Once there
was a king who received a gift of two magnificent falcons. They were peregrine
falcons, the most beautiful birds he had ever seen. He gave the precious birds
to his head falconer to be trained.
Months
passed, and one day the head falconer informed the king that though one of the
falcons were flying majestically, soaring high in the sky, the other bird had
not moved from its branch since the day it had arrived.
The king
summoned healers and sorcerers from all the land to tend to the falcon, but no
one could make the bird fly. He presented the task to the members of his court,
but the next day, the king saw through the palace window that the bird still
not moved from its perch.
Having tried
everything else, the king thought to himself, “Maybe I need someone more
familiar with the countryside to understand the nature of this problem.” So he
cried out to his court, “Go and get a farmer.”
In the
morning, the king was thrilled to see the falcon soaring high above the palace
gardens. He said to his court, “Bring me the doer of this miracle.” The court
quickly located the farmer, who came and stood before the king. The king asked
him, “How did you make the falcon fly?” The farmer said to the king, “It was
very easy, your highness. I simply cut the branch where the bird was sitting.”
Moral: We
are all made to fly-to realize our incredible potential as human beings. But at
times we sit on our branches, clinging to the things that are familiar to us.
The possibilities are endless, but for most of us, they remain undiscovered. We
conform to the familiar, the comfortable, and the mundane. So for the most
part, our lives are mediocre instead of exciting, thrilling, and fulfilling. Let
us learn to destroy the branch of fear and free ourselves to the glory of
flight.
Note:
Published at the Himalayan Times on 17 March 2014
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