The
nicest thing about this question was it automatically started quickly to show
me the movie of my life so far. All kinds of things suddenly came up and showed
themselves again. Amazing to discover how much you still can remember if you
take the time to watch that running movie.
My
thoughts lingered for a while at the age of around fifteen. My father had his physiotherapy
practice at home and he had several patients (clients) who lived far away from
us and regularly came to visit him. Most of the time they had to wait for a
while. And yes, his practice offered a waiting room as well but my mother
always felt a bit pity on the people waiting and always offered coffee, tea and
cookies in our living room for them. So, our private living room became more
and more the waiting room. And her hospitality was not only there for the
patients of my dad. Also, our milkman and baker, who at that time came to your
house, nearly on a daily base were our visitors in mom’s ‘coffee shop’.
My father
had a number of patients from a family. Father, mother and their son always
came together every other week.
The son’s
hobby was karting and always scored high in the national top ranking. He worked
at their family business. They owned a garage and also ran an ambulance, coach
and taxi services business. I was always amazed about the astonishing stories
they told and especially about the wealth of jewelry that they wore around
their fingers and wrists. Abundancy of money because business was running more
than well and they had a lot of solid big customers including large hotel
chains and Schiphol Amsterdam Airport. The wealth almost “sparkled" toward
me.
And yet,
when they were gone again, my mother often told me about the pity she had with
them. I didn't understand that first that time. Often my mother, with her background
as an actress, ‘replayed’ the stories to my sisters and me afterwards and we had
to laugh a lot about it.
At some
point I started to understand my mother's pity, despite the fun we sometimes
had about the wonderful stories she made of it. Their life was not happy at
all. Visit after visit to us was filled with a list of all sorts of problems and
suffering because of their private and business life.
Now that
I am writing this, I am sure they also saw (and used) the visit and therapy of
my dad (and mom) as a kind of relief. Sharing their stories safely with someone
who listened, did not immediately have an opinion or unsolicited advice, and
who was outside their close "circuit".
Where I
first saw them as super-rich, it turned out to be a great poverty with a lot of
misery.
And in
relation to that question from a few weeks ago, this memory shows me again that
wealth is not at all in possessions and outward show. This insight began to
come alive for me already at a young age through these stories from my father's
customers and personal experiences.
Further
on in the movie of my life, several "richest" people emerge. People I
know from politics, government, the uniformed world, service clubs and so much
more. The strange thing is that when I touched the situations in which I remembered
them as ‘rich’ again, those thoughts immediately evaporate. This was and is no
richness at all. Often simply laughable impressions and unreal life shows. I
will not go into it any further.
The photo
on this blog is from April this year when I was in India with my girlfriend.
This poor boy, he begged in the streets, touched me deeply with his
spontaneity. We only met and talked shortly. He was more than thankful after
our chat and showed me his real inner richness and especially his pleasure in
this photograph.
Where I
am stuck for the answer to the question so far in my life, is with a person I
met at the Padma Center in Middelburg-NL more than 12 years ago as my
philosophy and meditation teacher. For years I attended evening classes every
Thursday and also regularly weekend meetings. They were the fuel for the huge
life(style) change that I was allowed to make in my life.
This man
was far from rich in a financial sense and even struggled with a developmental
disorder as he sometimes told. And perhaps precisely because of the latter, he
was an expert in his specific interests and activities in relation to
philosophy.
He
possessed and possesses the wealth to encourage you to discover the richness in
yourself through his stories, history, Bhagavad-Gita, personal experiences and
inner wisdom.
Someone
who shares his rich set of talents in a fantastic way to let others discover
their personal treasures and added value.
Voila ...
the answer. The richest person I have met in my life so far.
Gangey Gruma (Frans Captijn)
email: captijninsight@gmail.com
Captijn Insight. Catalyst in developing tranquility & in-sight to get in a sustainable way real connection, purpose, pleasure and flow in life, love, family, business, career and work again.
Gangey Gruma (Frans Captijn)
email: captijninsight@gmail.com
Foto blog: http://franscaptijnhisworld.blogspot.com
Captijn Insight. Catalyst in developing tranquility & in-sight to get in a sustainable way real connection, purpose, pleasure and flow in life, love, family, business, career and work again.
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