The first and most
obvious life lesson here is as follows: inspect your candy before
consumption. I mean, you do this for
your kids after Halloween, right? You
always check it for razor blades and such when you children are involved. Have the same diligence in your own life. It’s called a “Dum Dum” after all; make sure
you are smarter than your candy. Now I’ve
never met this person, and I assume he is a relatively intelligent guy, despite
his lack of foresight toward candy-related injuries, and so I will choose to
believe that this lesson was learned by him almost instantly (or at least after
the bleeding stopped).
Which is why the second
life lesson is a little less obvious: in the same way that our tongues can be
used to hurt others, they can also be hurt by others. Have you ever chosen not to say something you
knew was right because you had been hurt in the past for telling the
truth? Or maybe you’ve spoken life into
someone else time after time only to be repeatedly disappointed. We all know that the words we say can cut
others, but sometimes we are the ones who get cut and so we protect our tongues
by keeping silent. This does not mean
that we just say whatever we think all the time, but it does mean that we
shouldn’t let the fact that we might get hurt keep us from saying the good, encouraging,
life affirming, and sometimes challenging things we know we should say.Thursday, November 14, 2013
This is a "Dum" Post
Earlier this week I
wrote a blog post about cutting my finger while slicing a tomato. While I did not receive any “Get Well Soon”
cards, I did get an interesting request.
One of my readers (thanks mom!) mentioned this post to a friend of hers,
and he sais that he had recently cut his tongue on a Dum Dum sucker. As the conversation continued, they started
to wonder if there could be a lesson learned from this kind of encounter just
like I learned from my cut finger.
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