The paradox of the blind seeker 

The Paradox of the Blind Seeker


Once, in a village at the edge of a vast forest, there lived a blind man named Elan. Though Elan could not see, he was known far and wide as a seeker of truth. Every day, he would set out guided only by sound, smell, and the echoes of the world.
One morning, the village woke to find the sky heavy with dark clouds and the wind murmuring strange riddles. The villagers whispered, afraid of the unknown storm that approached. Elan, though blind, was not afraid—yet a perplexing doubt settled deep within him.
Seeking the source of the storm’s meaning, Elan ventured deeper into the forest, following the shifting winds. Along the way, he met a hunter crouched by a stream. The hunter spoke, “Elan, why do you chase certainty in the shadow of confusion?”
Elan replied, “Though I cannot see, I must walk—because to stand still is to surrender to darkness.”
The hunter smiled sadly. “Yet, all who walk this path are blind in some way. Knowing this, are you still certain your direction leads to truth?”
Elan paused. The forest whispered around him—birds quiet, leaves trembling—and he realized that the forest was both his guide and his puzzle.
Days passed. Elan returned to the village, unknowing if he had found any truth or merely circled deeper into perplexity. Yet, the villagers greeted him with respect—not for answers, but for the courage to walk despite the blindness.
Elan understood then: The human journey is not to conquer confusion but to embrace it—to move forward despite it, learning that clarity is not a place reached, but a companion kept through the storm.

DCG

Leave a Reply