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Dusting my mom's display area of Chinese porcelain statues was one of my childhood household chores. When it was time to clean the Kwan Yin, I always quietly asked the statue if everything was okay and to let me know if I was ever hurting her. Yah, kids do the craziest things. The girl in this story did some crazy things, but all for a very good reason.
While Miao Shan was growing up in the palace, she dressed plainly and ate simple foods. She was so gentle to her family, her servants, even to the animals in the field. She never had an evil thought or did anything cruel to anyone. Her servants knew her as The Heart of Buddha. It was traditional to have arranged marriages to strengthen the king's kingdom and to increase the king's assets at that time, so King Miao Chuang has his first two daughters married off to neighboring kingdoms. When it was time for Miao Shan to marry, she calmly and with great wisdom told her father that if she were to marry, nothing good would become of her. Gold and material things could not buy entrance into Heaven. She wanted to continue work and live the simple life to fulfill the goodness in her heart. Angrily, he banished Miao Shan to a nunnery at the top of the mountain.
As each miracle appeared, the King became more and more angry. In his old age and his body filled with repressed anger and hatred, he became very sick. He was losing all feeling in his right arm and losing his eyesight in both eyes. Miao Shan heard of this terrible tragedy and walked from the top of the mountain to the palace where she was banished from earlier. When she saw the king, she cried tears of compassion. She told the monks to cut off her right arm and take her eyes so that the King could use them. When her arm and eyes were removed, Miao Shan died instantly.
When I moved out on my own, my mom gave me her Kwan Yin statue. She said she would give me good luck. Maybe, because when I see the porcelain statue, I'm sure someone is watching over me. |
