What Sort of “Normal” Is Normal?
Item
Title of item excerpted / highlighted
What Sort of “Normal” Is Normal?
Codes, tags, subjects, themes, topics
Analogies to Mythic Narratives
Text of excerpt, if available
In the Padotta Sutta, there’s a parable about four kinds of horses likened to four types of people with varying degrees of self-awareness. The first horse is so quick that it moves merely at the shadow of its trainer’s whip. This horse is like a person who, hearing of the pain and death of a distant villager, is compelled to find the meaning of her own life. The second horse moves when the whip touches its skin, just like someone who personally witnesses the pain or death of one of an acquaintance and is spurred to action. The third horse doesn’t move until the whip punctures its flesh, like a person who fails to react until she sees the pain or death of one of her close relatives. The fourth horse remains unmoving until the whip penetrates its marrow, like a person who must herself experience pain and the threat of death before waking up to the urgency of understanding her own existence.
"Excerpt Date" -- made by Dedoose/Dovetail user
2022-11-23
Item for the media file that is excerpted
Creator
Vanessa Zuisei Goddard
Identifier
h244