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The pupil of a "bamboo acrobat" (candālavamsika) (See
KS.v.148, n.3) of long ago. His master called to him one day and asked him to
climb the bamboo and to stand on his shoulder. Then the master suggested that
they should watch and look after each other during their performances. But
Medakathalikā said that each should look after himself, which would be the
better way.
The Commentary (SA.iii.182) adds that, in this
performance, the end of the pole rests on the forehead or throat. The man who
thus holds it must watch the balance closely and not attend to the man at the
end of the pole.
The Buddha related this story at Desakā, in the Sumbha
country, to the monks, and said that, in the same way, each monk should look
after himself; by guarding oneself, one guards another; this is done by the
cultivation of the four satipatthānas (S.v.168f).
The name Medakathalikā, though feminine in inflection, is
used for a male (SA.iii.181).

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