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Post Info TOPIC: Don't this apply to our life ????


Grill Cook

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Posts: 7
Date:
Don't this apply to our life ????





Once upon a time in a forest not far away, there lived a very fuzzy
bear. Now bears usually go lumbering through the forest on all four
legs, but this bear always seemed to be limping, as if something was
wrong with her right front paw. Other animals would question why
she walked with a limp and the bear would reply, "I don't limp!"
or depending on how she felt at the moment,
"I don't know why I limp."

Sometimes the bear could sense pain deep down inside
her paw and she would hold it up and look at it, but she
saw nothing unusual. It looked just like her other paws,
with scarcely any signs of scars or cuts or problems that would
cause her to limp.

Now this bear also had problems
getting along with the other bears
in the forest. She didn't want to tumble
and play with the others, and
didn't understand why any bear
would want to tumble with another
bear. She didn't even enjoy getting
honey out of trees. Often the bear
felt a deep sadness within her, but she
wasn't quite sure why. She seemed
unable to feel the feelings that other
bears told her they had or to enjoy life
as other bears seemed to.



One day as she was walking down a
path with nowhere in particular to go,
the bear came upon a little cub who had
fallen into a clump of prickly bushes
and now had a huge and sharp thorn
lodged in it's paw. The little cub was
whimpering and crying because it was
very afraid and did not seem to know
what to do to get rid of it's pain.
Gently the bear held the little cub and
pulled the thorn out of the paw. The
cub whimpered and cried for some time
after the thorn was removed, and the bear watched and comforted the cub
as the bleeding stopped and the wound
began to heal.

All at once as the bear
looked down at the young
cub, from deep within
her in the hidden corners of
her memory, a picture from
the past begin to appear -
a picture from a time when
she, too, had fallen into a
prickly bush

and lodged a huge thorn deep within the pad of her right front paw.
The memory became clearer as she realized that when she was
younger she didn't know how to get anyone to help her. So
gradually the skin on her paw grew around the thorn covering up
the thorn and also covering up the knowledge that it was even there.
But the sharp object lay deep within her paw, surrounded by infection that spread throughout her whole body, leaving only numbness
instead of feelings of being a bear.

As she found this memory, the bear
understood what she had to do.
She soon helped the little cub find
its mother and then set off to find
other bears in the forest and ask
for their help in removing the thorn.
Before long, she managed to find
a bear who had much experience in thorn removal.
"This is going to hurt some," said the wise bear. "It's been buried
so long that as we bring it up, you may wonder if you shouldn't
leave it in place so you won't have sharp pain now. "But," she
went on, "this thorn has hurt you far more than you now
understand. It must come out so the infection that it caused in
your body can be healed."

Then, using the pressure and persuasion, the wise bear eased the
sharp thorn nearer and nearer to the surface of the lonely bear's paw
until at last it was visible and could be removed. The other bears
helped, too, and before long every bit of the thorn was out.


Getting all of the pieces of
the thorn out after such a
long time was painful, but
the bear understood that in
order for her pain to be
completely gone, every bit
of the long embedded thorn
had to be released from her
paw. As she began to heal,
her paw sometimes hurt,
but she noticed that each
day she felt better and better.



It was amazing - she was experiencing feelings in a new way and
seeing the world through the eyes of a bear who was healthy
and who, at last, loved being a bear.

And to make sure she learned from her experience, she told other
bears how powerful a mind can be to hide the pain of a thorn buried
deep in a paw. For she understood the lesson of the thorn, that pain
not remembered can be the most destructive pain of all.


Ye are of God little children, and have
overcome them; because greater is He
that is in you, than he that is in the world.
I John 4:4

Cast your cares upon the Lord and He will sustain thee;
he will never let the righteous fall.
Psalms 55:22

Cast all of your anxiety upon Him
for He cares for you.
I Peter 5:7










__________________
B. BENEDICT


Smart Blonde Administrator

Status: Offline
Posts: 1153
Date:


Thank you for sharing Barbee! What a wonderful way to think about it. Opens ones eyes, doesn't it??? I know I've got a few thorns that need extracting!


Thanks again!




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