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She lives in a lime pot
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Once
upon a time, there was a very beautiful, very rich, but very
proud young girl. Women avoided her and young men more often
than not hated her for she usually offended her suitors.
For a long time, she remained single while all the other women
in the village had begun families. She finally got hitched but
she became so bored with him, they divorced each after just six
months.
Ascribing her misfortune more to fate than to her nasty nature,
she converted to Buddhism. For 20 years, she led a secluded life
in a small pagoda in the forest among wild animals.
"Why haven't I met Buddha yet?" she would ask the chief
monk. "Who knows the prayers better than I. Who can lead a
life as pure as mine?"
One day she decided to pack up her things and go on a quest to
the Promised West, or the Land of Buddha (Tay Truc) in the hope
of answering these questions and many more. Alone, she set off
on the long journey.
After many days, she arrived at the foot of a mountain, where
she stumbled across a hut. The host and her daughter gave her a
warm welcome.
The nasty nun told the pair about her quest and the woman and
her daughter, who were both devote Buddhists, greatly admired
her for her patience and faith.
As they wanted to meet Buddha too, they offered to accompany the
nun on her quest.
"Come along with me then," said the nun, a little
reluctant to let a couple of heathens tag along. So all three
women set out and soon arrived in the Land of Buddha. The nun,
however, was becoming concerned that one of her companions might
be a little more pious than her.
"It would be shameful," she muttered under her breath, "if
they were more successful than I." Buddha, who was aware of
all three women's intentions, watched as the women approached
the gates of heaven.
The nun, who by now wanted to get rid of her companions, said: "Don't
you see that enormous banyan tree? It is under that tree that
Buddha himself spent his life before attaining enlightenment."
"People say that if you climb to the top of the tree and say
a prayer, you can fall right into heaven."
Without suspecting a thing, her companions climbed to the top of
the tree and followed the wicked nun's advice. As they fell from
the top of the tree, however, Buddha appeared, caught the naive
pair and carried them to heaven.
The nun gaped at them, but pulled herself together and climbed
to the top of the tree. She said a prayer, closed her eyes and
let herself fall. Buddha, however, wanted to punish her for the
trick she tried to play on her companions, so didn't catch her
in her fall.
Instead, he trapped the nun in an old lime pot, the type old
women in the countryside ransack when they make their betel
quid. She's been stuck there ever since.
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