COMMENTARY: Lessons from Life’s Parable

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Dr. Isaac Newton

By Dr. Isaac Newton

Let me offer this as a parable.

There was once a builder who labored quietly at the edge of a great project. Many times the structure leaned toward collapse, and each time the builder braced it, steadying the walls so others could keep working. His hands bore the marks of rescue, though his name was seldom spoken.

When the day came for the final council, when the doors were polished, the banners raised, and the moment of unveiling drew near, the builder was not invited inside. The work he had saved stood tall, but he stood outside its gates.

Those within the hall said little of him. Some assumed he would understand. Others believed the foundation could now hold without the hands that once saved it. A few thought omission cost nothing.

But foundations remember.

In time, the walls began to whisper. Trust thinned. Gratitude dried up. The same hands that had once strengthened the structure were no longer there when the strain returned. And those who had sown exclusion were puzzled when goodwill refused to grow.

For there is a quiet law written into the grain of human life:
What is built by many hands must be honored by many hearts.
No harvest of trust comes from seeds of disregard.
And no leadership flourishes by forgetting those who kept it from falling.

My mother used to say, one hand washes the other, and both hands wash the face. The builders who remember this find their work enduring. Those who do not often admire their towers, right until the cracks begin to speak.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Dr. Isaac Newton is an international strategist trained at Harvard, Princeton, and Columbia. He advises governments and global institutions on governance and development, helping leaders turn ideas into practical and lasting results.

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1 COMMENT

  1. I love this love. The helper helps from the goodness of his/her heart and not using the help to get inside and abuse the opportunity to self enrichment and power. Your parable applies to honorable helpers. Not all who helped.

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