Friday, 16 December 2011

3 THE MIRACULOUS TRANSFORMATION OF JULIAN MANTLE




I was astonished by the new and improved Julian Mantle. 
     'How could someone who looked like a tired old man only a 
few short years ago now look so vibrant and alive?' I wondered in 
silent disbelief. 'Was it some magical drug that had allowed him to 
drink   from   the   fountain   of youth?  What was   the   cause   of this 
extraordinary reversal?' 
     Julian   was   the   first   to   speak.   He   told   me   that   the   hyper- 
competitive legal world had taken its toll on him, not only physi- 
cally and emotionally but spiritually.  The fast pace  and endless 
demands had worn him out and run him down. He admitted that 
his body had fallen apart and that his mind had lost its lustre . His 
heart   attack was  only   one   symptom   of a   deeper   problem.  The 
constant pressure and exhausting schedule of a world-class trial 
lawyer had also broken his most important—and perhaps most 
human—endowment: his spirit. When given the ultimatum by his 
doctor either to give up the Law or give up his life, he said he saw 
a   golden   opportunity   to   rekindle   the   inner   fire   he   had   known 
when he was  younger,  a fire that had been  extinguished  as  the 
Law became less a pleasure and more a business. 


     Julian grew visibly excited as he recounted how he sold all his 
material possessions and headed for India,  a land whose ancient 
culture   and   mystical   traditions   had   always   fascinated   him.   He 
travelled from tiny village to tiny village, sometimes by foot, some- 
times by train, learning new customs, seeing the timeless sights 
and growing to love the Indian people who radiated warmth, kind- 
ness   and   a   refreshing   perspective   on   the   true   meaning   of life. 
Even those who had very little opened their homes — and their 
hearts — to this weary visitor from the West. As the days melted 
into   weeks   within   this   enchanting   environment,   Julian         slowly 
began to feel alive and whole again, perhaps for the first time since 
he was a child. His natural curiosity and creative spark steadily 
returned, along with his enthusiasm and his energy for living. He 
started to feel more joyful and peaceful. And he began to laugh 
again. 

     Although he embraced every moment of his time in this exotic 
land,  Julian  told me  that his journey to  India was  more  than  a 
simple  vacation  to  ease   an   overworked  mind.  He  described  his 
time in this far-away land as a "personal odyssey of the self". He 
confided that he was determined to find out who he really was and 
what his life was all about before it was too late. To do this, his first 
priority   was   to   connect   to   that   culture's   vast   pool   of   ancient 
wisdom on living a more rewarding, fulfilling and enlightened life. 

     "I don't mean to sound too off-the-wall, John, but it was like I 
had received a command from within, an inner instruction telling 
me that I was to begin a spiritual voyage to rekindle the spark that 
I had lost," said Julian. "It was a tremendously liberating time for 
me." 
     The more he  explored, the more he heard of Indian monks 
who had lived beyond the age of a hundred, monks who despite 


their   advanced   years   maintained   youthful,   energetic         and   vital 
lives. The more he travelled, the more he learned of ageless yogis 
who had mastered the art of mind-control and spiritual awakening. 
And   the   more   he   saw,   the   more   he   longed   to   understand   the 
dynamics behind these miracles of human nature, hoping to apply 
their philosophies to his own life. 
     During   the   early   stages   of  his  journey,   Julian   sought   out 
many well-known and highly respected teachers . He told me that 
each one of them welcomed him with open arms and open hearts , 
sharing  whatever   gems   of knowledge   they   had   absorbed   over 
lifetimes     spent   in  quiet   contemplation      on   the   loftier  issues 
surrounding  their   existence.  Julian   also   attempted  to   describe 
the beauty of the ancient temples which were strewn across the 
mystical landscape  of India,  edifices which  stood  as loyal gate- 
keepers to the wisdom of the ages . He said he was moved by the 
sacredness of these surroundings. 
     "It was a very magical time of my life, John. Here I was, a tired 
old  litigator who  had  sold   everything from my racehorse to my 
Rolex, and had packed all that remained into a large rucksack that 
would be my constant companion as I ventured into the timeless 
traditions of the East. " 
     "Was it hard to leave?" I wondered aloud, unable to contain my 
curiosity. 
     "Actually, it was the easiest thing I have ever done. The decision 
to give up my practice and all my worldly possessions felt natural. 
Albert   Camus  once  said that 'Real generosity toward the future 
consists in giving all to what is present.' Well, that's exactly what I 
did. I knew I had to change—so I decided to listen to my heart and 
do it in a very dramatic way. My life became so much simpler and 
meaningful   when       I  left   the   baggage  of   my   past   behind.   The 


moment I stopped spending so much time chasing the big pleasures 
of life, I began to enjoy the little ones, like watching the stars danc- 
ing in a moonlit sky or soaking in the the sunbeams of a glorious 
summer morning. And  India is such   an intellectually stimulating 
place that I rarely thought of all I had left." 
     Those initial meetings with the learned  and the  scholarly of 
that exotic culture, though intriguing, did not yield the knowledge 
for which Julian hungered.  The wisdom that he desired and the 
practical techniques that he hoped would change the quality of his 
life continued to elude him in those early days of his odyssey.  It 
was not until Julian had been in India for about seven months that 
he had his first real break. 

