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Empty Cup - Part 2 - What To Do With Your Full Cup

What To Do With Your Full Cup
by
Chris Johnson (c) 2014

Bruce Lee also spoke about the Empty Cup with a similar story to the one I detailed in my article from earlier this month.  If you haven't read it, you can find it right here.

In Bruce Lee's explanation of the Empty Cup, he described a glass half full of Coke and another half full of clear water. The Coke was the student's mind and all the knowledge they had found to be true. 

The second glass represented Bruce Lee's mind and knowledge and skill... which the student wanted.
Bruce explained that he could not give the student his knowledge because there was no room for it in the glass. The student would need to empty his own "glass" to allow for what would come from Bruce.

A couple of the ways that we can apply this to our everyday lives will be described from BOTH points of view.

Take the example of what most likely happens in your home life.

You have come home from your day at work which could have been absolutely hellish. Your boss could have been an absolute bastard and the customers could have been grumpy creatures before they even thought of speaking with you about their problems. So by the time 5 o'clock happens your head is full of the day's trials and tribulations.

When you arrive home, your spouse greets you but they have had a totally awesome day. Everything went well for them. They managed to achieve their daily tasks and they seem to have swallowed so much sunshine that they could be farting rainbows.

Both of you are Full Cups at this point and want to blurt out all of the day's events to each other. After all, that's what couples do. They talk, right?

Imagine what happens if your spouse starts talking first. You see his or her eyes light up and... are you even listening to what they say? Probably not because you're thinking about how someone at work expected you to take over a task for her just 2 minutes before you had to go home... and that task required at least 10 minutes to assess before even attempting it. However you chose to handle that, you are aching to tell that battle story and your spouse's words are falling on unlistening ears.
Your spouse may as well be pouring into a glass until it overflows because that's what happens.
On the other hand, if you speak first and unleash your stories and woes upon your poor spouse, you will end up potentially ruining their chances to express themselves too.

Yes, I made this a really tough situation purposely to make you think for a moment.

Here is one solution (but not the only one), utilising the Cup.

You don't have to Empty the Cup completely. Either of you could start by saying, "I have some really great news" or "I have had a really crap day".

Although it's only a little bit, that one little "spillage" from your Cup could be enough to let  you take on your spouse's story before telling them your story if they are to speak first. Alternatively, if you speak first, you have emptied yours ready for their story too.

It works both ways. You can empty your cup or you can help empty theirs... or you can both spill a little bit each.

Another example of the Empty Cup comes about through the workplace. How many emails do you receive or send daily? I mean the ones within the workplace that detail things about updates to policies, new information on products, and so on.

I know of at least one company where the staff receive at least 50 to 100 emails daily AND they are expected to read every single one of them while answering calls in the call centre every day. Remarkably the management know about it and do zilch about it, probably because they are caught in the same poisonous cycle themselves.

Meanwhile their Outlook has just about herniated from the overload as well as their staff who have gone into a zombified coma from too much information.

In this case, as the email sender, you could try changing either how the information is written (eg: bullet points rather than long waffling paragraphs), how many you send (eg: a digest of points, rather than multiple messages, or even a summary) or just send the truly important information (could be hard for some people).


Consider the people you intend to inform of things. They are busy people too and you need to give them a chance to Empty their Cup to take on, and appreciate, your own refreshing Tea.

The other challenge is as the one with the Full Cup. What do you do when you are receiving heaps of emails at work which serve as distractions from your work... and yet paradoxically are meant to help you even though it hinders you to have to take time to read the overload?

You have to Empty the Cup in one way or another. You could speak with the manager and ask for time off to catch up on the emails. If you have to keep doing this, day after day, it may indicate an issue with management themselves or even require asking the senders to change their frequency.

The Empty Cup is always in a better position to take on more tea (information), therefore it is a useful cup. The Full Cup, although serving a purpose, is less useful unless it has been emptied at least a little.

Until next time....

ESPecially Best Wishes,

Chris Johnson

The Empty Cup (Is Your Cup Empty?)

One of my favourite stories involves the young and the old Masters in China.

There are many different versions of who the characters really are and the one thing in common involves the setting of how they came to be speaking. It was even "inserted" into the apocalyptic movie "2012".

When you read it, ask yourself, "What am I missing out on because I haven't emptied my cup?"

A young Shaolin monk in Feudal China had an extensive background in the ways of the Shaolin, Tao and Buddhism as well as being an expert on the Nirvana Sutra. As was the custom in those times, he studied under many different masters. Many of those masters he had bested with his knowledge and skill. Finally he came across the most venerable of masters of that time.

He came to study with the Master and, after making the customary bows, asked him to teach him the greater truths.

The old Master sat him down for tea and, while preparing the tea, asked the young scholar about his background. The young man gladly spoke of his past, how he had bested other more learned men than he. To each of the scholar's tales, the old Master smiled and nodded, listening patiently the whole time while making the tea.

When it was ready, he poured the tea into the scholar's cup until it began to overflow and run all over the floor. The scholar saw what was happening and shouted, "Stop! Stop! The cup is full, you can't get any more in!"

The Master stopped pouring and said, "You are like this cup - full of ideas, full of yourself, and full of what you believe. You come for teaching but your cup is full. I can't put anything in. Before I can teach you, you will have to empty your cup."
_____________________

LESSON?
1. Challenge your beliefs.
2. Search not for the truth but first cease your infatuation with your opinions.

In 2 weeks time, after I return from my honeymoon, I will tell you a little more about some of the many ways this can be applied to your everyday life.


Until then,

ESPecially Best Wishes,

Chris Johnson
Mentalist and Psychic Entertainer
www.thementalist.com.au