The Eagle And The Chicken

Image of the Week
Hand-drawn art by Rupali Bhuva
Image of the Week

A fable is told about an eagle that thought he was a chicken. When the eagle was very small, he fell from the safety of his nest. A chicken farmer found the eagle, brought him to the farm, and raised him in a chicken coop among his many chickens. The eagle grew up doing what chickens do, living like a chicken, and believing he was a chicken.

A naturalist came to the chicken farm to see if what he had heard about an eagle acting like a chicken was really true. He knew that an eagle is king of the sky. He was surprised to see the eagle strutting around the chicken coop, pecking at the ground, and acting very much like a chicken. The farmer explained to the naturalist that this bird was no longer an eagle. He was now a chicken because he had been trained to be a chicken and he believed that he was a chicken.

The naturalist knew there was more to this great bird than his actions showed as he “pretended” to be a chicken. He was born an eagle and had the heart of an eagle, and nothing could change that. The man lifted the eagle onto the fence surrounding the chicken coop and said, “Eagle, thou art an eagle. Stretch forth thy wings and fly.” The eagle moved slightly, only to look at the man; then he glanced down at his home among the chickens in the chicken coop where he was comfortable. He jumped off the fence and continued doing what chickens do. The farmer was satisfied. “I told you it was a chicken,” he said.

The naturalist returned the next day and tried again to convince the farmer and the eagle that the eagle was born for something greater. He took the eagle to the top of the farmhouse and spoke to him: “Eagle, thou art an eagle. Thou dost belong to the sky and not to the earth. Stretch forth thy wings and fly.” The large bird looked at the man, then again down into the chicken coop. He jumped from the man’s arm onto the roof of the farmhouse.

Knowing what eagles are really about, the naturalist asked the farmer to let him try one more time. He would return the next day and prove that this bird was an eagle. The farmer, convinced otherwise, said, “It is a chicken.”

The naturalist returned the next morning to the chicken farm and took the eagle and the farmer some distance away to the foot of a high mountain. They could not see the farm nor the chicken coop from this new setting. The man held the eagle on his arm and pointed high into the sky where the bright sun was beckoning above. He spoke: “Eagle, thou art an eagle! Thou dost belong to the sky and not to the earth. Stretch forth thy wings and fly.” This time the eagle stared skyward into the bright sun, straightened his large body, and stretched his massive wings. His wings moved, slowly at first, then surely and powerfully.

With the mighty screech of an eagle, he flew.

Seed Questions for Reflection

How did you relate to the notion of taking away the easy reminders of our past conditioning in order to help us be truer to our authentic selves? Can you share a personal story of a time you took away contextual reminders in order to step into a strength you always had? What helps you realize what's trapping you from spreading your authentic wings?

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27 Past Reflections
SU
susana
Jul 21, 2024
Leelo te amo
AR
Jul 19, 2024
The eagle stretched it's wings and flew because it had inside the NATURE to be an Eagle . It is so important to acknowledge our authentic self (dharma) and have the courage to be that.
If in the process we discover our real, true SELF that would be close to moksha.
JB
Jul 17, 2024
Each one has his own potential and we lose this but looking around and mimicking others. Sometimes out of our own laziness or out of mere fear of standing out different or fear of loss on experimentation. Its insights that help us and so does some outside poke. In absence of an outside poke, the key is to give yourself sufficient time to know yourself and potential and the dare to experiment. Enjoy life, find what you love and do one's best without falling in the trap of comparison.
PA
Jul 10, 2024
Intriguing. As a parent of kids in college, I think of their "going away" to college as a means for our children to get to know their true selves. That is, if the parents have not already conditioned them to think of that education as a means to get a diploma that enables them to start earning the big bucks, but I digress . . . The discovery (if it is to happen) is often about shedding light on the misperceptions that may be occluding their experience of their true self.

