Learning Lessons From Aesop's Fables

Published: April 22, 2020, 7 p.m.

b'As regular listeners know, GamerDude has always enjoyed stories, whether reading them or having them read to him.\\xa0 Some\\xa0of the earliest stories that he remembers from his childhood were Aesop\'s fables.\\xa0 Aesop was an ancient Greek storyteller who was probably one of the earliest "people-watchers."\\xa0 He watched people, saw how they acted, and crafted stories about people and their behavior from his observations.\\xa0 He would use animals in his stories to portray the characteristics he observed, and each of his stories - some of them quite short - would convey a moral, or lesson, that could be learned from the behaviors.\\n\\nThese fables were a big part of GamerDude\'s childhood.\\xa0 He remembers his mother reading them to him, and he remembers reading them himself, and the lessons he learned from those stories helped shape the kind of person he is.\\n\\nGamerDude shares some of the fables he remembers.\\xa0 He tells the tales of The Fox and The Grapes, and The Oak and The Reeds, and The Sparrow and The Crow, and The Ass In The Lion\'s Skin, among others. He also shares his favorite: The Boy Who Cried Wolf, and explains how these stories influence his decisions in life, and his personality.'