     It was while he was in Kashmir, an ancient and mystical state 
that sits sleepily at the foot of the Himalayas, that he had the good 
fortune  to  meet  a   gentleman   named  Yogi  Krishnan.  This  slight 
man with a clean-shaven head had also been a lawyer in his "previ- 
ous incarnation," as he often joked with a toothy grin. Fed up with 
with the hectic pace  that personifies  modern  New Delhi,  he  too 
gave   up   his   material   possessions   and   retreated   to   a   world   of 
greater   simplicity.   Becoming   a   caretaker   of the  village   temple, 
Krishnan said he had come to know himself and his purpose in the 
larger scheme of life. 

     "I was  tired  of living my life  like  one  long  air raid  drill.  I 
realized   that   my   mission   is   to   serve   others   and   somehow   to 
contribute  to  making this  world   a better place.   Now   I   live  to 
give," he told Julian . "I spend my days and nights at this temple, 
living an austere but fulfilling life.  I share my realizations with 
all those who come here to pray. I serve those in need. I am not 
a priest . I am simply a man who has found his soul." 

      Julian informed this lawyer turned yogi of his own story. He 


spoke of his former life of prominence and privilege. He told Yogi 
Krishnan of his hunger for wealth and his obsession with work. He 
revealed, with great emotion, his inner turmoil and the crisis of 
spirit he had  experienced when the  once bright light of his  life 
began to flicker in the winds of an out-of-balance lifestyle. 
     "I too have walked this path, my friend. I too have felt the pain 
you have felt. Yet I have learned that everything happens for a 
reason," offered Yogi Krishnan sympathetically. "Every event has 
a purpose and every setback its lesson. I have realized that failure, 
whether   of the  personal,   professional   or   even   spiritual   kind,   is 
essential   to   personal   expansion.   It   brings   inner   growth   and   a 
whole  host of psychic rewards .  Never regret your past .  Rather, 
embrace it as the teacher that it is." 

     After hearing these words,  Julian told me  that he  felt great 
exultation. Perhaps, in Yogi Krishnan, he had found the mentor he 
was     searching   for.   Who     better   than   another former        hotshot 
lawyer who, through his own spiritual odyssey, had found a better 
way of living to teach him the secrets of creating a life of more 
balance, enchantment and delight? 

     "I  need your help,  Krishnan.  I   need to learn how to build a 
richer, fuller life." 
     "I   would   be   honored   to   assist   you   in   any way   that   I   can," 
offered the yogi. "But may I give you one suggestion?" 
     "Sure." 
     "For as long as I have been caring for this temple in this little 
village,   I   have   heard  whisperings   of a   mystical   band   of sages 
living high in the Himalayas. Legend has it that they have discov- 
ered some sort of system that will profoundly improve the quality 
of anyone's life — and I don't just mean physically. It is supposed 
to be a holistic, integrated set of ageless principles and timeless 


techniques to liberate the potential of the mind, body and soul." 
     Julian was fascinated. This seemed perfect. 
     "Just exactly where do these monks live?" 
     "No one knows, and I regret that I'm too old to start search- 
ing. But I will tell you one thing, my friend; many have tried to find 
them   and   many   have   failed   —   with   tragic   consequences.   The 
higher reaches of the Himalayas are treacherous beyond compare. 
Even the most skilled climber is rendered helpless against their 
natural ravages. But if it is the golden keys to radiant health, last- 
ing happiness and inner fulfillment that you are searching for, I do 
not have the wisdom you seek — they do." 

     Julian,   never   one   to   give   up   easily,   pressed  Yogi   Krishnan 
again. "Are you certain that you have no idea where they live?" 
     "All I can tell you is that the locals in this village know them as 
the Great Sages of Sivana. In their mythology, Sivana means 'oasis 
of enlightenment'. These monks are revered as if they are divine 
in their constitution and influence.  If I knew where they could be 
found, I would be duty-bound to tell you.  But honestly,  I   do not 
know — no one does, for that matter." 

