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🌿 Four Ways Stories Teach Truth

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  Parables, fables, folktales, and Sufi stories all use storytelling to pass wisdom from one generation to the next. They share a few essentials: They teach through narrative, not argument. They use symbolic or archetypal characters. They are short, memorable, and easy to retell. They invite interpretation — sometimes direct, sometimes hidden. Yet each form speaks a different language of truth. 📘 Parables — Moral Insight Through Human Experience Characters: Always human. Purpose: Reveal moral or spiritual truth. Tone: Realistic and grounded in everyday life. Lesson: Implied rather than stated. Engagement: The listener reflects and infers meaning. Example: The Good Samaritan. Parable = A mirror held up to the listener. 🐢 Fables — Moral Lessons Through Non‑Human Actors Characters: Animals or objects acting like humans. Purpose: Teach practical lessons about behavior. Tone: Simple, symbolic, often humorous. Lesson: Explicit moral stated at the end. Engagement: The listen...

Tip #134 from 365 Teacher Secrets for Parents (Trombly, McKinley) - story starters

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  Today's tip for parents from two talented teachers comes from  365 Teacher Secrets for Parents  by Cindy McKinley Alder and Patti Trombly.                                                         #134 Story Starters   When you have completed 95 percent of your journey, you are only halfway there. ~Ancient Japanese proverb   Have you ever heard from your child, “I can’t think of anything to write about!” If you have, you will probably recognize that this is a major hurdle. Of course, it will be tough to write about something if she can’t even think of a topic to write about! The journey’s adventure aside, she can’t even figure out where to go! When your child does not have a specific writing assignment, writing for fun can be enjoyable and can also help her increase her writing skills along the way. If choosing...

Daily Excerpt: When You're Shoved from the Right, Look to Your Left (O. Imady) - For a Few Silver Coins

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  Excerpt from When You're Shoved from the Right Look to Your Left: Metaphors of Islamic Humanism (Omar Imady) FOR A FEW SILVER COINS Once a man heard about a place where people worshipped a tree. “These people are under a delusion. They have  replaced the glory of the transcendent God, the secret of all that is alive, with a mere tree? I must save them from this path. I must cut down this tree.” And so, the man climbed on his horse and headed toward the tree. When he got there, he picked up his ax and began to strike at it. People ran to him, yelling, “Stop! This is our most sacred tree.” But everyone who tried to push him away from the tree failed. He was simply too strong and too determined. When everyone was about to give up, an old man approached him and said, “Listen, my friend. The truth is that you have severely surprised these people. They are all very devoted to this tree, and they will be very hurt if they see it cut down today. However, if you were to wait just un...