Another “not Aesop’s fables” answer:
The story of the dog carrying a bone who looks in the water, and sees the reflection of another dog with a bone. He barks at this dog to try to take for himself a second bone, and in doing so, loses his own in the water. Trying to get more than you deserve or taking what others have leaves you with nothing of your own.
Wait, I thought this is Aesop’s
Is it? It could be. I thought I remembered it as a standalone book from when I was a kid. That was MANY moons ago, so I could be wrong
Now I’m not too sure anymore lol
Literally every fable ends with a good lesson, how to pick! The salt merchant’s donkey sticks out as a memorable one because it’s complex–the donkey’s mistake is not trying to lighten its load, it is doing so excessively, trying to reduce its load to zero every day. The merchant’s revenge seems somewhat cruel, but isn’t actually forced upon the donkey until/unless, even though the sponges are very light on the last day, the donkey tries to make them even lighter by slipping into the water. It’s a classic “pigs get fat, hogs get slaughtered” type message, but with some interesting nuance to it.
The one that’s stuck with me throughout a lifetime is The Hare and the Tortoise (Project Gutenberg, safe click). Slow but steady wins the race.
The grasshopper and the ants - Don’t be a lazy fuck and then expect others to bail you out due to your own lack of planning
Thisreply isn’t allegorical right? Haha
I think the one that has stuck with me is the one about the man in the coat, and the sun & cloud competing to take his coat off. You get a lot further in life with kindness than through force
Take the thorn out of the lion’s paw, and don’t charge him $10,000.
Not sure if it counts, but I quote The Donkey in the Lion’s Skin all the time. Nobody has an infinite capacity to play a part. That isn’t to say the reverse (over-applying expectations) isn’t valid.
This is often compared to stories of Sun Wukong’s tail and Zoroaster’s encounter with Nebroel, both of which I cite as well.
The golden goose is timeless. Greed is a challenge in the best of times and for those of us living in deregulated capitalist hell, it can seem more like being a goose in a butcher shop. I constantly watch businesses squeeze in the short term to fail in the long term. Every quarter every day, people make the same, predictable greedy decisions and in the current system are often shielded from the consequences.