     The next morning, as the first rays of the Indian sun danced 
along the colorful horizon, Julian set out on his trek to the lost 
land of Sivana. At first he thought about hiring a Sherpa guide to 
 aid   him   in  his  climb    through    the   mountains,     but,  for  some 
 strange reason, his instincts told him that this was one journey 
he would have to make  alone.  So instead,  for perhaps the first 
time  in   his  life,  he   shed  the  shackles  of reason   and  placed  his 
trust in his intuition. He felt he would be safe. He somehow knew 
he would find what he was looking for. So, with missionary zeal, 
he started to climb. 

     The first few days were easy. Sometimes he would catch up to 


one of the cheerful citizens of the village below who happened to be 
walking on   one  of the  footpaths,  perhaps  searching for just the 
right piece of wood for a carving or seeking the sanctuary that this 
surreal place offered to all those who dared to venture this high 
into the Heavens. At other times he hiked alone, using this time to 
silently reflect on where he had been in his life — and where he 
was now headed. 

     It didn't take long before the village below was nothing more 
than  a tiny speck on this marvellous canvas of natural splendor. 
The majesty of the snow-capped peaks of the Himalayas made his 
heart beat faster and, for one long moment, took his breath away. 
He felt a oneness with his surroundings, a kind of kinship that two 
old friends might enjoy after many years  spent listening to each 
other's  innermost   thoughts   and   laughing   at   each   other's jokes . 
The fresh mountain air cleared his mind and energized his spirit. 
Having travelled the world many times over, Julian had thought he 
had   seen   it   all.   But   he   had   never  seen   beauty   like   this.   The 
wonders of which he drank at that magical time were an exquisite 
tribute to the symphony of nature . At once he felt joyous, exhila- 
rated and carefree.  It was here,  high above the humanity below, 
that Julian slowly ventured out of the cocoon of the ordinary and 
began to explore the realm of the extraordinary. 

     "I still remember the words that were going through my mind 
up there, " said Julian. "I thought that, ultimately, life is all about 
choices. One's destiny unfolds according to the choices one makes, 
and I felt certain that the choice I had made was the right one. I 
knew my life would never be the same and that something marvel- 
lous, maybe even miraculous, was about to happen to me. It was an 
amazing awakening." 

     As Julian climbed into the rarified regions of the Himalayas, 


he told me that he grew anxious. "But it was those good kind of 
jitters , like the ones I had on prom night or right before an excit- 
 ing case began and the media was chasing me up the courtroom 
 steps. And even though I didn't have the benefit of a guide or a 
 map, the way was clear and a thin, lightly travelled path led me 
 higher into the deepest reaches of those mountains. It was like I 
 had some sort of inner compass, nudging me gently towards my 
 destination. I don't think I could have stopped climbing even if I 
 had wanted to, " Julian was excited, his words spilling out like a 
 gushing mountain stream after the rains . 
     As  he  travelled  for  two   more   days  along  the  route   that  he 
 prayed  would   take   him   to   Sivana,   Julian's   thoughts  wandered 
back to his former life. Though he felt entirely liberated from the 
 stress and strain that personified his former world, he did wonder 
whether   he  could   really   spend  the  rest of his   days without the 
 intellectual   challenge   that   the   legal   profession   had   offered   him 
 since he left Harvard  Law School.  His thoughts then wandered 
 back to his oak-paneled office in a glittering downtown skyscraper 
 and   the   idyllic   summer   home   he   had   sold   for   a   pittance.   He 
 thought about his  old  friends with whom he would frequent the 
 finest   of   restaurants   in  the   most   glamorous   locales.      He   also 
 thought about his  prized   Ferrari  and  how his  heart would  soar 
when he gunned the engine and all its ferocity sprang to life with 
 a roar. 
     As he ventured deeper into the depths of this mystical place, 
 his reflections of the past were quickly interrupted by the stun- 
 ning marvels of the moment.  It was while he was soaking in the 
 gifts of nature's intelligence that something startling happened. 
     From the   corner   of his   eye  he   saw another   figure,   dressed 
 strangely in a long, flowing red robe topped by a dark blue hood, 


