Sunday, March 18, 2012

The Dual Nature of a Warrior

The ancient Spartans had a tradition, where before they step off to battle, they would take their "ticket" which was nothing more than a small tab of wood with their name inscribed on each end, and they would break it in half, taking half with them into battle and leaving the other half behind in the hands of a designated ticket keeper.  When the battle was over and the combatants returned to camp, the keeper would call off names one by one, and each man would then go claim his half of the broken ticket.  The unclaimed tickets are of those that fell in battle.

The dividing of the ticket also symbolizes the dividing of one's self and leaving behind that half of you, the better half, that carries every inclination towards love, mercy, and compassion; that side that delights in his children and lifts his voice in song.  The warrior then takes with him the side of him that knows only his baser instincts, only combat, survival, and slaughter, the side of him that looks across the battlefield and sees only soldiers, without a name an without a face.  As soon as faces appear recognizeable across the way, the soldier becomes a man, and mercy and compassion enter the picture.  It is not until the battle is over and the ticket is once again joined together where the warrior experiences that sacremental moment when he is once again whole.

There exists an interesting dynamic among the villain, the hero, and the damsel in distress.  In the typical scenario, the damsel is captured by the villain, then the villain is defeated by the hero, and the damsel is rescued.  So the villain overcomes the damsel, the hero overcomes the villain, yet it is the damsel that weakens the knees of the hero.  Evil hates love, so it strives to overcome it, and in this dynamic, evil succeeds in doing so.  The hero's righteous anger is what overcomes evil, and love quells the righteous anger.  This is why love, and all other feelings derived from love like mercy and compassion, have no place on the field of battle.  Love calms the righteous anger that burns in the heart of every warrior, which allows evil to flourish, and in turn, love is extinguished.

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