A game of Chess

CA Alok Modak (CA in Practice) (595 Points)

29 May 2009  

 A young man said to the abbot of a monastery: 

'I would really like to become a monk, but I have learned nothing of 
importance in my life. My father only taught me how to play chess, and that does not 
lead to enlightenment. And besides, I was told that all games are sinful.' 
'They can be sinful, but they can also be a diversion, and perhaps this 
monastery needs a little of both,' came the reply. 
The abbot called for a chessboard and summoned a monk to play with the 
young man. However, before the game began, he added: 
'We may need diversion, but we cannot have everyone playing chess all the 
time. We will have only the best players here. If our monk loses, he will leave the 
monastery, thus creating an opening for you.' 
The abbot was deadly serious. The young man played an aggressive game, but 
then he noticed the saintly look in the monk's eyes, and from then on, he began to play 
deliberately badly. He decided that he would rather lose because he felt that the monk 
could prove far more useful to the world than him. 
Suddenly, the abbot overturned the chessboard onto the floor. 
'You learned far more than you were taught,' he said. 'You have the powers of 
concentration necessary to win and you are capable of fighting for what you want, but 
you also have compassion and the ability to sacrifice yourself for a noble cause. You 
have shown yourself capable of balancing discipline and mercy; welcome to our 
monastery!'