If A Dog Was Your Teacher
You Would Learn Stuff Like...
When loved ones come home, always run to greet them.
Never pass up the opportunity to go for a joyride.
Allow the experience of fresh air and the wind in your face to be pure ecstasy.
When it's in your best interest-- practice obedience.
Let others know when they've invaded your territory.
Take naps and stretch before rising.
Run, romp and play daily.
Thrive on attention and let people touch you.
Avoid biting, when a simple growl will do.
On warm days, stop to lie on your back on the grass.
On hot days, drink lots of water and lay under a shady tree.
When you're happy, dance around and wag your entire body.
No matter how often you're scolded, don't buy into the guilt thing and pout ...run right
back and make friends.
Delight in the simple joy of a long walk.
Eat with gusto and enthusiasm. Stop when you've had enough.
Be loyal.
Never pretend to be something you're not.
If what you want lies buried, dig until you find it.
When someone is having a bad day, be silent, sit close by and nuzzle them gently.
The Emperor's Three Questions (By Leo Tolstoy)
.. One day it occurred to
a certain emperor that if he only knew the answers to three questions, he would never
stray in any matter.
.. The emperor issued a decree throughout his kingdom announcing that whoever could
answer the questions would receive a great reward. Many who read the decree made their way
to the palace at once, each person with a different answer.
.. In reply to the first question, one person advised that the emperor make up a thorough
time schedule, consecrating every hour, day, month and year for certain tasks and then
follow the schedule to the letter. Only then could he hope to do every task at the right
time.
.. Another person replied that it was impossible to plan in advance and that the emperor
should put all vain amusements aside and remain attentive to everything in order to know
what to do at what time.
.. Someone else insisted that, by himself, the emperor could never hope to have all the
foresight and competence necessary to decide when to do each and every task, and what he
really needed was to set up a Council of the Wise and then to act according to their
advice.
.. Someone else said that certain matters require immediate decision and could not wait
for consultation, but if he wanted to know in advance what was going to happen he should
consult magicians and soothsayers.
.. The responses to the second question also lacked accord.
.. One person said that the emperor needed to place all his trust in administrators,
another urged reliance on priests and monks, while others recommended physicians. Still
others put their faith in warriors.
.. The third question drew a similar variety of answers.
.. Some said science was the most important pursuit. Others insisted on religion. Yet
others claimed the most important thing was military skill.
.. The emperor was not pleased with any of the answers, and no reward was given.
.. After several nights of reflection, the emperor resolved to visit a hermit who lived on
a mountain and was said to be an enlightened man. The emperor wished to find the hermit to
ask him the three questions, though he knew the hermit never left the mountains and was
known to receive only the poor, refusing to have anything to do with persons of wealth or
power. So the emperor disguised himself as a simple peasant and ordered his attendants to
wait for him at the foot of the mountain while he climbed the slope alone to seek the
hermit.
.. Reaching the holy man's dwelling place, the emperor found the hermit digging a garden
in front of his hut. When the hermit saw the stranger, he nodded his head in greeting and
continued to dig. The labor was obviously hard on him. He was an old man, and each time he
thrust his spade into the ground to turn the earth, he heaved heavily.
.. The emperor approached him and said, "I have come here to ask your help with three
questions: When is the best time to do each thing? Who are the most important people to
work with? What is the most important thing to do at all times?"
.. The hermit listened attentively but only patted the emperor on the shoulder and
continued digging. The emperor said, "You must be tired. Here, let me give you a hand
with that." The hermit thanked him, handed the emperor the spade, and then sat down
on the ground to rest.
.. After he had dug two rows, the emperor stopped and turned to the hermit and repeated
his three questions. The hermit still did not answer, but instead stood and pointed to the
spade and said, "Why don't you rest now? I can take over again." But the emperor
continued to dig. One hour passed, then two. Finally the sun began to set behind the
mountain. The emperor put down the spade and said to the hermit, "I came here to ask
if you could answer my three questions. But if you can't give me any answer, please let me
know so that I can get on my way home."
.. The hermit lifted his head and asked the emperor, "Do you hear someone running
over there?" The emperor turned his head. They both saw a man with a long white beard
emerge from the woods. He ran wildly, pressing his hands against a bloody wound in his
stomach. The man ran toward the emperor before falling unconscious to the ground, where he
lay groaning. Opening the man's clothing, the emperor and hermit saw that the man had
received a deep gash. The emperor cleaned the wound thoroughly and then used his own shirt
to bandage it, but the blood completely soaked it within minutes. He rinsed the shirt out
and bandaged the wound a second time and continued to do so until the flow of blood had
stopped.
.. At last the wounded man regained consciousness and asked for a drink of water. The
emperor ran down to the stream and brought back a jug of fresh water. Meanwhile, the sun
had disappeared and the night air had begun to turn cold. The hermit gave the emperor a
hand in carrying the man into the hut where they laid him down on the hermit's bed. The
man closed his eyes and lay quietly. The emperor was worn out from a long day of climbing
the mountain and digging the garden. Leaning against the doorway, he fell asleep. When he
rose, the sun had already risen over the mountain. For a moment he forgot where he was and
what he had come here for. He looked over to the bed and saw the wounded man also looking
around him in confusion. When he saw the emperor, he stared at him intently and then said
in a faint whisper, "Please forgive me."
.. "But what have you done that I should forgive you?" the emperor asked.
.. "You do not know me, your majesty, but I know you. I was your sworn enemy, and I
had vowed to take vengeance on you, for during the last war you killed my brother and
seized my property. When I learned that you were coming alone to the mountain to meet the
hermit, I resolved to surprise you on your way back and kill you. But after waiting a long
time there was still no sign of you, and so I left my ambush in order to seek you out. But
instead of finding you, I came across your attendants, who recognized me, giving me this
wound. Luckily, I escaped and ran here. If I hadn't met you I would surely be dead by now.
I had intended to kill you, but instead you saved my life! I am ashamed and grateful
beyond words. If I live, I vow to be your servant for the rest of my life, and I will bid
my children and grandchildren to do the same. Please grant me you forgiveness."
.. The emperor was overjoyed to see that he was so easily reconciled with a former enemy.
He not only forgave the man but promised to return all the man's property and to send his
own physician and servants to wait on the man until he was completely healed. After
ordering his attendants to take the man home, the emperor returned to see the hermit.
Before returning to the palace the emperor wanted to repeat his three questions one last
time. He found the hermit sowing seeds in the earth they had dug the day before.
.. The hermit stood up and looked at the emperor. "But your questions have already
been answered."
.. "How's that?" the emperor asked, puzzled.
.. "Yesterday, if you had not taken pity on my age and given me a hand with digging
these beds, you would have been attacked by that man on your way home. Then you would have
deeply regretted not staying with me. Therefore the most important time was the time you
were digging in the beds, the most important person was myself, and the most important
pursuit was to help me."
.. "Later, when the wounded man ran up here, the most important time was the time you
spent dressing his wound, for if you had not cared for him he would have died and you
would have lost the chance to be reconciled with him. Likewise, he was the most important
person, and the most important pursuit was taking care of his wound."
.. "Remember that there is only one important time and that is now. The present
moment is the only time over which we have dominion. The most important person is always
the person you are with, who is right before you, for who knows if you will have dealings
with any other person in the future? The most important pursuit is making the person
standing at your side happy, for that alone is the pursuit of life."
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