True bravery and wisdom are always about protecting oneself, not challenging danger

Mondo Psychological Updated on 2024-02-07

In the yard, there is a tree.

Originally, it was carried to the crevices of the yard by guano and raised and grown by nature.

When I first saw it, it was only the thickness of my fingers.

I was hesitant to get rid of it, but in a moment, I stayed.

A life, even if it is just an accident, has the right to see the world.

After a few years, the small sapling of that day has grown taller than the house and has become a real big tree.

The price of growth is borne by the owner of the house, who cleans the fallen leaves all over the yard every day.

However, the limit of its growth can only be the beams of the next-door neighbor.

If you grow unlimitedly, one day, you will be required to sawn off because you block the neighbor's sunlight.

I don't know if a tree will ever be crazy to grow, to other trees to output "no matter what life gives us, we just work hard to grow to the sun" mental process, or will it be sawed off one day, and then sigh "bad luck, what can I do".

It may never know that it grows in a small yard with guano, and it happens that the owner of this yard has a bit of kindness.

It was born because of the benevolence of the owner.

It died because of the structure of the yard itself.

All of this, in fact, was already predestined in the beginning.

The instinct of a tree is to keep growing and expanding, but if one day it can understand that uncontrolled expansion will only lead to destruction, and then it will voluntarily stop growing and wither away those unimportant branches, then it can be regarded as enlightened.

True bravery and wisdom are always about protecting oneself, not challenging danger

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