The Rainmaker
A story told by Richard Wilhelm, Chinese scholar and theologian to Carl Jung: 
In the ancient Chinese province of Kiaochou there was a drought so 
severe that many people and animals were dying. All the religious 
leaders attempted to solicit relief from their gods: the Catholics made 
processions, the Protestants said their prayers, and the Chinese fired 
guns to frighten away the demons of the drought. Finally, out of 
desperation, the town’s people called upon the Rainmaker, and from a 
province far away there appeared a shriveled up, old man. The old man 
immediately requested a small hut on the outskirts of town, where he 
locked himself up for three days and nights in solitude, and then, on 
the fourth day, it rained. In fact, it snowed at a time when snow was 
not expected.
Wilhelm, who was allowed to interview the Rainmaker, asked him how he
 made the rain, and the old man responded by exclaiming that he did not 
make the rain, that he was not responsible! Not satisfied with this 
response, Wilhelm pressed on, “Then what did you do for these 
three days?” And the old man explained that he had come from another 
province where things were in order with nature, but here, in Kiaochou, 
things were out of order, and so he himself was also out of order. Thus,
 it took three days to regain Tao and then naturally, the rain came.
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| Marie Bortolotto 
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