Becoming a Monk
29A man is driving down the road and his car breaks down near a monastery.
He goes to the monastery, knocks on the door, and says, “My car broke down. Do you think I could stay the night?”
The monks graciously accept him, feed him dinner, and even fix his car. As the man tries to fall asleep, he hears a strange sound. A sound unlike anything he’s ever heard before. The Sirens that nearly seduced Odysseus into crashing his ship comes to his mind. He doesn’t
sleep that night.
He tosses and turns trying to figure out what could possibly be making such a seductive sound. The next morning, he asks the monks what the sound was, but they say, “We can’t tell you. You’re not a monk.”
Distraught, the man is forced to leave.
Years later, after never being able to forget that sound, the man goes back to the monastery and pleads for the answer again.
The monks reply, “We can’t tell you. You’re not a monk.”
The man says, “If the only way I can find out what is making that beautiful sound is to become a monk, then please, make me a monk.”
The monks reply, “You must travel the earth and tell us how many blades of grass there are and the exact number of grains of sand. When you find these answers, you will have become a monk.”
The man sets about his task.
After years of searching he returns as a gray-haired old man and knocks on the door of the monastery. A monk answers. He is taken before a gathering of all the monks.
“In my quest to find what makes that beautiful sound, I travelled the earth and have found what you asked for: By design, the world is in a state of perpetual change. Only God knows what you ask. All a man can know is himself, and only then if he is honest and reflective and
willing to strip away self deception.”
The monks reply, “Congratulations. You have become a monk. We shall now show you the way to the mystery of the sacred sound.”
The monks lead the man to a wooden door, where the head monk says,
“The sound is beyond that door.”
The monks give him the key, and he opens the door. Behind the wooden door is another door made of stone. The man is given the key to the stone door and he opens it, only to find a door made of ruby. And so
it went that he needed keys to doors of emerald, pearl and diamond.
Finally, they come to a door made of solid gold. The sound has become very clear and definite. The monks say, “This is the last key to the last door.”
The man is apprehensive to no end. His life’s wish is behind that door!
With trembling hands, he unlocks the door, turns the knob, and slowly pushes the door open. Falling to his knees, he is utterly amazed to discover the source of that haunting and seductive sound…
But, of course, I can’t tell you what it is because you’re not a monk.
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- Comment
/giphy shakes fist
@RiotDemon
@caffeine_dude @RiotDemon
/image star trek captain picard face palm
/giphy well, crap
You got me, I was sucked in like a monk at a sheet sale
I love this! I had run out of groaner-inducing jokes to tell (“Dad jokes” are no match for mine). Thank you, thank you!!!
Pfffffft.
/image monk Tony shalub
@f00l haha… I remember the episode where he was at the monastery. Good one.
LMSO!
Damn, I can’t get my gif to show. Here’s the link.
@lisaviolet need to remove the “s” from the “https”
@rockblossom yeah, that was kind of the point. That’s how you rickroll.
who says i’m not a monk.
@jro2020
Then you already know.
Reminds me of a little note hung in CATCC on my ship:
“If you’d been here, you’d know.”
That was the answer if you asked about it.
CATCC is the Carrier Air Traffic Control Center, eh?
The monastic noise was probably a plumbing issue, especially if the door made of solid gold led to the boiler room. If the noise only happened when the toilet was refilling, the float lever is probably the culprit; if the sound can be traced to the water pressure tank it was probably mineral build-up or some other restriction at a valve or pipe. Otherwise harmonic vibration is often a water-pressure issue. It doesn’t sound like air in a hydronic heating system to me.