by
Mateo Sol
March 14,
2020
from
LonerWolf Website
Spanish version
There is an old and wise parable that you may have heard.
It goes
like this:
One day an old
Cherokee man sits down with his grandson to teach him about
life.
"A fight is going
on inside of me," he says to the boy.
"It's a terrible
fight between two wolves. One is evil - he is full of rage,
jealousy, arrogance, greed, sorrow, regret, lies, laziness,
and self-pity."
He continues,
"The other is
good - he is filled with love, joy, peace, generosity,
truth, empathy, courage, humility, and faith. This same
fight is going on inside the hearts of everyone, including
you."
The grandson thinks
about this for a few minutes, and then asks his grandfather,
"Which wolf
wins?"
The old Cherokee
simply replies,
"The one you
feed"...
There is Another Version to This Story…
There's another intriguing ending to this two wolves Cherokee story.
Here's how it goes:
The grandson thinks
about this for a few minutes, and then asks his grandfather,
"Which wolf
wins?"
The old Cherokee
simply replies,
"They both win if
you feed them right."
"You see, if I starve one wolf, the other will become
imbalanced with power. If I choose to feed only the light
wolf, for example, the shadow one will become ravenous and
resentful.
He will hide
around every corner and wait for my defenses to lower, then
attack. He will be filled with hatred and jealousy and will
fight the light wolf endlessly."
"But if I feed both, in the right way, at the right time,
they will live side-by-side in harmony. There will be no
more inner battle.
Instead, there will be inner peace.
And when there's
peace, there is wisdom. The goal of life, my son, is to
respect this balance of life, for when you live in balance,
you can serve the Great Spirit within.
When you
put an end to the battle inside, you are free."
The Meaning of
the Two Wolves Story
There's a reason why I like the second version of the two wolves
story better:
It makes sense.
It
honors what the Taoists refer to as the yin yang - or the sacred
balance of life.
The Buddhists also refer
to this as the
Middle Way (a path that embraces being both human and
divine).
That brings us to the essential meaning of the two wolves story:
it is a parable that
is a teaching, path, and prescription in one.
Not only does it teach us
about the basic nature of humanity and that peace is within our
grasp, but it also prescribes the wisest action and thereby gives us
a path to follow.
What do we do with
these two seemingly opposing forces within us?
How do we handle the
paradox of being both sacred and wild?
What do we do with
our 'higher' and 'lower' traits?
The answer is to embrace
both and seek balance:
to feed both wolves within us "in the right
way, at the right time"...
Unlike the first version of the story,
we are not going to extremes.
Instead, we are walking the Middle Way - the path of harmony and
therefore peace...
If you really think about it, if the 'good' part within us was truly
loving,
Why would it tolerate
us ignoring, rejecting, and condemning the 'bad' part within us?
Wouldn't it feel
compassion for that part and want to help it somehow?
How to Feed
Both Wolves Within You
"When you put an
end to the battle inside,
you are free" we read in the two
wolves story....
What benefit is it to
be pulled apart internally and constantly at war with oneself?
How can we listen to
our higher calling when we are stewing in inner turmoil?
Why show favoritism
to only one side of us, when the other will eventually catch up
with us?
To stop this internal
war, we need to honor both sides of our nature.
This philosophy is echoed in the profoundly important psychological
discovery made by famous Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung.
He proposed that we have
numerous sides of our nature and we all possess a dark side known as
the
Shadow Self.
The Shadow
Wolf = the Shadow Self
Everyone carries a shadow,
and the less
it is embodied
in the
individual's conscious life,
the blacker
and denser it is.
Carl
Jung
What happens when we repress (or push out of consciousness)
something that pisses us off?
Eventually, it's
going to come back and bite us on the ass. We all instinctively
know this.
Think of it like a volcano. The more magma is
withheld within the volcano, the more it rises to the surface
due to the pressure. Sooner or later it's going to explode.
The same applies to us humans:
we all think, feel, and do things
that are either shamed by our parents, rejected by our peers, or
condemned by society...
These traits get buried away within us to
form what we call the Shadow Self.
But just because
they're buried away and become unconscious doesn't mean they
totally disappear. In fact, they're always there looming in the
background, waiting to be acknowledged - just like the shadow
wolf.
The thing is, we either forget about these buried parts or we
actively suppress, reject, deny, and disown them.
After all, if
these parts of us got us in trouble, made us feel upset, or
caused our parents to withdraw their love,
Why the hell would we
want to face them?
Isn't the best thing to continue banishing
and even hate them for the pain they create?
The Perils
of Avoiding the Shadow Wolf
That's where the two wolves story comes into the picture to
teach us that avoiding our Shadows is not a smart idea.