I submit that this parable/story is not so much about the eagle getting to know it's true nature. It is more about how the Body+Mind can be convinced of what reality is based on the perceptions that have nothing to do with the reality. The Naturalist helped correct the eagle's misperception of its avatar.
MI
Jul 9, 2024
Thank you. I understand deeply feeling less capable than I actually am. I understand too that sometimes, it takes a stranger to remind you of your beauty. I am also reminded of a woman I met at the Loving Community - Jyoti with a smile that brightened a room. She made 5-6 purses a day that she would sell for less than 1 usd - EVERY evening she will cook dinner for up to 80 elders in the community who have leprosy and can't cook and feed themselves (most have no fingers) - She will cook for them, help to feed them and clean up. She told me how happy she was in her life of service and that (and I am paraphrasing) not every one needs to be or can be an eagle and that is okay. We need everyone.
ST
Jul 9, 2024
Being reminded of what of me is conditioned and what is authentic is a wake up call. I have many strong urges to be and act more than I am or do that I restrain due to what others consider appropriate. What I say and when and how I say it. What I wear. Where I walk and do not walk. Where I swim and do not swim. When I dance or how I dance.
I have been sharing my poetry on controversial topics more and more. Sharing the importance of nature and goddess worship toward reversing the warrior cult we live in.
What stop me is having the energy and composure to deal with reactive ness.
DP
Jul 9, 2024
Reminds me of the “Ugly Duckling”, who was no Duckling at all. Essentially, this takes me back to 2019 and many others years. In 2019, I let go of all my past convictions and conditionings that instilled fear in me….Basically, I followed my heart. ❤️

Not listening to my most inner voice “traps me from spreading my wings”…overcoming fears, uncertainty, the unknown, etc…

