There
was a farmer who sold a pound of butter to the baker. One day the baker decided
to weight the butter to see if he was getting a pound and he found that he was
not. This angered him and he took the farmer to court.
The
Judge asked the farmer if he was using any measure. The farmer replied, “ Your
honor, I am primitive. I don’t have a proper measure, but I do have a scale.”
The
farmer replied, “ Your homour, long before the baker started buying butter from
me, I have been buying a pound loaf of bread from him. Every day when the baker
brings the bread, I put it on the scale and give him the same weight in butter.
If anyone is to be blamed, it is the baker.”
What
is the moral of the story? We get back in life what we give to others. Whenever
you take an action, ask yourself this question: Am I giving fair value for the
wages or money I hope to make? Honesty and dishonesty become a habit. Some
people practice dishonesty and can lie with a straight face. Others lie so much
that they don’t even know what the truth is anymore. But who are they
deceiving?
Themselves.
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