Juan Tamad is Not Lazy At All!
Hey steemians! How are you all today? Cheerful first day of month. With that, I couldn't imagine anything better than to tell that that Juan Tamad isn't actually tamad. I bet you previously heard his story from your Nanays, Tatays, Uncles or potentially from Aunties.
Juan Tamad isn't really lazy using any and all means. Possibly he just stops and rests for quite a while in the wake of a troublesome day of exertion under the tiring warmth of the sun. Maybe the guava tree is the nearest to him and finds its shade a wonderful spot to loosen up. He feels tired and to rest is definitely not an essential yet something trademark to do. He understands when to stop after a ton of work. Perhaps this is the value Filipinos have neglected to recollect all along, when in furious endeavors in our consistently occupations and timetables, our bodies and minds get depleted now we don't contribute energy to rest. Juan, something past a lazy picture, can be an image of , peacefulness or a rest for the soul.
Or of course maybe Juan has commendably and serenely sorted out some way to stop. Exceptionally still or not, he understands that the guava, like every single other natural item, falls ordinarily. It goes to a second that the natural item's stem disengages from the piece of the tree, and gravity is in actuality a force that makes the natural item fall. A buddy demonstrated another idea that also entered my musings: that Juan is adequately savvy to see the course of nature, like what Isaac Newton did that made him discover the law of gravity. Juan may not be a physicist, yet he gets life and nature. To sit or rests, to see and to remain by all seem lack of care to us, yet Juan reminds us regardless – there is plenitude of knowledge figured out at such time.
In the surface he appears to be lazy, yet we can't see what is under where his shrewdness and getting lies. In where there is customary abundance, Juan, who much of the time typifies a Filipino expert in the open nation, works his way in the field, and trusts that the Earth he has furrowed is adequately rich to bring unlimited blessings, without convincing it to make or to foster anything he needs. He ought to just to stop, be patient, and intensely notice. Like the as often as possible refered to Zen saying, "Spring comes and the grass creates without any other person", Juan knows this reality – he does in conclusion sits inactive. He returns to his quiet being, sitting under the guava tree and likes the second in quietness and concurrence with all there is.
Agree or disagree? If it's not too much trouble, leave your remark underneath.
Special thanks to:
@loloy2020 @julstamban @steemitphcurator - More power to you all!
Wow.. Hahaha.. You got me this.. Hahaha