Love Stories 7
Inprisoned No more
Here is a story of a man who became a prisoner for some
misdeed that angered the King of his particular country. He
was arrested and shut up in a dungeon beneath the castle.
A ferocious-looking jailer carrying a long key escorted the
man down a dark stairway. The door of the cell was opened,
and the man was thrust into a dark hole. The door shut with
a bang, and there he was. He lay in that dark dungeon for
twenty years.
Each day the jailer would come, the big door would be opened
with a great creaking and groaning, a pitcher of
water and a loaf of bread would be thrust into the cell and
the door closed again. After twenty years the prisoner
decided that he could not stand it any longer. He wanted to
die but he did not want to commit suicide, so he decided
that the next day when the jailer came he would attack him.
The jailer would then kill him in self- defense, and thus
his misery would be at an end. To prepare for the next
day, he decided to examine the door carefully. When the
prisoner went to the door, he caught the handle and turned
it.
To his amazement the door opened, and upon investigation he
found that there was no lock and never had been. For
those twenty years he had not been locked in ... except in
belief.
At any time during that period, he could have opened the
door and been free. He thought it was locked, but it was
not. He groped along the corridor and felt his way upstairs.
At the top of the stairs two soldiers were chatting, and
they
made no attempt to stop him. He crossed the great yard
without attracting attention. The armed guard on the
drawbridge at the great gate paid no attention to him, and
he walked out a free man. He went home untouched and
lived happily ever after.
He realized that he could have left at any time throughout
those long years since his arrest if he had known
enough, but he did not. He was a captive, not of stone and
iron, but of false belief. He was not locked in; he only
thought he was imprisoned. In may be safe to say that we all
are prisoners, to some extent, of own making. We may find
ourselves imprisoned by anger, resentment, remorse, or
the belief that there are no other options for us in our
lives and jobs-that we are locked into doing what we are
currently
doing.
What kind of prison might you be living in that you would
like
to get out of? Remember, the prison is in our thoughts and
the key to our
release is