Zomo the
rabbit, though not big or strong, was known to be very clever. Zomo decided it
was time he was known for wisdom too, so he approached Sky God.
Sky God
told him he would have to earn it by bringing him the scales of the Big Fish Of
The Sea; the milk of the Fearsome Wild Bull Cow, and the tooth of the Mighty
Leopard.
Zomo
confidently agreed. He begin playing his drum so loud at the shore, that the
drumbeats went down to the bottom of the sea. Big Fish, dancing to the
irresistible rhythm, flipped right out of the water. Zomo drummed faster and
faster; Big Fish danced faster and faster so fast that its jingling scales fell
right off. Embarrassed, it jumped back into the sea. Zomo grabbed the scales
and ran.
Back in
the forest, Zomo climbed a palm tree till Wild Bull-Cow showed that it wasn’t
really big and strong, daring it to knock down the little palm tree. Enraged,
it charged and its horns stuck in it, so Zomo slid down, turned his drum upside
down filling it with milk before it got free.
Zomo
then ran to the top of the hill where Mighty Leopard lied, sprinkled some fish
scales and a few drops of milk on the path, and slipped, rolling down the hill,
hitting a rock. Its tooth immediately popped out. Zomo caught it and hopped a
way to Sky God.
Sky God
smiled, ‘You are clever enough.” He said. “But not wise…. Three things in this
world are worth having: Courage, good sense and deep understanding of things
and creatures,” said Sky God. “Little rabbit, you have lots of courage, a bit
of sense, but absolutely no understanding. So next time you see Fish, Cow or
Leopard …. Better run fast!”
Like
Zomo, we imagine that cleverness can easily bring us to wisdom, or that they
are sister states of being. Actually they are more like distance relatives.
Cleverness
is satisfied with short-term gains; wisdom acts from a wider perspective.
Wisdom is founded on confidence rather than arrogance,; learning from
experience, yet forever open to the power of new possibilities.
Most of
us are good at being clever, and are encouraged to be so, appreciated for being
so. Being clever has made us more powerful. We can build organizations, cities,
countries. We can also destroy them.
How does
it make sense to say, “He is a wise man but he does foolish things”
Wisdom
is not just thinking intelligently, but living intelligently. More than just
being effective in daily life, it means we choose our values and basic
priorities well and we live by them. It means we can fail, but learn from
mistakes. It means we take responsibility for the intended as well as
unintended consequences of our actions.
When
cleverness does serve wisdom, knowledge, information and experience can be
distilled in a meaningful way. Often
cleverness, recognized in showy brilliance, involves resourceful accepting
reality, putting things in perspective ten contexts – dependent; wisdom is
timeless, free of context. Cleverness mostly is a means to wisdom, recognizing
the interrelatedness of everything, is always for the good of all.
No comments:
Post a Comment