TheBanyanTree: The Toad and the Princess

Sally Larwood larwos at me.com
Sun Nov 2 12:26:27 PST 2014


Thank you Monique. I've missed your unique view of life and the lovely quirky way you express it. Your writing is always just right. 

Sal
Sent from my mini iPad

> On 2 Nov 2014, at 5:37 am, Monique Colver <monique.colver at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> When she was little she had been a toad, squat and with bulbous eyes, and
> even though she was in a family of toads, she was the ugliest of them.
> 
> Not that toads are ugly, as toads, but they're not known for their stunning
> good looks.
> 
> She wished to be a princess, pretty and sleek, but knew wishing wouldn't
> make it so. She didn't know what would, but she hated being a toad. The
> other kids laughed at her, for even though some of them were also toads
> they didn't seem to care, they carried their toadness around like a bright
> shiny shield, and so she wished she could be like that. It wasn't as good
> as being a princess, but if she could just be a toad who didn't care about
> being a toad, it would be an improvement.
> 
> But she did care. She tried not to, because it seemed that if she cared
> less she could be happy being a toad.
> 
> That didn't work either. She still saw a toad when she looked in the
> mirror, and she still cared.
> 
> She wished to be a princess because she thought that would make the pain go
> away, not knowing that being a princess carries its own burden. It's not
> easy being a princess either.
> 
> And one day she met a princess, a beautiful non-toad, and she said, "I wish
> were a princess too."
> 
> The princess had been having a particularly bad day that day, what with all
> the demands expected of her just for being a princess, and she said, "Why
> would you want that? You can do anything you want, and I can't."
> 
> The toad said, "Would you like to be a toad then?"
> 
> "Well, no," the princess replied, I wouldn't like that very much at all I
> think."
> 
> The toad considered this carefully, and thought that at least the princess
> was honest.
> 
> "But I don't want to be a toad, I'm tired of people looking at me like they
> do, and I'm tired of not being smart, or witty, or funny."
> 
> The princess regarded the toad with a bit of skepticism and a lot of
> frustration. "But you're not a toad. You're just you."
> 
> "I'm not a toad? Everyone said I was a toad."
> 
> "Pshaw," the princess said, "Do you always believe everything everyone
> says?"
> 
> "Well, no," the toad responded, wondering where this was going.
> 
> "Because if you do, then I say you're not a toad, so it must be true, and
> if you don't, then what anyone else says doesn't matter unless you believe
> it yourself."
> 
> The toad thought about this. "I shall have to think about this some more,"
> the toad said, for she was not quick to make up her mind about anything.
> 
> "You do that," the princess said, "and while you're thinking about it,
> let's go get a pedicure."


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