Willow branches weep ice.
Swan rises dazzling in the sunlight.
After long self-cultivation, one's accumulated energy reaches a threshold and then bursts out full, breathing, and vibrant. Without the careful building of momentum, this moment of release would never have been possible. With long years of preparation and experience, the freeing of the soul will not be mere dissipation but will be so strongly focused that it lifts one into a higher state of awareness. When one's spiritual energy emerges, it feels like a swan rising from the water.Once you have reached this level of stored energy, you will be a different person. On one hand, you may take genuine comfort in the point of attainment that you have made. On the other hand, you now see all the other possibilities that remain for you to explore.
With the emergence of great possibilities comes the need for responsibility. If you diverge from your life's path in order to explore new vistas, remember how far you are flying, and remember to return at the proper times. Only you can decide how to arrange your life. Once you are a strong flier, you must still use wisdom to direct your flight.
Personal Interpretation
It is glorious to reap the benefits of careful self-cultivation. The journey is not an easy one. We may often find ourselves feeling like the baby swan in Hans Christian Andersen's tale, whose identity was a secret even to its own self until it reached maturity. the journey may involve bearing taunts and unkindness. We may feel different, isolated, unwelcome. In the end though, we will become what we were always meant to be, will be able to embrace the spiritual transformation that has suddenly cloaked us in dazzling white, a kind of armor against the ignorance of the unenlightened world. Like the elegant swan, we will reach our heads skyward, spread our magnificent wings, and take the world by storm. We get to determine when we leave our homes, what direction we fly off in. It is important to have a base to return to though, and we must insure that we have the strength to take a longer flight before we set forth on one. Sometimes it's best to take shorter flights first, test our own strength. Ultimately, we must listen to ourselves.
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