
As a kid, I liked to read the novels of Robert W. Service. He wasnโt much of a writer, but he wrote something called The Roughneck which enthralled me so much I stretched the reading of it over an entire summer. The one thing I remember about the book is that the main character became a locksmith. No lock could hold him back. Iโve been fascinated with keys and locks ever since. And in some way, thatโs the great metaphor. We all need the key to the lock; the world is the lock and we are the key.
Now picture the world that way, as a barrel with grooves and tumblers, and the only way to open this world is to fit something that meshes exactly with these grooves. So that wherever you go, essentially what youโre looking at is the lock with all these barrels in it. When you step into a situation, you have to be the key to match it. You have to fit into it. Thatโs the only way to relate to it. You must be meshed with it for the world to unlock. If you walk in blank, it canโt work. The key gets jammed in the lock.
When weโre blank, we canโt open the world. So we need to have the right relationshipโthose cuts and teeth and groovesโwe have to be cut in a certain way to mesh with the world, so we can unlock it.
The only way to do that is not to be blank, and the only way not to be a blank is to be totally connected to your senses. Itโs that connection that enables you to be the unique key in relation to the unique world. If youโre not doing that, you canโt open it; you have to be there with your senses, connected to them. You have to see whatโs in front of you, hear whatโs around you, taste and smell and touch. You have to do that or else nothing will open, nothing at all, youโll be facing a blank wall all the time. It will be blank and you will be blank. A frozen state.
The only one who can open the world is the individual, each individual. There isnโt just one lock; itโs a multitude of locks in the universe. And the only one who can open it is each person, for herself. So that the master key is not what to doโthe master key is to come to your senses, stop being blank, and relate to the world with the totality of your senses. Then you will see it will open for you.
The world will open in a very obvious wayโyou will see whatโs happening and you will mesh with whatโs happening in a room. And the effect of that meshing will reach very deeply into your entire being. It has to begin with the senses, and your connection to them, moment by moment.
You see what a demand that is? Youโre this human key, shaped a certain way, that must relate to the world through a particular shape. And nobody can do it but that individual, that key. Connecting to the senses gives you the cuts and shapes that enable you to mesh with the world. If you can remember this one, youโll know why things are so inexplicable when youโre blank, why nothing happens when youโre not there. And how the world opens up when you are there.
One of the most amazing things revealed in the Gospels about Jesusโheโs a very interesting characterโappears when heโs walking in Jerusalem amid a great crowd, a mob, really. In the middle of this mob Jesus says, โSomebody touched me!โ The apostles reply, โOf course, weโre getting pushed and touched everywhere. What do you mean?โ โI felt power leave me,โ he says. He looks around, and an old woman comes forward and says she was the one who did it. And all she had done was touch the fringe of his garment, in hopes that sheโd be healed of a hemorrhage sheโd had for 20 years.
Imagine the sensitivity of someone being pushed around in rush hour and he knows when someone has touched the fringe of his garment? We think of Jesus as being โThe Christโ and all that. But what we donโt realize is he was the keyโtotally connected to his senses, he picked up everything, he could feel when power was leaving him through his clothing.
Thatโs what you call a sensitive being, someone who has his wits about him. Itโs no wonder he said astonishing things. He was there in each situation. Like when the priests presented him with the tribute coin with Caesarโs profile on it. They thought theyโd spring a trap, and get him at last. But he had a brilliant answer. Itโs not because he was a genius. Itโs just that he kept his wits about him, all the time. Thatโs what the senses were known asโthe five wits. You see the effect that man had when he turned the lock? Two thousand years of effect. This is a graphic example of how important it is to come to your senses.
When people talk, they get lost in what theyโre saying. They get lost in what theyโre thinking, too. The trick is that when you speak, donโt think about your ideas. Donโt get involved in your ideas. All you have to do is listen to the sound of your voice. The mind thinks by itself. What you have to say comes right out, provided youโre listening to the sound.
From my experience, I donโt have an idea in my head when I talk. I listen to what comes out. Sometimes itโs all right, sometimes not, but I just listen to what I have to say. So listen to yourself, and youโll find sometimes that youโll say something worthwhile. And you wonโt get lost. Youโll always be interested. And whatโs more, it will help you to listen to others, which is also a valuable human ability.
One of the reasons people go on lying to themselves and others is because theyโre not listening to themselves. If they would, instead of being caught in their own web theyโd hear the lies, because lies have a certain sound, just as the truth has a certain sound. But the sound of a lie as it rolls off the tongue is painful, itโs unbearable. Thatโs the way to get free of lies, to listen to the tone, and the sound that comes out. Then youโll stop. Youโll be acutely aware of the difference between the truth and a lie. Youโll know when itโs coming and when it isnโt. So youโll never be caught by Pontius Pilateโs cutesy question โWhat is truth?โ Listen, and youโll hear.
This article appears in January 2004.