I love this post! Must be Kismet! 🙌
JS
Jul 9, 2024
Poor treatment socially versus the concrete evidence of reality where I do something which feels intuitively correct and it works out in a splendid manner and my rivals also had to appreciate or they stopped their harassment and bullying. My victory several times in life showing me to be a Hero being backed by God ... Only I tend to not play fully for myself when God is actually on my side. God needs happiness. If He doesn't find it with you He will experience through other doors. Fault is not God's.... Only ours when we hurt ourselves by holding ourselves back. The abundance of God is for everyone, just we need to know the right way to take it and enjoy it. God simply likes us happy and whole Life and Existence for enjoyment together i.e. God celebrating Existence with us. Us who are visible and God the Invisible Spirit permeating this Creation which is His Life. We make God happy by enjoying the goodness of Life in all possible ways. So, Go and Have Fun and Yes.... W... View full comment
KA
Jul 9, 2024
Nice analogy for the recovery community. Hard to break out of addiction (of any kind) when you're still surrounded by your old, familiar surroundings and friends and habits. For meaningful change to happen, that has to be left behind. To achieve real recovery, you have to change only one thing: EVERYTHING.
NS
Jul 9, 2024
Ahaṁ Brahmāsmi (अहं ब्रह्मास्मि) -
"I am Brahman", or "I am Divine" (Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 1.4.10 of the Yajur Veda)
JC
Jul 9, 2024
Until recently, I was a battery hen. I assumed that nothing I could do would change anything in this world.
Since a visit to Zoho HQ in Chennai India and their farm and school in rural Tenkasi, I think I am now an owl, tooting about regenerative business. You can find my Toots on Medium
GU
Jul 8, 2024
Thanks for choosing this piece for the week. For me, it has come at a time when i am in the midst of having started off on a regular meditation practice and also getting fresh influences from some "Eagles".
My musings are that some rare folks naturally gravitate towards/discover and abide in "eagleness" and the vast majority are firmly ensconced in happy/unhappy "chickenhood". I reckon, i am one of a significant cohort of humanity who see glimpses of a different reality but remain majorly "earthbound".
I am seeing promise in weakening the grip of past conditioning by coming back repeatedly to a state of "awareness of being" rather than, or even while, giving importance to the content of awareness, that is, usual life - guided by the talks and books of "eagles" who inspire me and to whom i can relate to. Devotion/Bhakti/love can be and is an added helpful force. In its steady gentle form, it is the ballast for moment-to-moment daily discipline.
SP
Saroj pathak
Jul 7, 2024
How does one know if she is an Eagle or the chicken? You need Gyan and how does one go about getting that?
Finding a live Guru is not a trivial task so my guess is that we need to cultivate inside and not be afraid to venture into unknown when the door opens. We would never know who we are until we open our wings and take that flight. I would love to know more about how do we make ourselves take that flight and not be afraid to fall. In big gratitude, saroj
DD
David Doane Jul 9, 2024
I believe it's important to be careful, and no matter how careful we are, there is no way to avoid risk; there is no guarantee. Anais Nin said, "And the time came when the risk to remain tight in a bud was more painful that the risk it took to blossom."
SH
Jul 7, 2024
The naturalist was the true guru for the eagle as he could see that the Eagle was a victim of conditioning and simple words or nudge would not work. He pushed the Eagle and almost made her realise her true self. Same way we have been conditioned by the people/society that we are just ordinary chickens and are here to do the mundane tasks .
I guess we do need a guru , or maybe a shove or a jolt, to see and realise our authentic self and also to send us on the journey we are here on this planet for.
B
BarbaraS. Jul 9, 2024
Yes, I love this response and agree!
MA
Jul 5, 2024
I notice how we all long to be our true selves, the Eagles! But we are surrounded by the likes of the farmer who want us to stay where we are and there are parts within us which play the farmer.
Also interestingly there are people like the naturalist and also parts within us that if we heed to will surely help us soar great heights and be our true selves!! Whoa!!! I see how in my life I have held myself back , played the farmer , just to feel that false sense of safety, I am still in that chicken farm!! A lil while more to take to the sky!
DD
David Doane Jul 6, 2024
Reminds me of I think it was Rumi who asked why do we keep ourselves in prison when the door is wide open? Why do we keep ourselves chickens in the chicken farm when the sky is wide open?
MA
Jul 5, 2024
Such a reflection of most of our lives: conditioned to be something that we're not. The pain of letting go of the old identity, to allow room for the new (which is actually the old since it was forged before the beginning of time). :-) Thankfully, we're given a lifetime to realign with our majestic brilliance. Enjoy the journey!
DD
Jul 4, 2024
In my experience, it's not so easy as in the story to take away reminders of past conditioning and become more authentic. The conditioning is well established, internalized and often unconscious, and words usually aren't enough to make a difference -- it takes an experience that is more penetrating than words to be an awakening and freeing experience. Choosing to leave an educational program that I had wanted and been conditioned for was very difficult and positive for me to do, and it awakened me to listening to and trusting myself, my strength and my truth. By paying attention to my feelings I realize that I'm trapped. What helps me realize what is trapping me is honest soul searching or reflection. More often than not it is me that is trapping me and then it is for me to come to terms with myself and stop trapping me.
MA
Madhuri Jul 5, 2024
What you say resonates so much with me!!
JP
Jul 4, 2024
Who am I is a profound question explored by spiritual seekers and mystics. Am I my body, Am I my mind, or I am beyond my body and mind? We usually identify ourselves with body and mind. My true self, my authentic self, my essence is beyond body and mind. Sadly, as we grow up, our personalty is shaped by what the people close to us define our real and authentic selves by our looks, by our worldly possesions, our professions, prestige and power. Sadly we lose our authentic self, our true identity. The story of the eagle and the chicken narrated by Jamie Glenn is quite revealing: How the mighty and free eagle turns into a chicken, the eagle looking like a chicken and quacking like a chicken and becoming a chicken. Sadly a majority of people in different socities and cultures tend to define their members by the external apperances, ranks, money and power. No wonder, why such socities and cultures create materialistic, power and prestige hungry leaders. I was blessed to have parent... View full comment
VC
Jul 4, 2024
This story reminds me of the story of the Ugly Duckling. An eagle raised as a chicken and a swan raised as a duck. Both from an early age only knowing one way to be....like a chicken or a duck...and having no clue or awareness that they are at their core, something different, a swan and an eagle. And only becoming aware once they are separated from what they know and are encouraged to see in a new way. They both face a double abandonment....first from their true nest and then again from the false nest in order to return to the true Self. And with both the ugly duckling/swan and the eagle, they were unable to come into the awareness alone, but needed space from their 'regular world' along with the wisdom and guidance from others. I sense this story is a common one for our humanity. I can sure relate to losing one's self for various reasons, so totally that the false identity is fully embraced....and even fought for. And yet I can also relate to the insistent, not to be denied, inn... View full comment
PA
Jul 4, 2024
Know thy true self and be free…

}:- a.m.