Listening to the naturalist and Broadcaster Sir David Attenborough’s calm and reassuring voice narrates a wildlife documentary. You can’t help but feel connected to the animals as they strive to survive and raise their young.
The creatures’ drama brings out their personalities, and they become human. Since religion has used the behaviour of the world’s creatures as a blueprint for humanity, we shall analyse their behaviour.
Let’s dramatise a few creatures in fables compared to the transformative Perfect Prince and his emotionless attitude towards women.
Try to imagine him as Papa Bear meeting Mama Bear. They greet each other with a mating ritual, and then he copulates with the female bear.
You would think he would stay to raise his offspring. Oh no, Papa Bear does not care or think of others; he’s greedy, violent and too selfish to have an ounce of parental love. Not all relationships end happily ever after once the deed is done; who is left with the burden of raising a handsome son and a devoted daughter?
When that is said and done, some Perfect Princes proclaim their love, and regardless of the problems, like an ugly male toad, he clings on for dear life when he’s unwanted. Due to economic stress, there’s no rest.
Staying together due to financial reasons, virtues, or a dominant partner means the children recycle what they learn. Being together isn’t always the best environment for raising a child.
Dysfunctional family units teach the child that this is how to keep an incompatible relationship together when Ruth the Truth knows that not all marriages can defeat the laws of probability.
Due to economic stress, there’s no rest. Ruth the Truth thought they were blessed.
Then, the curse was worse; first was his Cheeky Cockney verse. His lyrics weren’t the worst, or did he rehearse his words?
Of course, first, he had a few before meeting her, but he wasn’t the worst. He promised a love she would miss if she didn’t kiss him quick, and he persisted.
He insisted. So, they kissed on the lips, and at first, Ruth the Truth resisted, but the Cheeky Cockney’s lips were irresistible, like tasting Blue Stilton Cheese, and yes, she was pleased. Then, there was a bulge for months on end. Now, they’re not friends. Why did it end?
Due to economic stress, there’s no rest. She thought they were blessed, but now Ruth the Truth is depressed. It was her first.
When she was pregnant, she pushed out the birth of his son; the future runs in his blood, and then the afterbirth fell on the Earth. Following the placenta before walking on the Earth, is it the future’s course to be beneath the Earth?
Or do our dreams and destiny lift us to sail between the flickering stars at night?
The power of love is a spirit with an overwhelming energy and a compelling force you cannot resist or capture. It drifts here to rest there.
It is everywhere and nowhere, but its presence can be felt like the sun’s warmth and glows like a firefly at night. If love can be described as an asteroid, two collide to join as one, and it gets bigger when smaller ones come together.
Love’s radiance unites two and then grows to form a community that extends and creates a better world.
- Mathematical probability:
The random collision with love in the chaotic world of mathematics produces a formula called probability. It creates all types of scenarios and throws out many mathematical variables, such as winning a race, losing a job, or having a successful relationship.
Personal experience isn’t the only way to learn, understand, gain knowledge and become wise. In Perfect Prince, search for love, fun and laughter like a thief in the night.
He embarks on a journey across the Atlantic Ocean and learns a valuable lesson, guided by the world’s creatures.
A Dog’s Life
Growing up in the 1970s, Perfect Prince never had a pet. Back then, there wasn’t much value in the price of a dog, and he would see them roam the streets in packs without their owner. Perfect Prince noticed the dogs fighting, but he didn’t understand the reasons why!..
Today, dogs are very domesticated in the U.K.; their owners take great care of them because they’re expensive to purchase. Therefore, he doesn’t see them in packs today. Owners walk with their dogs with great pride.
In his early years, he knew his grandparents until they left England when he was nineteen. In May 2000, at the age of 34, Perfect Prince went to visit them in Jamaica. He was surprised to see his grandparents with a small selection of farm animals, including a few chickens and a dog chained to a post.
On a hot Caribbean day, Perfect Prince watched a flock of beautiful red, yellow and blue feathered scarlet macaws flying low in the clear blue sky as the mango trees swayed in the gentle breeze. He was sitting on the porch with the late Mr Kenneth Prince, his grandad, who told Perfect Prince a story about his dog. His grandad said, ‘I had two dogs before this day. A dog and that bitch you see tied to the post; I don’t like that bitch.’
Curiosity made Perfect Prince ask, ‘Where is the other dog, Dad?’
His grandad looked Perfect Prince in the eye with the saddest expression and replied, ‘When I got both dogs, I chained them to the post, and every night, the dog had his way with the bitch and then howled at the moon. One hot day, a pack of dogs came to my house barking viciously at my dogs and attacked my dog, killing him in the process, and then the bitch offered herself to the pack. What are your thoughts on that, Perfect Prince?’
Perfect Prince was speechless and had no answer to his grandad’s question. At 58 years old, Perfect Prince believes the pack of dogs acted according to the laws of nature; that is, no one owes the love of another; it is a free-moving spirit, and is it worth dying for, for nights of pleasure that may not last a lifetime.
One reason Perfect Prince enjoyed watching wildlife documentaries is that when he was a young boy, he’d sit with his grandparents and watch television together.
He begins to understand his behaviour while watching a wildlife documentary about primates.
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