits of his past selves rise up, including those less than
admirable past selves that he's tried to forget.
For
the first time, he faces them. They are, he sees, nothing to fear. They
were him once-upon-a-time, but not now. Even as he realizes this, he
finds himself forgiving those past selves for the wrongs they did that
left him feeling bad. He senses, in turn, that they forgive him for
ignoring the lessons they had to teach him. As he reaches an
understanding with them, they start to rise up and float away, vanishing
into the sky. Though they remain as experiences and memories, they no
longer have any power over him. He is free of ill-feelings, reborn, and
living in the present.
The Fool turns to take that final step along his final path, and
finds, to his bemusement, that he is right back where he started, at the
edge of that very same cliff he almost stepped over when he was young
and too foolish to look where he was going. But now he sees his position
very differently. He thought he could separate body and mind, learn all
about one, then leave it to learn about the other. But in the end, it
is all about the self: mind and body, past and future, the individual,
and the world. All one, including the Fool and the Mystic who are both
doorways to the secrets of the universe.
With a knowing smile, the Fool takes that final step right off
the cliff...and soars. Higher and higher, until the whole of the world
is his to see. And there he dances, surrounded by a yoni of stars, at
one with the universe. Ending, in a sense, where he began, beginning
again at the end. The world turns, and the Fool's journey is complete.