If you get good amount of money, what will you do. will you spend or search for rightful owner. But here is an entity who did neither. He just distributed among crowd.
He was a monkey and got many 500 Rs. notes in a bag. He threw the notes to crowd. He was not greedy at all like humans.
http://in.news.yahoo.com/monkey-rains-rs-500-notes-on-shimla-054138244.html
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I saw this story when I was a child on Doordarshan. It was a funny story intended for children. The moral given at its end was everyone gets what he ultimately deserves. But I guess it could also be interpreted in a different perspective.
Anyway such simple story with a clear moral lesson tends to stick with you.
Anyway such simple story with a clear moral lesson tends to stick with you.
I saw this story when I was a child on Doordarshan. It was a funny story intended for children. The moral given at its end was everyone gets what he ultimately deserves. But I guess it could also be interpreted in a different perspective.
Anyway such simple story with a clear moral lesson tends to stick with you.
That's the purpose of a moral story. It penetrates deep in to the hearts. For the same reason, Aesop's fables and Panchatantra remained with us for centuries.
I saw this story when I was a child on Doordarshan. It was a funny story intended for children. The moral given at its end was everyone gets what he ultimately deserves. But I guess it could also be interpreted in a different perspective.
Anyway such simple story with a clear moral lesson tends to stick with you.
That's the purpose of a moral story. It penetrates deep in to the hearts. For the same reason, Aesop's fables and Panchatantra remained with us for centuries.
There are many wise monkeys in such tales.
I saw this story when I was a child on Doordarshan. It was a funny story intended for children. The moral given at its end was everyone gets what he ultimately deserves. But I guess it could also be interpreted in a different perspective.
Anyway such simple story with a clear moral lesson tends to stick with you.
That's the purpose of a moral story. It penetrates deep in to the hearts. For the same reason, Aesop's fables and Panchatantra remained with us for centuries.
There are many wise monkeys in such tales.
Along with monkies, there are crows, jackals, lions and tigers to name a few. Panchatantra is replete with such stories
it is an eye-opener, the value of money relates to us only not to animals so if some day money is abolished and some other medium of purchase such as barter or something there, then productivity participation in all forms of production will be higher for sure.
Money will never be abolished and Barter system is thing of the past
Would you collect the money distributed by monkey, if you were present there? Just for fun.
It depends on the perceived value of money by an individual. A rich man would never jump up and down to grab a few notes.
Personally I wont bother "Kyonki mai pheke huye paise nahi uthata " :) :)
Would you collect the money distributed by monkey, if you were present there? Just for fun.
It depends on the perceived value of money by an individual. A rich man would never jump up and down to grab a few notes.
Personally I wont bother "Kyonki mai pheke huye paise nahi uthata " :) :)
Of course it depends on people's outlook on the money.
Once I was offered a job with a hefty pay packet which was not of my liking and a job with less pay and perks, but a job which has immense opportunities for growth in my field that's close to my heart. I took the later.
Topic Author
G
Gulshan Kumar Ajmani
@gkajmani
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Created
Saturday, 01 March 2014 07:00
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Tuesday, 30 November -0001 00:00
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