Stories For Older Adults
Stories For Older Adults
Stories For Older Adults
After reaching different conclusions, the wise men began to argue about
who possessed the truth . Since everyone defended their positions
vigorously, they resorted to the help of a seventh sage who could see. This
made them see that in reality all of them were partly right, given that they
had been describing a single part of the animal as a whole, and at the same
time that, even without being wrong, none of them had been able to know
it in its entirety."
A classic story from India ; This story tells us about the need to take into
account that our point of view is not the only one that exists on reality: we
must value that the opinions, beliefs or knowledge of other people can be
as valid and true as ours, without need that neither of them are wrong.
legends "
Shortly after, he began to tell his supposed dream, to which one of those
who heard it reacted by trying to look for the deer. After finding it, he took it
home and told his wife about the situation, who told him that perhaps he
was the one who had dreamed the conversation with the woodcutter, even
though having found the animal the dream would be real. To this, her
husband replied that regardless of whether the dream was his or the
woodcutter's, there was no need to know.
But that same night the woodcutter who hunted the animal dreamed
(this time for real) about the place where he had hidden the body
and about the person who had found it. In the morning he went to
the house of the discoverer of the animal's body, after which both
men argued over who the piece belonged to . This discussion
would try to be settled with the help of a judge, who replied that on
the one hand the woodcutter had killed a deer in what he believed to
be a dream and later considered that his second dream was true,
while the other found said deer although his wife considered that he
was the one who dreamed of finding it based on the former's story.
The conclusion was that no one had really killed the animal, and it
was decided that the case be resolved by dividing the animal
between the two men. Later, this story would reach the king of
Cheng, who would end up wondering if it really was not the judge
who had dreamed of having distributed the deer."
The story of “The Hidden Deer” is a Chinese folk tale that tells us a
story based on the differentiation between dream and reality and
how difficult it can sometimes be to make it happen. It is one of the
short stories for adults that tells us about the possibility that we can
live in various planes of existence.
And although the chain was thick and powerful, it seemed obvious to me
that an animal capable of uprooting a tree with its own strength could
easily tear out the stake and flee. The mystery is evident: What keeps it
going then? Why don't you run away?
When I was five or six years old, I still trusted in the wisdom of the greats. I
then asked some teacher, some father or some uncle about the mystery of
the elephant. One of them explained to me that the elephant does not
escape because it was trained. I then asked the obvious question... if he is
trained, why are they chaining him? I don't remember receiving any
coherent response.
Over time I forgot about the mystery of the elephant and the stake... and
only remembered it when I met others who had also asked themselves the
same question. A few years ago I discovered that luckily for me someone
had been wise enough to find the answer: the circus elephant does not
escape because it has been attached to a similar stake since it was very,
very small. I closed my eyes and imagined the little newborn attached to
the stake. I'm sure that at that moment the little elephant pushed, pulled,
sweated, trying to get loose. And despite all his efforts, he could not.
The stake was certainly very strong for him. I would swear that he fell
asleep exhausted, and that the next day he tried again, and also the other
and the one that followed him... Until one day, a terrible day in his history,
the animal accepted his helplessness and resigned himself to his fate .
This enormous and powerful elephant, which we see in the circus, does not
escape because it believes - poor thing - that it cannot. He has a record and
memory of his helplessness, of that helplessness he felt shortly after being
born. And the worst thing is that that record has never been seriously
questioned again. He never…ever…tried to test his strength again…”
One of Jorge Bucay's best-known stories; This narrative tells us how our
memories and previous experiences can give us knowledge, but also
generate stagnations and blockages that impede us and can sabotage us
even when their original cause is no longer present. The narrative pushes
us to continue trying to test ourselves even though what we have
experienced may have made us believe that we cannot do it.