The Tortoise and the Hare
We all know the story of the Tortoise and the Hare, but usually we
are told that the moral is that "slow and steady wins the race." This
moral is simply wrong. It's the wrong lesson to derive from the story,
and is a foolish lesson at that. Rarely does going slow win any races.
Going slowly is a good way to be careful, but that's not what races are
about. In fact, the real lesson is not about the tortoise at all, it's
about the hare.
The hare believes that he's faster than the tortoise, and he's
right. In a flat out run, the hare will beat the tortoise every time.
But the hare makes a huge mistake, believing in his ability but then
not actually proving it. In life you may have great skill, one which
everyone acknowledges, but you must still use that skill in competition
to actually win competition. Overconfidence that leads to a
lackadaisical attitude will often be punished by embarrassing failure.
While it is true that somebody with few skills but who works his
ass off will sometimes beat out somebody lazy with lots of skills, the
real lesson here is that you must use your abilities when they are
called upon. When I was in elementary school, everyone acknowledged
that I was a smart kid, maybe the smartest in the class, but I didn't
do much school work and I did not get good grades as a result. Like the
hare, I acted as if my intelligence meant that I did not need to do the
school work or to study much for tests. Maybe I could have drawn some
wisdom from this story if the proper moral was given.
In major league baseball, the really good teams win about half the
games they play against the other really good teams, and they crush the
bad teams. Those winning teams do not slack off when they are playing
against the worst team in the league, because even the worst team can
beat them, and they need every single win they can get.
The suggested moral, that "slow and steady wins the race" also
hides an important fact: the tortoise took up a challenge that he could
not possibly win. If the hare had been intelligent and run quickly to
the end, the tortoise would look quite foolish, and this type of
foolishness is scorned in many of Aesop's other fables. After the hare
has crossed the finish line, hours before the tortoise has arrived,
then the hare can sit down and take a nap. He will have shown his
superior speed by having demonstrated it in the race, and then he can
brag about it after the race, not during. If we learn anything from the
tortoise, it is that when you are faced with an opponent who will
certainly defeat you, the only hope you have is that he defeats
himself.
The correct moral: success depends on using your talents, not just having them.