Almsfood is Almsfood
ONCE THERE LIVED a kind-hearted Brahmin who often offered food to the Buddha and his monks whenever they came by on their almsround.
One day they happened to arrive when he was already in the middle of his meal,
and though they patiently stood in front of his door, he did not notice them.
His wife did, however, but she did not want her husband to know that they had
come, for she knew that he would surely offer them the rest of his meal. That
would mean she would have to go back into he kitchen and cook some more, which
she really was not in the mood to do.
So
she stood in front of the doorway in such a way that the Buddha and his monks
remained cut from her husband’s view. She then quietly eased herself to the
door within the Buddha’s listening reach and whispered to him through he corner
of her mouth that there was no almsfood for them that day.
The
Buddha and his disciples were already walking away when the husband noticed his
wife’s strange behavior and asked her what she was up to. As she turned from
the door, he caught sight of the edge of a monk’s robe leaving the doorway and
immediately realized what had happened.
He
jumped from behind his unfinished plate of food and ran after the Buddha. He
apologized profusely for his wife’s crude behavior toward them and begged the
Buddha to return with him and accept his food, although already partially eaten. The Buddha did not hesitate to accept the hrahmin’s
offer and said, “Any food is suitable for me, even if it be the last remaining spoonful of an
unfinished meal, for that is the way of a bhikkhu. The brahmin then asked the
Buddha how a bhikkhu was to be defined. The Buddha’s response was quite
succinct and ckar “A bhikkhu,” he said, “is one who no longer has any
attachment to body or mind and does not long for what he doesn’t have.”
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