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Do You Live in a Fish Bowl?

Several months ago, at a children's rally, my ten year old son was the lucky winner of a raffle. His prize? A plump goldfish. It came in a plastic bag filled with water.

My son was ecstatic with his prize. I, on the other hand, was anxious. While I feigned excitement, inwardly I dreaded what I was sure was to come. Previous experience made me wonder how long we had before it died on us.

And so, we immediately drove to the closest fish store to purchase special food and a perfectly sized glass bowl that was to become our goldfish's new home. Despite all our efforts, though, by the next morning our prized goldfish was dead.

But my son's enthusiasm for a pet fish had been whetted. He begged us for another fish, a stronger one that he could care for long term. That is how Simcha, our blue Betta fish, reluctantly came into our home.

My son's hobby grew into somewhat of a passion, as he studied more and more about the different species of fish and the environments best suited for each to thrive. He learned of community fish tanks for the "friendly fish" as well as "aggressive fish" that needed their own space; he studied about fresh water tanks as opposed to tropical fish that needed salt water environments. He could enthusiastically recite which species were "top" swimmers, and which preferred to swim/crawl along the ocean's depths.

Little by little, my son's ambitions (and persuasive power) grew, as did his thorough knowledge of handling fish and their unique needs. After dutifully caring for Simcha for several months, he begged us to buy a real fish tank, fully equipped with its own heater, filter, gravel bottom, fish toys, etc., as well, of course, as a whole assortment of brightly colored fish.

So after several more trips to the fish store, we now have two fully equipped fish tanks, a smaller one for our aggressive, loner fish, Simcha, and one with a whole array of exotic sounding, friendly species like Clown Loaches, Neon Guppies, Panda Platies, Zebra Danios and more.

Even I have to admit that I've become enamored by this colorful new piece of decor. Daily as I pass our fish, I find myself hypnotically observing their graceful swim. And as I gaze at them, I wonder about their perceptions of their home:

Do our fish realize that this twenty gallon tank is just a tiny miniature replica of their authentic home, in some faraway lake or sea?

Do they understand that the pretty blue background gracing the back of their tank is just a cheap, printed backdrop?

Do they enjoy the food that we drop in twice daily—even though it is a freeze dried, preserved formula meant to mimic the native food that fish hunt?

Are the heater that keeps their waters warm and the filter that cleans it, properly simulating the environments of their real homes, hundreds of miles from here?

Do they discern that the plants that they play with are artificial—plastic replicas of lush, living greenery?

Of course they can't know any of this. They can't possibly understand how artificial their environment is, or how far from their real source they have come. This is what they've been born into and what they will bring their offspring into. To them this is home. This is comfortable. They simply cannot fathom a different, more authentic existence.


And then I thought about us.

Despite our material comforts, despite being born into our exiled circumstances, do we realize how foreign our environment is? That soon will come a time when we will be submerged in life giving waters, with a genuine perception of our divine source and purpose?


Life in our fish tanks might be a more or less comfortable simulation. But it's nothing like the real thing.


Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Mar 25, 2009
What?
who needs fish!?
i got simsfish, which is keeping a vertual fish on the computer. much better.
Posted By you, really, stink

Posted: Mar 18, 2009
That was really well written. It is beautiful to see how you take a simple occurence in your son's life to a whole new level and take a lesson for life from it. If only we were all like that. May we all continue to appreciate the little things in life.
Posted By chaya, melbourne, australia

Posted: Mar 17, 2009
Truly Aware
Thank you, your awareness and teaching is directed at your childrens' need to develop compassion, and it is a wonderful thing to read a kindred spirits' ideas.
I don't know how old your little one is, but watching fish can lead to a lifetime of scientific endeavour. I would, though, ask of my son to consider the misery of the trapped fish;that is, every thee months I would ask him to purchase a new fish and to set the older ones free in the sea, or in a caring marina.
I had one of those hideous decos given to me;a blue Siamese trapped in a vase with weed. It began to make loud calls, while pitching its gravel in an attempt to find a tunnel out. i gave it to a neighbour whose relative had greater capacity for fish. To me Judaism is primarily about preventing and decrying the abhorrence of slavery.
Posted By sue, Kanata, OM


 



By Chana Weisberg   More by this authors...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
Chana Weisberg is a writer, editor and lecturer. She authored several books, including her latest, Tending the Garden: The Unique Gifts of the Jewish Woman. She has served as the dean of several women’s educational institutes, and lectures internationally on issues relating to women, faith, relationships and the Jewish soul.

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