đ The Fish, the Pan, and the Power of Asking âWhyâ
Thereâs a short video thatâs been quietly making wavesânot because of flashy visuals or dramatic music, but because of a deceptively simple question: Why do we do what we do?
In the video, a woman is preparing fish. As sheâs done countless times before, she cuts off both the head and the tail before steaming it. But this time, something nags at her. Why do I cut the head and tail off? She doesnât know. So she asks her mother. Her mother shrugs: âThatâs how my mom did it.â The grandmother says the same. Finally, she calls her great-grandmother, who chuckles and says, âBack then, our pan was too small. We had to cut the fish to make it fit.â
Thatâs it. A practical solution to a physical limitation became a traditionâpassed down unquestioned through generations.
đ Tradition Without Context
This story is more than culinary trivia. Itâs a metaphor for how culture, religion, and politics often operate. Practices are inherited, rituals repeated, ideologies defendedâall without asking why. We follow patterns not because they make sense today, but because they made sense once, somewhere, for someone.
- In culture, we celebrate, mourn, and behave in ways shaped by historyâbut sometimes forget the history itself.
- In religion, rituals and beliefs may be rooted in ancient contexts that no longer apply, yet theyâre preserved as sacred.
- In politics, policies and party lines are often defended out of loyalty or tradition, not relevance or reason.
đ§ The Courage to Question
Asking âwhyâ isnât rebellionâitâs reflection. Itâs the beginning of wisdom. It doesnât mean rejecting everything old, but understanding it. It means honoring the past without being bound by it.
The woman in the video didnât stop steaming fish. She just stopped cutting it unnecessarily. Thatâs the kind of change that mattersânot dramatic, but intentional.
đŹ Whatâs Your Fish?
We all have our own âfishââhabits, beliefs, routines we follow without question. Maybe itâs the way we vote, the way we pray, the way we raise our kids, or the way we treat others. Maybe itâs something we do every day that no longer serves us.
So hereâs the challenge:
What are you cutting the head and tail off ofâand why?
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