There once was a who went to India. He had never been there before. When he got there, he saw a lot of f小题1:. In India they have plenty of fruit to sell, but much of it is expensive b小题2:they can’t grow much as a result of the water situation. He saw a big basket of some very red, long fruit. And it was the c小题3:in the shop, not expensive at all.
He went up and asked,“how much per kilo?”“Two rupees.”Two rupees in India is almost
n小题4:; it’s like dirt (尘土). So he bought a whole kilogram of it and started eating it. But
a小题5:he ate some of it: Oh, my god! His eyes watered, his mouth watered and burned, his eyes were burning, his head was burning and his face became red. He jumped up and down, saying,“Ah! Ah! Ah!”
But he s小题6:continued to eat! Some people looking at him shook their heads and said,“You’re crazy. Those are chilies (辣椒)! You can’t eat them like that. They’re not fruit!” However, the said, “No, I can’t stop! I paid money for them, and now I’ll eat them. It’s my money!”
You may think that was s小题7:, right? Similarly, we sometimes do a lot of things
l小题8:that. We devote money, time or effort to a relationship. Even though the suffering experience tells us it won’t w小题9:, and we know there’s no hope things will change in the future—we still continue just because we’ve devoted money, time, effort and love to it. Just like the man who ate the chilies and suffered so much but couldn’t stop.
So even if you’ve lost something, let it g小题10:and move on. That’s better than continuing to lose.