It was a dark and stormy night.
Rain swept across the mountain in silver sheets. Wind roared through the valleys and bent the bamboo nearly to the ground.
On a lonely ridge stood a single tree.
It had stood there longer than anyone remembered.
Through summer heat and winter snow, through drought and flood, it remained upon the mountain like a silent sentinel.
That night, a young monk climbed the path to seek shelter from the storm.
When he reached the ridge, he stopped beside the tree.
The branches groaned.
The trunk swayed.
Lightning flashed across the sky.
The monk bowed to the tree and said, "Old one, how do you endure such suffering? The wind strikes you. The rain lashes you. The cold enters your bark. Yet year after year you remain."
The tree gave no answer.
Only the storm replied.
The monk sat beneath the tree and waited.
The wind grew stronger.
A large branch snapped somewhere in the darkness and tumbled down the mountain.
The monk shook his head.
"Even the strongest things break."
Again the tree said nothing.
Hours passed.
The monk watched as the tree bent with each gust.
It did not resist.
It did not struggle.
When the wind pushed, it yielded.
When the wind passed, it returned.
Near dawn the storm finally weakened.
The clouds drifted away.
The first light of morning spilled across the ridge.
The monk looked around.
Many small shrubs had been uprooted.
Loose stones had been scattered.
Broken branches lay everywhere.
Yet the old tree still stood.
At that moment the abbot, who had followed the monk up the mountain, arrived on the ridge.
The monk pointed to the tree.
"Master, I have watched it all night. What is its secret?"
The abbot looked at the tree and smiled.
"The tree has no secret."
"Then why has it survived?"
The old master stooped and picked up a fallen branch.
"All night you saw the storm."
He tossed the branch into the valley.
"But the tree saw only the wind."
The monk frowned.
"I do not understand."
The master pointed to the eastern horizon where the sun was rising.
"The storm believed itself powerful because it could shake the mountain."
He pointed to the tree.
"The tree never argued."
"The storm said, 'Bend.'"
"The tree bent."
"The storm said, 'Stand.'"
"The tree stood."
"The storm said, 'Fear me.'"
The master paused.
"The tree was busy being a tree."
The monk gazed at the sentinel on the ridge.
Drops of rain still clung to its branches like jewels.
Birds were already returning to sing among its leaves.
The storm had spent itself trying to conquer the tree.
The tree had spent the night simply being what it was.
Many years later, when the monk became old, he often returned to that ridge.
The tree was eventually struck by lightning and fell.
Its trunk became shelter for insects.
Its wood nourished moss.
Its roots fed the earth.
Looking upon the fallen giant, the old monk laughed softly.
At last he understood.
The tree had never weathered the storm.
The storm had weathered the tree.
And both had passed away into the same morning.