Don't Leave Me Raw

Image of the Week
Hand-drawn art by Rupali Bhuva
Image of the Week

A woman was standing over a fire, having poured a handful of dry, hardened chickpeas into water. As the water warmed up to the point of boiling, her mind began to wander. Then she heard a voice: “I am burning!”

Startled out of her daydream, she looked to the right, to the left. She didn’t see anyone, so she drifted back into the daydream. Again, she heard: “I am burning!”

This time she looked a bit more closely, and saw that the sound was coming from….inside the pot of boiling water. A chickpea within the boiling water, to be more precise. The little chickpea, twirling around the boiling water, began talking to the woman: “I am burning….
Get me out of here!”

The woman glanced at the chickpea with compassion. Up it went, down it went in the boiling water. The fire was so hot it made water hot. What kind of fire is this, that makes water boil?

The chickpea pleaded with the woman again: “Get me out of here!”

She reached over, and grabbed a ladle. She reached into the water. And pushed the chickpea back into boiling water.
The chickpea swam around the ladle, and rose to the surface again.“Did you not hear me? It’s boiling in here. Get. Me. Out!”

The woman looked lovingly at the chickpea. She said: “My darling chickpea, I push you back in, because you’re not done cooking yet. You’re still hard. You need to be cooked before you’re worthy of being taken inside.”

As Rumi puts it: If you should leave this place for one perfected
You’ll be a morsel and then resurrected.

All of us are like this, hardened hearts, in the process of becoming soft, getting cooked. The whole of life is like this: cooking in the fire of love, going from a state of hardness to softness, from rawness to being spiritually “cooked.” There is a transformation that each of us must undergo before we are “done.”

Rumi himself summarized his own life as this: The whole of my life
is summed up in these three phrases: I used to be raw. Then I was cooked. Now, I am on fire.

Most of us would be content to simply go from being raw to cooked. For a select few, those who want not just salvation but sanctification, the goal is to actually be on fire. That way, anyone who comes into their orbit can move from being raw to being cooked.

There is such a fire, the fire of Divine love (eshq). This love is not a mere emotion or sentiment. It is no less than the very being of God unleashed upon this world.

In another poem, he pleads with his love, his Shams, whose love is cooking him, too: Don’t leave me raw.

How often we end up being like this. We find the fire of love that cooks us, the fire that transforms us. We begin to cook, to ripen, to soften, and mature as human beings, only to turn away from the love. Being cooked is hard, letting go of our “raw”ness is painful. The ego cannot stand love, and it begs and pleads to be taken out of the fire of love. We stay half-baked, half-cooked, which is to say: half-raw.

To be taken inside another human being at this state causes everyone: indigestion.

We ourselves are the raw chickpea, we ourselves are the fire of love, and we ourselves are the mystic chef/lover who pushes us back into the flame.

May we have the heart, the courage (the word courage comes from root word for having heart) to go through the cooking. May we have the courage to commit ourselves to the flame. May we have the heart to finish our cooking, to make each of us worthy of being inside the heart of another fellow human being.

What a difference between being cooked, and being half-cooked. What a difference between sustaining another human being, and causing them indigestion.

And how sweet to find she who will plunge us back into the boiling fire of love, to get us to finish cooking. Oh mystic chef, she who has the gift of fire of love, all I beg of you is: Don’t leave me raw.

Seed Questions for Reflection

How do you relate to the notion that we ourselves are the chickpea, fire and the mystic chef that pushes us back into the boiling water? Can you share a personal story of a time you committed to being cooked fully? What helps you distinguish between a process that will soften you from other processes that will harden you?

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16 Past Reflections
TA
Tania
Apr 16, 2025
For me, the metaphor of the chickpea is our heart becoming tender as we go through the experiences of life. The gentle mention of the loving cook who pushes the chickpea back into the boiling water stood out for me - I thought of some people I find difficult that I could be grateful for their push.
DF
Apr 2, 2025
How beautiful. I have never heard it expressed quite like that. Tht
AM
Apr 2, 2025
I found this story at the right time. I am struggling hard to work with some very difficult people, and constantly being in this stressful environment, in which internet and chatgpt and everything around suggests to leave all places where you aren't acknowledged or if it is difficult, i stopped consuming all of this, only because, I see my father struggling, and how people have in past, to get where they are, nothing really comes easy. But we are not taught resilience, which is a core life skill. Process that softens you is when you grow in empathy, and hardens you is, when you become resilient to all situations in life and still come out unaffected internally.
LY
Apr 1, 2025
The question I end up having to ask myself is if any good will result from what I want or don't want to say or do. There is often not a wise, loving external voice in the moment to convince me that my discomfort is necessary or transformative, and that I am on the right path. Spiritual teachings contain wisdom and educate and soothe one side of the brain, and help us through hard times where there can be no knowing of how things will turn out, by softening the hard facts that the other side of the brain sees and must acknowledge to survive. I try to follow the Dalai Lama and be kind, especially when I don't feel like it. A lot of what people do in the world makes absolutely no logical sense. Fate will deliver its blows or heat, or learning to all of us regardless. Our nation is at an apex of that kind of experience right now. It is often the kindness or caring of others that makes life bearable, and keeps from aggravating the wounds in unnecessary ways that will be remembered... View full comment
EM
Emily
Apr 1, 2025
Becoming yourself is a challenging path that tests your resilience.
I find that I carry 2 extremes at the same time; the pain and discomfort of transformation and the joy of simultaneously experiencing growth.