After all:
"If I choose to
feed only the light wolf… the shadow one will become
ravenous and resentful. He will hide around every corner and
wait for my defenses to lower, then attack."
Carl Jung phrases
this in another eloquent way:
The brighter the
light, the darker the shadow...
In other words, the
more attention you lavish on your 'good' side, the more your
'bad' side is neglected. Your Shadow Self will grow in direct
proportion to your lighter brighter side.
This is basic
physics...
Just look at
Newton's third law that states:
For every action,
there is an equal and opposite reaction.
You want to only feed
your light wolf? Sure, fine...
But just be aware
that your shadow wolf is also going to grow. There's no way of
avoiding it...
There are plenty of tragic examples of people in this world who
only feed the light wolf within them and ignore their shadow
wolf.
Think of all the
seemingly,
-
holy priests
who molest children
-
gurus who get
into sex scandals
-
spiritual
teachers who abuse their followers
-
religious
public figures who get caught in big lies,
...and those who
appear to be full of light but actually have a very sadistic
dark side...
This is a sad, but honest reality.
Light Work
and Shadow Work
So how do we feed both the light and shadow wolf within us?
We need to pay attention to what the two wolves story advises:
to feed both in
the right way, at the right time.
Does this mean we
should go out and become ax-murderers because our family has
angered us to feed the shadow wolf?
No, of course not...!
Indulging your shadow wolf is not feeding it in the right way,
at the right time.
Instead, it is depriving power from your
light wolf, turning your shadow wolf into a glutton.
Jumping to
extremes is not the answer.
Instead, we need to find a way to give equal attention (or
'food') to each.
Thankfully, there is
a path that helps us to create this balance.
It is the path of involution, of
inner transformation and inner work. And we can
roughly divide this path into two parts:
light work and
shadow
work (although both often overlap).
Light Work
Light work is,
learning how to feed our inner light wolf, the
part of us that is naturally joyful, hopeful, empathetic, kind,
honest, and loving.
Light work involves
learning how to love yourself and connect with your True Nature
(Soul).
Practices may include,
developing intuition, learning self-care, practicing gratitude,
using positive affirmations, learning the
art of letting go,
connecting with spirit guides, healing the body, meditating, and
so on.
Shadow Work
Shadow work, on the other hand, is,
learning how to feed our
shadow wolf...
When we practice
shadow work we open ourselves to face, befriend, and integrate
the pain (shadows) we find within us.
Practices may include,
exploring negative core beliefs, doing inner child work, doing
shamanic soul retrieval, connecting with our inner
archetypes/parts, journaling, working through personal and
ancestral trauma, processing grief, doing emotional catharsis,
and so on...
Practicing both light and shadow work equally will allow you to
feed both wolves, thereby creating balance, harmony, peace, joy,
and spiritual expansion within your life.
What Are the Origins
of This Story?
So, who wrote the two wolves story anyway?
It is difficult to trace back the origins of this story, yet it is
often attributed to the Cherokee (Tsalagi) people.
This story is
sometimes referred to as,
Unfortunately, it is unlikely that this story truly originated
amongst the Native American peoples, but instead was created as a
christian-parable-disguised-as-native-wisdom.
Take the christian
evangelists Billy Graham and John R. Bisagno for
example.
One of them (Bisagno)
included this story in his 1965 book The Power of Positive
Praying.
The other (Graham),
narrated it in his 1978 book The Holy Spirit - Activating
God's Power in Your Life.
Some sources, such as
writer
Linda Caroll, claim that Graham admitted that he
fabricated the whole story for a sermon.
Originally the story was
about the
Inuit people, but because he got an outpour of negative
backlash from them, he changed the story to include a Cherokee
grandfather (knowing they wouldn't be able to challenge him).
Native Wisdom
or Urban Legend?
While it's hard to definitively say what happened, the original
emphasis on "good" and "evil" (which is a 'christian' concept...) gives
us a very non-Native American vibe...
Also, the whole emphasis
on white = good and black = evil (which I have removed from the
story in this article and replaced with 'light' wolf and 'shadow'
wolf instead) has been thought by some to possess an undercurrent of
racism and also
christian dogma.
Whether this story is the
product of a sermon or a catchy urban legend is hard to say
ultimately.
Nevertheless, despite the murky origins of this story, it has
clearly evolved with us. In fact, these days, it's most commonly
shared as a meme on social media. Most likely, the second version of
this two wolves story is a modern adaptation.
But who knows? Perhaps
the first version is the newest.
Ultimately, however,
there's a reason why it has stuck around for so long:
there's
something of deep value within it...
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