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One hot summer day, the fox walked through an orchard, and he stopped in front of a large bunch of ripe and juicy grapes. The fox thought, "I'm thirsty." So he took a few steps back, lunged forward, and jumped up, but could not reach the grapes. The fox stepped back and tried.
Once, twice, three times, but none of them got the grapes. The fox tried again and again, but without success. In the end, he decided to give up, he held his head high and said as he walked:
I'm sure it's sour. The parable is that some people are powerless and unable to do something, so they excuse that the time is not ripe.
This story is similar to the meaning of "If you can't eat grapes, say grapes are sour" in "Aesop's Fables", which means that if you can't get something, you will find excuses to belittle him, so as to achieve the purpose of balancing your own psychology. In psychology, it is called the "sour grapes mentality".
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The Fox and the Grapes tells us the truth: don't deceive yourself, you can't be like a fox who can't eat grapes and say that grapes are sour, but you should bravely face the facts and face the limitations of your own abilities. If you only make up reasons to disguise the facts when you encounter suffering, you will only end up deceiving yourself and will not help the status quo.
In life, we must seek truth from facts, and no matter what difficulties we encounter, we must face the facts bravely. Trust your own judgment, have the courage to try, and don't make excuses for not being able to do things.
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The Fox and the GrapesThe parable tells us to be realistic in our lives and things, and we should have the courage to admit our own shortcomings。In this parable, the fox says that the grapes are sour because they can't eat them, and the people say that what they can't get is bad. This parable gave rise to a proverb: If you can't eat grapes, you say that grapes are sour.
If you still think about what you can't get, you will only make yourself miserable. Some people find excuses to belittle them for what they can't get, so as to achieve the goal of balancing their own psychology.
A synopsis of the story of "The Fox and the Grapes". The Fox and the Grapes tells the story of a hungry fox who sees bunches of crystal clear grapes hanging from the grape trellis, and his mouth is watering, and he wants to pick them to eat, but he can't pick them. After watching it for a while, he walked away helplessly, and he comforted himself as he walked
The grapes are not ripe, they must be sour.
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"The Fox and the Grapes" tells us the truth:After a person has experienced many failures, psychological cues are formed, and this negative cue is passed on to others, so that success is not possible. Therefore, we can never insist on going our own way, and we must observe and solve problems from different angles.
The Fox and the Grapes Original Text:
On a hot summer day, the fox walked through an orchard and stopped in front of the grape trellis. The fox thought, "I'm thirsty."
So he took a few steps back, rushed forward, and jumped up, but he didn't pick the grapes. But none of the grapes were picked. The fox tried and tried, but without success, and finally, it decided to give up, saying:
I'm sure it's sour. The monkey said, "Don't I know the grapes I planted?"
Sweet for sure. As he spoke, the monkey picked a bunch and ate it, and it was very sweet.
Source: Aesop's Fables, originally titled "The Collection of Essopersian Tales", is a collection of allegorical tales circulated in ancient Greek folklore. After being processed by later generations, it became the circulating "Aesop's Fables".
Through short fables, we embody the unperceived truths of everyday life. These short stories are concise and approachable, concise in writing, vivid in story, rich in imagination, full of philosophy, and a combination of ideology and artistry. Writers, poets, philosophers, ordinary people have been inspired and entertained.
Among them, "The Farmer and the Snake", "The Fox and the Grapes", "The Wolf and the Lamb", "The Tortoise and the Hare Race", "The Shepherd Boy and the Wolf", "The Farmer and His Children" and other stories have become household names all over the world.
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