slightly ahead of him   on the path.  Julian was  astonished to see 
anyone at this isolated spot that had taken him seven treacherous 
days to reach . As he was many miles away from any real civiliza- 
tion   and   still  uncertain   as  to where  his  ultimate   destination   of 
Sivana could be found, he yelled out to his fellow traveller. 
     The figure refused to respond and accelerated his pace along 
the path they were both climbing, not even giving Julian the cour- 
tesy of a backward glance of acknowledgement. Soon the mysteri- 
ous traveller was running, his red robe dancing gracefully behind 
him like crisp cotton sheets hanging from a clothesline on a windy 
autumn day. 
     "Please friend, I need your help to find Sivana," yelled Julian, 
"I've been travelling for seven days with little food and water.  I 
think I'm lost!" 
     The    figure    came    to  an   abrupt    stop .  Julian   approached 
cautiously while the traveller stood remarkably still and silent. His 
head did not move, his hands did not move and his feet kept their 
place. Julian could see nothing of the face beneath the hood but 
was struck by the contents of the small basket in the hands of the 
traveller. Within the basket was a collection of the most delicate 
and beautiful flowers Julian had ever seen. The figure clutched the 
basket tighter as Julian drew nearer, as if to display both a love of 
these   prized   possessions   and   a   distrust   of this   tall   Westerner, 
about as common to these parts as dew in the desert . 
     Julian gazed at the traveller with an intense curiosity. A quick 
burst of a sunbeam  revealed  that it was  a man's  face under the 
loosely-fitting hood.  But Julian had never seen a man quite like 
this one. Though he was at least his own age, there were very strik- 
ing features of this person which left Julian mesmerized and caused 
him to simply stop and stare for what seemed like an eternity. His 


eyes were catlike and so penetrating that Julian was forced to look 
away.  His  olive-complexioned   skin was  supple  and  smooth.  His 
body looked   strong and powerful.  And  though   the  man's  hands 
gave away the fact that he was  not young,  he  radiated  such  an 
abundance of youthfulness and vitality that Julian felt hypnotized 
by  what   appeared   before   him,   much   like   a   child  watching   the 
magician at his first magic show. 
     'This must be one of the Great Sages of Sivana,' Julian thought 
to himself, scarcely able to      contain his delight at his discovery. 
     "I   am   Julian   Mantle.   I've  come  to  learn from   the  Sages  of 
Sivana. Do you know where I might find them?" he asked. 
     The   man   looked  thoughtfully   at   this weary visitor from   the 
West. His serenity and peace made him appear angelic in nature, 
enlightened in substance. 
     The man spoke softly, almost in a whisper, "Why is it that you 
seek these sages, friend?" 
     Sensing that he had indeed found one of the mystical monks 
who had eluded so many before him, Julian opened his heart and 
poured out his odyssey to the traveller. He spoke of his former life 
and of the crisis of spirit he had struggled with, how he had traded 
his  health   and  his   energy for the fleeting rewards  that his  law 
practice brought him. He spoke of how he had traded the riches of 
his soul for a fat bank account and the illusory gratification of his 
'live fast,  die young' lifestyle.  And he told  him   of his travels in 
mystical India and of his meeting with Yogi Krishnan, the former 
trial lawyer from New Delhi who had also given up his former life 
in the hope of finding inner harmony and lasting peace. 
     The traveller remained silent and still. It was not until Julian 
spoke   of   his   burning,   almost   obsessive   desire   to   acquire   the 
ancient principles of enlightened living that the man spoke again. 


Placing an arm on Julian's shoulder, the man said gently : "if you 
truly have a heartfelt desire to learn the wisdom of a better way, 
then it is my duty to help you. I am indeed one of those sages that 
you have come so far in search of. You are the first person to find 
us in many years .  Congratulations.  I   admire your tenacity. You 
must have been quite a lawyer," he offered. 
     He paused, as if he was a little uncertain of what to do next, 
and then went on. "If you like, you may come with me, as my guest, 
to our temple. It rests in a hidden part of this mountain region, still 
many hours away from here . My brothers and sisters will welcome 
you   with   open   arms .   We   will   work   together   to   teach   you   the 
ancient principles and strategies that our ancestors have passed 
down through the ages. 
     "Before     I  take   you   into   our   private   world   and   share   our 
collected knowledge for filling your life with more joy, strength and 
purpose,   I   must   request   one   promise  from   you,"  requested   the 
sage.   "Upon   learning these  timeless  truths  you   must return   to 
your homeland in the West and share this wisdom with all those 
who need to hear it. Though we are isolated here in these magical 
mountains, we  are  aware  of the turmoil your world is  in.  Good 
people are losing their way. You must give them the hope that they 
deserve. More importantly, you must give them the tools to fulfill 
their dreams. This is all I ask." 
     Julian instantly accepted the sage's terms and promised that 
he would carry their precious message to the West . As the two men 
moved still higher up the mountain path to the lost village of Sivana, 
the Indian sun started to set,        a fiery red circle slipping into a soft, 
magical slumber after a long and weary day. Julian told me he has 
never   forgotten   the   majesty   of  that   moment,   walking   with an 
ageless Indian monk for whom he somehow felt a brotherly love, 


travelling to a place he had longed to find, with all its wonders and 
many mysteries. 
     "This was definitely the most memorable moment of my life," 
he confided in me. Julian had always believed that life came down 
to a few key moments. This was one of them. Deep inside his soul, 
he somehow sensed that this was the first moment of the rest of 
his life, a life soon to be much more than it had ever been. 


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