A
sword fighter has a beautiful wife. She is in awe of his reputation and is
almost daunted by the force of his persona. She respects him, but love is
missing in the secret chamber of her heart. As it happens, she falls in love
with somebody outside her marriage. As if that is a small problem, to make it
still worse the lover happens to be their servant. Lies and deceit can be
hidden, but love has the natural propensity to shine like sun from behind the
clouds. It comes to the light. That is its nature. As per social norms, love
usually stands out scandalous. The offended husband challenges the servant for
a duel, taking it for granted that he will surely kill the illicit lover, thus
giving him death and earning more laurels for his swordsmanship as bonus. The
deed will not reek of cold-blooded revenge and his motive to kill the servant
will lie buried under the fair game of duel. So it is supposed to be a sure
death for the poor servant. The sword fighter hides his revenge and anger under
the art and craft of his swordsmanship. Most importantly, he is sure of
victory, because by the logic of it, how can it be otherwise, pitted as he is
against a man who has just picked up the scabbard from his famed walls to clean
it. And he being a master swordsman whose reputation chimes across the four
corners of the state. The servant is thus sure of his death. He has accepted
his fate, death. When you are eying victory, you are also eying safety to yourself
from the corner of your eyes. And you have fear also, because without that the
sense of victory cannot sustain. With a sense of victory you just cannot be
fearless. There is something to fight for and achieve and for that you have to
remain alive. This breeds fear. But the servant has accepted death and failure.
His acceptance is hundred percent. He has no doubt about it. And when there is
no doubt, you become fearless. The swordsman isn’t totally free from fear
because his certainty about his victory falls short of the servant’s certainty
of his defeat and death. He isn’t as sure of his victory as the servant is of
his defeat. So, irrespective of the fighting caliber, the servant is more
fearless of the two, simply because he is under less doubt. In his fearlessness
he decides to let loose all madness in him before his death. He doesn’t hate
the opponent. He isn’t angry. His acceptance of death enables him to give all
to life before death. The sword-fighter on the other hand cannot give all in the
fight, because he is fighting to save respect, prolong life, take revenge, and
all these with further expectations from life. Life itself means fear. The
offended husband takes maneuvers as per the art of sword-fighting. In pre-death
fearless madness, the lover strikes with sword like he is striking with a
stick. To all the conventional strokes of the sword-fighter, he hits back with
the most awkward and unorthodox ones. Fearlessness in his eyes creates fear in
the opponent’s eyes. The servant kills the master! Why? Because he is sure of
his death, and because the master isn’t that sure of his victory! How can he
be? He simply cannot. He is fighting to save a lot of things and fighting to
save things cannot allow you to be cent-percent fearless.
The posts on this blog deal with common people who try to stand proud in front of their own conscience. The rest of the life's tale naturally follows from this point. It's intended to be a joy-maker, helping the reader to see the beauty underlying everyone and everything. Copyright © Sandeep Dahiya. All Rights Reserved for all posts on this blog. No part of this blog may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without permission in writing from the author of this blog.
About Me

- Sufi
- Hi, this is somebody who has taken the quieter by-lane to be happy. The hustle and bustle of the big, booming main street was too intimidating. Passing through the quieter by-lane I intend to reach a solitary path, laid out just for me, to reach my destiny, to be happy primarily, and enjoy the fruits of being happy. (www.sandeepdahiya.com)
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