Thinking Out Loud ~ A Lesson from Aesop’s Fables About Courage

Today’s Thinking Out Loud reflection is on Aesop’s Fable, The Fox and the Lion. Aesop’s Fables is available for free download here.

The Fable

“A Fox who had never seen a Lion one day met one, and was so

terrified at the sight of him that he was ready to die with fear.

After a time he met him again, and was still rather frightened, but

not nearly so much as he had been when he met him first. But when

he saw him for the third time he was so far from being afraid that

he went up to him and began to talk to him as if he had known him

all his life.”

Note: Our parents, neighbors, culture, and friends often unknowingly pass on biases to us. We learn early on to fear, dislike, or even hate those who are different from us. They may worship differently, they may talk differently, they may have a different skin color. The list goes on, we learned that being different from us is dangerous. If we have courage, we dare to move into a space that allows us to enter a dialogue with those who are different from us. If we’re patient we learn that most differences are superficialities. We learn that we share similar human experiences. We discover we desire the same things. Those who remain blinded by their biases miss out on beauty of our world and the wonderful gifts people whom we initially viewed as different from us bring to us.

Thinking Out Loud ~ The Little Prince: The Fox’s Secret About Love

Saint-Exupéry writes in The Little Prince of the Little Prince and the fox parting. The fox tells the Little Prince a secret about love as they are parting.

“Goodbye,” said the little prince.

“Goodbye,” said the fox. “Here is my secret. It is very simple: we see well only with the heart. The essential is invisible to the eyes.”

“The essential is invisible to the eyes,” the little prince repeated in order to remember it.

“It is the time you have spent for your rose that makes your rose so important.”

“It is the time I have spent for my rose,” the little prince said in order to remember.

“Men have forgotten this truth,” said the fox. “But you must not forget it. You become responsible forever for what you have tamed. You are responsible for your rose.”

“I am responsible for my rose, the little prince repeated in order to remember.

Note: Two people, who are deeply in love, sitting together can look at each other and know that each is loved; they read each other ‘s thoughts; they know when each other is troubled; they know when each other is happy; they know when they are in each other ‘s company that there is no place else in the world that they would like to be. Their hearts are communicating and beating as one. I hope you have this kind of love in your life.

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