This path of extremes feels longer than ever before. The joys enable me to continue to walk through the fire.
JT
Apr 1, 2025
I wanted to rescue the chickpea. I had to awaken that I had a choice. Earlier today I had breakfast and it included chickpeas. I finished each one mashing the last. Raw or half cooked it would’ve stayed on my plate. Now it is within I am digesting it fully and completely. It is nourishing. I am nourished.
AW
Mar 31, 2025
It’s a dance isn’t it, between opening and closing. I’ve had tastes of how it tastes to be cooked. Sweet, tender blissful times, but I don’t sustain them. I adhere to my practices, maintain trust and faith, outwardly look like I’m simmering away, cooking gently. But inwardly, the fire is but a few struggling embers and there is a stress with this a disquiet. Much the same as any stress, an underlying sense that something is wrong and with it a deep sadness at the alienation from the connectedness with the comfort of a glowing fire. So I breathe deep, bellowing into the dying embers. The next breath or the next, the fire may leap into life and the dance take a merry turn.
JA
jatin
Mar 31, 2025
i was getting irritated just by reading this story.. and then it hit me.. i was getting cooked.. thanks for a beutiful read.
GU
Gururaj Apr 1, 2025
Lovely. Good for you
RM
Mar 30, 2025
A chickpea is born, and it attains salvation only when it becomes soft enough to be a morsel inside a mouth. It burns in the fire of the mystic chef—our own soul—and this fire is fueled by our actions. The fulfillment of our lives lies in salvation, which comes when our ego is burned away in this transformative fire. Our soul will not leave us hard; it will keep the fire burning until we are truly ready for liberation.

I willingly chose the path of service, where my ego faced hard blows—something that would have been impossible otherwise. This journey has cooked me to a great extent, though I cannot claim it is complete. The moment I declare myself fully cooked, the chickpea that is 'me' hardens once again. When our ego is exposed to challenges and hardships, it softens in the process. But when we protect our ego and refuse to step out of our comfort zone, it only grows harder.
SH
Mar 29, 2025
"May we have the heart ( Courage) to commit us to the flame. May we have the heart to finish our cooking, to make each of us worthy of being inside the heart of another fellow human being.". Such profound words.
Can this be our prayer during life's turbulations, difficult times? Can we be willing to be sanctified ? The passage touches us deep .
JD
Mar 28, 2025
The ultimate goal of all religions is freedom, liberation, salvation, moksha. Freedom from self-created bondage, freedom from self-created darkness, freedom from temptations. There are many ways of attaining freedom. Knowing oneself (Gnana Yoga). Freeing oneself from self-created temptations without expectations of getting any personal rewards (Karma Yoga). Path of devotion (Bhakti Yoga) and path of meditation Dhyana Yoga. Follow your own path according to your own disposition. Listen to your clear voice and follow it. Follow your self- chosen path and remain committed. Temptations will come that may take us off our path. We need to discipline ourselves. This will help us stay on our path. Our goal is to keep on walking until we attain our goal. If we have deviated from our path it will make it hard to achieve our goal. It will prolong our journey and we may have to come back on our path until we get fully liberated and be united with the Creator. My path is the path of Medi... View full comment
DD
Mar 28, 2025
I agree that we are chickpea, the fire, and the mystic chef. My view is that we are all, and the challenge is to accept and live that. I'm not fully cooked. Some of me is fully cooked, and some of me isn't. I've held back from allowing fully cooked. I think to be fully cooked is to not be in this world, and I've done what I have thought is necessary to still function in the world. I feel in the world but not of it. I think I don't want to be totally in or out, and I find some middle area that seems right for me, but I may be fooling myself and cowardly in doing that. Distinguishing between what softens me and what hardens me seems easy and obvious. When I harden I'm into defending and fighting, and when I soften I'm into being open and working together. It's up to me which way I go. I more often soften, but sometimes I harden.
VG
VG Apr 2, 2025
Hello.. I was , lets call it guided, to this site in 2020 when the covid crap started.
I have been searching for years to find a way to live "outside of this Dream/Illusion" or as this story goes to become fully cooked..
all of our answers are "with in us" not out there..
Frank Wanderer and Ervin Kery. are the two self publishing authors ..and have different pen names..
Rebal Budha is the latest book.. and I highly recommend it.
if you google consciousness-books dot com
also on amazon
this is Frank's frankmwanderer. dot com
the books can be down loaded to kindle or PDF and to have in hand

there is saying:
Learn from the mistakes /lessons of others
because you do not live long enough
to learn them on your own

that is what they have done
they have had their experienced the "head blowing off" sort of speak..
and have searched for years...all their wisdom is being shared.
on how to live in the Present/Now as that is all there is..
I personally can say.. it truly has helped me. I am calmer, take things as they come..
and control the ego no more stupid thoughts, learn to be the observer.

I just wanted to share that with you.. and if you feel do check out the books
they are all there to help us in our awakening...

sending
PEACE & LOVE
VerA
AL
Mar 27, 2025
“We ourselves are the raw chickpea, we ourselves are the fire of love, and we ourselves are the mystic chef/lover who pushes us back into the flame.”
What beautiful sentiments of ordinary awareness of the flames of attention that awakened love nourishes.
And the dance goes on and on…
♾️🌀💞