Bee: (n) an insect of a large group to which the honeybee belongs
There certainly seem to be a lot of design flaws in Mother Nature.
I am not offering this as a criticism, nor do I think I could have done a better job stomping around the Universe.
It’s just that in the mortal brain, we have a tendency to seek sense where Nature only offers tension. The whole process is held together with tiny fibers, little branches, and maybe chewing gum and lint.
How it actually works is beyond our comprehension.
For instance, I would love to be friends with the bee.
I’ve heard of the good work they do.
- I realize that they pollinate plants and flowers which keep us alive and allow us to eat, escaping starvation.
- I am very favorable to honey, the by-product of their process.
- They are colorful.
But then, they have this thing called a “stinger.” And because I do not want to be stung, I am tempted to kill them, and therefore be party to terminating their noble work, and in a sense, setting in motion my own suicide.
It’s really crappy.
Why couldn’t the bee sing like the bird, so we would be able to admire both mission and personal traits?
But mingled in there is the need for the bee to defend itself against those who would try to quell its progress. So the bee threatens with a sting.
It is bizarre.
It is beyond my grasp.
Yet it works.
And when the bees started to die off a few years ago, we very complex human beings were sent into a dither over the prospect of losing the little fellas.
For after all, we need them.
So we must remember, there are many things in life that benefit us … which are also allowed to sting us if we misuse them.
Thank you for enjoying Words from Dic(tionary) — J.R. Practix
