THE DEAF FROG
My
friend, Dr. Deepak, used to always tell this story to our young ones…
especially on the Certification day, as his parting message. Today, I
remembered him, and his story, with a lot of freshness.
Once, in a town, all the frogs decided to hold
a competition among them. The challenge: to see who would be able to climb the
tallest tower in the town!
When the day of
the competition arrived, the people from the town came to the spot to witness
the great spectacle. When they saw the tiny creatures – the feeble-looking
frogs – near the town’s gigantic tower, all set to climb, they all became
cynical and cried, “Silly fools! They can’t!”
And, gun-shot
went up in the air. The race began… As the frogs tried desperately to climb,
and fast, the spectators began to scream hysterically, “You fool, you can’t,”…
“Give up, you silly creatures… Go home!”
When the little
frogs heard the cry of the mob around, they got discouraged and disheartened…
and, one by one, they gave up. But, one frog didn’t. He kept climbing, and kept persisting…
till he made it to the dizzy top of the high tower!
“Bravo! Bravo!
Bravo!”… It was the same cynical crowd, now, cheering the brave one.
After the
presentation ceremony, one of the many quitter-frogs asked the winner, “Friend,
how did you do it? How come you didn’t get discouraged by the frenzied mob?”
The quitter-frog
was in for a shock! The ‘hero’ – the brave winner – was deaf! Completely deaf!
Dr.
Deepak would charge our young ones, at the end of his story: “My dear
young friends, if you want to win, climb the tallest tower in your town, be
deaf like this frog. Completely deaf to the cynical and negative voices around
you!”
I find this story so relevant and
fitting it perfectly well in different contexts. One of the contexts is: to be
able to separate the poison from the so-called negative words of others. Be
able to take what is only wanted… and leave the rest. Never to let the poison
seep into our hearts… Never to internalize what is being said…Yes, as the
Buddha said, “If I don’t accept your abuse, the poison of your abuse will
belong to you, and not me!”
I find the frog-story very, very
relevant in life…
We learn it the hard way.
GERALD D’CUNHA
Pic.: Shaila D'Souza
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