Thursday, October 20, 2011

The Rabbit Seeks Wisdom

Candice McCarty
Professor Morgan Peters
English 200-08
December 15, 2011

            Life isn’t easy, you have to put in every ounce of strength you have, and then some to even scratch the surface. Nothing comes easy, and everything costs a price. Whether that price is money, product, time, or effort, you can’t receive until you give. The story The Rabbit Seeks Wisdom is a perfect example on this topic. It is an insightful way to take a concept and teach it to others.
            In the story the rabbit asks God for more wisdom. He, like many people want to take the easy way out of a situation. Now he is told by God that he has to complete 3 difficult tasks in order to receive his wish. He isn’t just given his request because what kind of story would that be? The story is his journey of completing the tasks of obtaining the scales of the great ocean fish, milk from the wild cow, and teeth from a living crocodile.
            The rabbit in his quest completes each task with flawless perfection, tricking every single participant into giving him what he wants. He returns to God and presents him with his treasures. In return, God tells him he cannot give him more wisdom because he already possesses enough. The rabbit didn’t see that he was given impossible tasks, and by completing them he already had the wisdom he was seeking. When you think deeply into the story, you see that God simply gave the rabbit the push that he needed to find what he truly wanted in himself. Compere the rabbit had the tools necessary; he just needed someone to teach him how to use them.
            When you think of a story like this being told to a village, or community, why do you think it was told? It is a type of motivational tale to get listeners to take the moral and apply it to their daily lives. It could also be to teach the youth the values that their older superiors want them to learn. Just like “slow and steady wins the race”, they wanted children, and everyone for that matter to learn from this story to look within themselves for the strength they were given.
            Relating this story to college students like us, you think about all the assignments that we do to complete our degree. How many of them do we actually do, or do we just “bullshit” our way through it just to get it done? Think about all the students who get caught plagiarizing essays, how long did it take and how much money did it take to do that? When in reality it would have taken just as much time and less money do just to it from the start. We spend so much time trying to get through the pages of a term paper, when if we just concentrated on the material it would just come easy to us. This is our degree we are paying for it, and if we don’t do the work why are we even here?

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