The crow had always envied the cuckoo’s song. It would sit for hours in the shadow of the banyan tree, listening to the melodic tunes that seemed to come from some celestial world. The crow had tried, many times, to imitate the cuckoo, but the effort only brought ridicule from the other birds. “Stick to your cawing,” they jeered. “You’ll never be a cuckoo.” It wasn’t that the crow didn’t have its own place in the world; it was just that it couldn’t see the value in being itself.
One day, a peacock wandered into the same grove. Its feathers glistened like emerald and sapphire under the morning sun, yet its head hung low. “Why do you look so sad?” asked the crow. The peacock sighed, explaining how humans treated it with disdain. “They say I’m all show and no substance. My beauty invites mockery, and my dance, which comes from the depths of my being, is met with stones and jeers.”
The crow was astonished. “But you’re a peacock, the envy of the world! Surely people adore you.”
The peacock shook its head. “They see only what they want to see. To them, I am either a decoration or a joke. I didn’t choose to be this way, yet I am made to feel as if it’s my fault.”
The two birds sat in silence, each lost in its own thoughts. Their conversation was overheard by a passing donkey, who paused to join them. “You think your troubles are bad?” brayed the donkey. “At least people admire you, even if it’s fleeting. Me? I am the butt of every joke, the symbol of foolishness. They mock my strength as if it’s a curse. ‘Stupid donkey,’ they say, never once seeing the burden I carry for their sake.”
A snake slithered out from the nearby underbrush, listening intently before hissing its own grievances. “And what of me? The moment I show myself, I am met with fear and violence. Stones rain down, and I am driven from my home. I am hunted not for what I do, but simply for what I am. My very existence is deemed a threat.”
More animals joined, each sharing its story: lizards lamented their need to crawl while others stood tall, crocodiles grumbled about their inability to savor their meals, and frogs spoke of their plight in a world that drained the wetlands they called home. As each one spoke, a shared theme emerged—a longing for dignity, a plea for understanding, and a desperate desire to belong.
This chorus of grievances echoed far beyond the grove. Like a pandemic of discontent, it spread to humans, touching every corner of their lives. People, too, carried their burdens of dissatisfaction with life in general. The blind wondered why they couldn’t see, the lame why they couldn’t run. Some cursed their short stature, others their frailty. The poor lamented their poverty, while the rich felt trapped by the weight of their wealth. It seemed that no one, neither beast nor man, was free from the chains of discontent.
But as the animals and humans alike bemoaned their fate, a traveler entered the grove. He was a simple man, draped in a modest cloak, yet his presence radiated calm. He listened quietly to their grievances before speaking.
“Do you not see,” he began, “that each of you has been created with a purpose? The crow may not sing like the cuckoo, but it is clever and resourceful, a vital part of its world. The peacock may not be revered, but its beauty reminds us of the wonders of creation. The donkey bears heavy loads not because it is cursed, but because its strength is a gift. And the snake, feared though it may be, keeps the balance of life by curbing the spread of disease.”
He turned to the humans and continued, “And you, who lament your station—do you not know that no soul is burdened beyond its capacity? Your trials are not punishments, but opportunities to grow. The Qur’an says, ‘Allah does not burden a soul more than it can bear.’ Have you ever stopped to wonder why?”
The crowd fell silent. The man’s words lingered, spreading through the gathering like the gentle bloom of light at dawn after a long, restless night.
“Each of you,” he said, “was created intentionally, with love and wisdom. You are not accidents of nature, but deliberate, purposeful beings. The Qur’an reminds us that ‘We have created everything in proportion and measure.’ Your diversity is not a flaw but a design. If all crows became cuckoos and all donkeys peacocks, the world would collapse under its own weight. It is your differences that give life its richness.”
A woman in the crowd raised her hand hesitantly. Her voice trembled, but there was a quiet determination in her question. “What if we can’t see our own worth? What if all we feel is this aching need to be something we’re not, to measure up to what others seem to be?”
The man paused, letting her words settle. He looked at her with a gaze full of understanding, as though he could feel the weight of her question. “There was a man,” he began, “who met the Prophet Muhammad ﷺ. The man was wealthy, blessed with much, but he wore clothes so worn and ragged that they spoke of neither his blessings nor his gratitude. The Prophet ﷺ asked him, ‘Do you not have wealth?’ ‘Yes, O Messenger of Allah,’ the man replied, ‘I have been given plenty.’ The Prophet ﷺ said, ‘Then let the blessings of Allah be seen upon you.’”
The crowd stirred, as if the words carried a gentle wind among them. The man continued, his voice calm yet firm. “This is not about pride or arrogance. It is about acknowledging the gifts you’ve been given, living in a way that honors them. It’s not what others think of you—it’s about being true to the role Allah has written for you. That is where gratitude begins.”
Another voice from the crowd spoke up. “But what if we want to give all that we have, to sacrifice for others? Isn’t that a higher virtue?”
The man nodded, a soft smile playing at the corners of his lips. “Sacrifice is noble, but it must be tempered with wisdom. Once, a wealthy companion, Sa’d ibn Abi Waqqas, asked the Prophet ﷺ if he could donate all of his wealth in charity. The Prophet ﷺ gently refused. Sa’d offered half, but again the Prophet ﷺ said no. Finally, Sa’d suggested giving away a third of his wealth, and the Prophet ﷺ agreed, saying, ‘A third, and even a third is too much. It is better to leave your heirs well-off than to leave them dependent, asking others for help.’”
The man looked around, meeting each pair of eyes in turn. “What does this teach us? That even in giving, there is a balance. To live in harmony with your purpose is to give from what you can, without neglecting your own needs or the needs of those who depend on you. That balance is not a restriction but a mercy.”
For a moment, the grove fell silent, save for the rustle of leaves in the breeze. The woman lowered her hand, her face softening as if some heavy burden had been lifted. Others in the crowd began to nod, a quiet ripple of understanding spreading among them.
The man’s voice softened, like the last note of a song. “Allah does not burden a soul beyond its capacity. And each of you—each of us—is created with care, with love, and with a purpose. You don’t need to become something you’re not. You only need to uncover the beauty and strength that already reside within you, the gifts Allah has entrusted to you.”
The grove seemed to exhale. The animals stopped their bickering, the humans their lamenting. For the first time, they began to see themselves not as broken or inadequate, but as pieces of a larger, harmonious whole.
As the traveler left the grove, his final words lingered: “Embrace who you are, not in comparison to others, but in fulfillment of your own purpose. For Allah has created you exactly as you are meant to be.”







