Tchaikovsky - Swan Lake in charcoal.
No More Crocodile Tears
"Does a crocodile have Buddha-nature?"
That was the question that floated through my mind after waking from one of the strangest dreams I have ever had.
In the dream there was an ancient crocodile. Not a fierce hunter, not a monster lurking beneath the water, but an old creature wandering from river to river as though searching for a place to die. There was no fear in me. Instead, I felt that somehow it was looking for me, as if I was meant to become part of its final journey.
Dreams have their own language. They seldom speak directly.
As I sat quietly that morning, a memory surfaced from more than seventy years ago.
As a young teenager, I had been caught by my mother looking out of a window at a group of girls bathing at a village well behind their house. Her reaction was immediate and devastating.
"You are a crocodile!"
In Malay, the word carries far more weight than the English translation. It is an accusation that brands a person's character rather than merely pointing out a youthful indiscretion. It landed on my young heart with such force that, somewhere deep inside, I accepted the verdict.
I became the crocodile.
For the rest of my life, whenever sensual thoughts or fantasies arose, my mother's voice would echo within me. Even now, at seventy-five years of age, she still appears in that inner theatre. Such is the mysterious power of childhood conditioning.
I have carried that hidden burden for most of my life.
It festered quietly beneath the surface while outwardly I travelled the world, fished the Bering Sea, practised Zen, wandered through Japan, painted, wrote journals, and searched for Truth. All the while, somewhere in the depths, the old crocodile remained alive.
Until now.
Only recently did I find the courage to drag this ancient, rotting part of myself into the open. Not to condemn it, nor to justify it, but simply to expose it to the light.
It reminded me of the beautiful Islamic tradition describing how the Prophet Muhammad's heart was opened and cleansed by the Archangel. Whether understood literally or symbolically, the story points toward a profound truth: the heart is not discarded; it is purified.
Perhaps that is what this dream was inviting me to do.
Naturally, my mind wandered to Carl Jung.
I could almost imagine him chuckling in his grave.
"You see?" he might say. "At last, he has stopped running away from his shadow."
Then, not to be outdone, Alan Watts wandered into the conversation wearing his familiar mischievous grin.
"He is still clinging to the crocodile's tail!"
Trust Alan Watts to puncture even the most solemn revelation with laughter.
Then came the inevitable Zen question.
"Does a crocodile have Buddha-nature?"
I could almost hear Watts laughing even harder.
A Zen master might simply ask in return,
"Who wants to know?"
And there it is.
For seventy years I had been asking whether I was the crocodile.
Perhaps I should have been asking who it was that had been watching the crocodile all along.
That witness...
That silent awareness...
That Presence...
It was never stained by the label.
The dream was never about a reptile.
It was about an identity that had grown old.
Very old.
Old enough to seek its own resting place.
As I reflected further, another phrase came to mind, one that made me laugh aloud.
No more crocodile tears.
Not because I have stopped feeling sorrow, but because the tears are no longer flowing from a false identity I accepted as a frightened boy. If tears come now, let them come honestly—from gratitude, from humility, from seeing clearly.
The river continues to flow.
The old crocodile has done his work.
Perhaps it is finally time to let him rest.
Wallahu A'lam.
#NoMoreCrocodileTears #DreamJournal #CarlJung #AlanWatts #Zen #BuddhaNature #ShadowWork #SelfInquiry #Awareness #Healing #SpiritualJourney #ArtOfLiving #WallahuAllam



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