There
were once two rabbits, Wanda the Wise and Frederick the Foolish, who were
walking through a field.
They
were good friends and enjoyed their strolls together.
On
this walk, they came upon two carrots.
One of the carrots had large leaves sprouting out of the top and the
other looked much smaller from the surface.
Frederick
was excited and ran up to the carrot with the larger leaves.
“I’ll
have this one,” he proudly exclaimed and proceeded to extract it from the
ground.
Wanda
shrugged her shoulders and pulled out the other carrot, which turned out to be
much bigger.
Frederick
was surprised and asked how this could possibly be.
Wanda
looked at her friend and replied, “You can’t always judge a carrot by its
leaves.”
They
kept on walking and came across another pair of carrots, again with differing
sized leaves.
This
time Frederick allowed his friend the first pick.
Wanda
hopped to each carrot, inspected and sniffed them carefully and, to Frederick’s
surprise, chose the carrot with the larger leaves.
As
they each extracted their carrots from the ground, Frederick was bemused to see
that his carrot was smaller than Wanda’s.
“I
thought that you said that small leaves meant it would be a larger carrot.” He
said.
“No,”
replied Wanda, “I said don’t judge a carrot by its leaves. It’s also important to remember to think
before you choose.”
Frederick
nodded and they ate their carrots before continuing their stroll.
For
a third time, they found two carrots, again with different sized leaves.
Frederick
looked confused and didn’t know what to do.
Wanda indicated that he could choose which carrot to eat.
The
poor foolish rabbit, pretended to inspect each carrot, but he didn’t really
know what to do. He knew that he wasn’t
as smart as his friend and he looked to Wanda with a confused expression on his
face.
Wanda
smiled warmly and hopped over to the carrots.
She inspected them and pulled out one of the carrots.
Frederick
shrugged his shoulders and went to the other one before he was interrupted by
his wise friend.
“No
Frederick, this one’s your carrot,” she said.
“But
you made the choice and I’m sure it’s the bigger one of the two. I don’t know how you do it, but I guess
you’re just smarter than me.”
“Frederick,
there’s no point in having wisdom if you’re not willing to share the benefits
of it with others. You’re my friend and
I want you to have this carrot. A smart
rabbit with a full stomach but no friends isn’t really wise is she?”
“I
guess you’re right,” said Frederick with a full mouth, “As usual.”
I
wrote this story as a reminder that in our search for wisdom, we must also
search for a way to assist those around us with what we’ve learned.
The
ancient Greek philosopher Epicurus once said, “Of all the things which wisdom
provides to make life entirely happy, much the greatest is the possession of
friendship.”
Be
wise, share what you’ve learned with others and help make the world a better
place for those around you.
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