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Calm it Down

You Are Not a Fish - The Importance of Self Worth (Summer Archive)

Calm it Down

Chad Lawson

Health & Fitness, Mental Health

4.8678 Ratings

🗓️ 25 July 2023

⏱️ 11 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

"I'm worthless.", said the fish. "I can't even climb a tree. The squirrel can. Look at him." We're each uniquely, and beautifully, different. And while we each have traits/talents that are ours, what happens when we strip those 'things' away. Who are we at our core? Listen in to this archived summer episode as we learn the importance of Self Worth in 3...2...1.

Transcript

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0:00.0

I'm about to tell you the most profound thing you've heard all day.

0:10.0

So astounding, I've hesitated and even telling you.

0:14.0

But you must be told.

0:16.0

Are you ready?

0:18.0

You are not a fish. That was a lot to drop in your lap, so I'll give you a moment, but

0:24.6

you're not a fish. I hope this comes as no surprise, but stick with me. I'm going somewhere

0:32.7

with us. Everybody is a genius, but if you judge a fish by its ability to climb a tree,

0:38.6

it will live its whole life, believing that it is stupid.

0:43.0

There is much debate surrounding this quote as to whether or not Einstein, in fact, said it,

0:49.1

in further reading of its history, the idea about schools for animals has been around for over 100 years,

0:57.1

reaching back to a post in the Journal of Education in 1898.

1:02.3

The essay was written under the pen name Aesop Jr., who was later identified as Amos Dober

1:08.3

of Tufts, a prominent physicist and inventor.

1:12.9

In short, the essay pointed out how absurd it is to use a single standard to assess how bright

1:20.7

or of value a student was.

1:24.9

His essay, and I'm paraphrasing here, went on to say how each animal should be able to do

1:31.1

one thing as well as the others. If an animal such as an eagle had great wings, but short legs,

1:38.4

the focus was teaching the bird to use its legs more and to fly only for recreation, for fun. Of course, this is

1:47.4

all fictitious, but the animals in this school that would not submit to the training but continued

1:53.1

to use their natural talents as they had been given were dishonored, called narrow-minded,

1:59.9

and were mocked.

2:01.7

No one was allowed to graduate from that school unless he or she could climb, swim,

...

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