A Rabbit on a Swim
Team
Once
upon a time, the animals decided they should do
something meaningful to meet the problems of the
new world. So they organized a school.
They
adopted an activity curriculum of running,
climbing, swimming and flying. To make it easier
to administer the curriculum, all the animals took
all the subjects.
The
duck was excellent in swimming, in fact better
than his instructor, but he made only passing
grades in flying as was very poor in running.
Since he was slow in running, he had to drop out
of swimming and stay after school to practice
running. This caused his web feet to be
badly worn, so that he was only an average
swimming. But average, ...was quite
acceptable, so nobody worried about that, except
the duck.
The
rabbit started at the top of his class in running,
but developed a nervous twitch in his leg
muscle, because of much made up work in swimming.
The
squirrel was excellent in climbing, but he
encountered constant frustration in flying class
because his teacher made him start from the ground
up instead of from the treetop down. He developed
a "charlie horse" from overextension, and only got
a 'C' in climbing and a 'D' in running.
The
eagle was the problem child and disciplined for
being a nonconformist. In climbing classes
he beat everyone to the top of the tree, but
insisted on using his own way to get there...
The
obvious moral of the story is a simple
one - each creature has its own set of
capabilities which it will naturally agree, -
unless it is expected or forced to fit a mold it
doesn't fit. When that happens, frustration,
discouragement and even guilt bring overall
mediocrity or complete defeat. A duck is a duck
and ONLY a duck. It is built to swim, not to run
or fly and certainly not to climb. A squirrel is
a squirrel - and ONLY that. To move it out of
it's forte, climbing, and than expect it to swim
of fly will drive the squirrel nuts! The rabbit
will win every time unless, of course, the eagle
gets hungry.
So
relax, cultivate your own capabilities. Your
own style. Appreciate the members of your
family and those around you and who they are, even
though there outlook or style may be different
from yours.
Rabbits don't fly, Eagles don't swim. Squirrels
don't have feathers. Stop comparing. Enjoy being
you. There is plenty of room in the forest.
...(Extract from an article published by the
Springfield, Oregon Public School Newsletter -
1994 - TALK Newsletter 1994)
