[Daily OM]: There are many variations on the
story of stone soup, but they all involve a traveler coming into a town
beset by famine. The inhabitants try to discourage the traveler from
staying, fearing he wants them to give him food. They tell him in no
uncertain terms that there's no food anywhere to be found. The traveler
explains that he doesn't need any food and that, in fact, he was
planning to make a soup to share with all of them. The villagers watch
suspiciously as he builds a fire and fills a cauldron with water. With
great ceremony, he pulls a stone from a bag, dropping the stone into the
pot of water. He sniffs the brew extravagantly and exclaims how
delicious stone soup is. As the villagers begin to show interest, he
mentions how good the soup would be with just a little cabbage in it. A
villager brings out a cabbage to share. This episode repeats itself
until the soup has cabbage, carrots, onions, and beets -- indeed, a
substantial soup that feeds everyone in the village.
This story addresses the human tendency to hoard in times of
deprivation. When resources are scarce, we pull back and put all of our
energy into self-preservation. We isolate ourselves and shut out others.
As the story of stone soup reveals, in doing so, we often deprive
ourselves and everyone else of a feast. This metaphor plays out beyond
the realm of food. We hoard ideas, love, and energy, thinking we will be
richer if we keep them to ourselves, when in truth we make the world,
and ourselves, poorer whenever we greedily stockpile our reserves. The
traveler was able to see that the villagers were holding back, and he
had the genius to draw them out and inspire them to give, thus creating a
spread that none of them could have created alone.
Are you like one of the villagers, holding back? If you come forward and
share your gifts, you will inspire others to do the same. The reward is
a banquet that can nourish many.