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You've been given some great advice to think about something that involves you and what you learned from it. Also, great advice to write about something you know personally ~ it always makes for a better paper.

I'm going to take it one step more: think about the naughtiest thing you did as a child such as hurting someone's feelings, getting into a fight with a friend over something trivial and losing the friendship, harming a sibling and how you felt afterward, lying to your parents or someone in authority and getting caught and the embarrassment and humility you felt afterward.

Usually the greatest lessons in morals we learn are the ones we have created for ourselves, as others have said. So, concentrate and think about the worst thing you've ever done and what was the moral lesson in it. Was it "do unto others as you would have others do unto you?" ... "losers never win and winners never lose?" .... "friendship is built on love and trust and not on 'things'?" ...

Here's a good one: have you, or someone you know, ever been ugly or done something ugly to someone else and then, even though that someone else was hurt and crying, they forgave you or the other person? How did it make you, or the other person who did the wrong, feel? Was the wrongdoer humiliated, sad, felt like dirt? What was the moral, or lesson, learned from that?

2007-02-04 01:36:58 · answer #1 · answered by just common sense 5 · 0 1

The one about always telling the truth unless the truth is going to hurt someone, either physically or mentally. This is the little (or big) white lie moral. You can write a great essay on this subject.

2007-02-04 01:11:07 · answer #2 · answered by PATRICIA L 3 · 0 0

try to think of something that has happened to you that made a difference in your life, and that you learned from. maybe that will give you more ideas to a moral lesson. what you actually learned from the situation/s could be the moral.

2007-02-04 00:45:54 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

"It is always best to tell the truth" ... this is a moral standpoint which is generally held to be true....

.. but what about the people who sheltered Jews from the Nazis during World War 2? In that case, lying saved the lives of others!

.. so it would seem that it can be both right and wrong to tell the truth!! It all comes down to what is "ethical" in a given situation.

Hope this gives you something to think about!

2007-02-05 07:01:41 · answer #4 · answered by tattooed.dragon 3 · 0 0

Aesop's Fables: The Lion and the Mouse The Lion and the Mouse is an Aesop's myth. interior the myth, a lion needs to devour a mouse who wakes him up. The mouse begs forgiveness and resources to go back the pick if ever he's given the prospect. He also makes the point that such unworthy prey as he could no longer stain the lion's tremendous paws. The lion is moved to uncontrollable laughter or maybe as he recovers, lets the mouse flow, declaring that he has no longer had the variety of sturdy snicker in a lengthy time period. Later, the lion is captured through hunters and tied to a tree; the lion roars with all his may so as that someone may help him. The mouse hears the lion's pleas and frees him through gnawing via the ropes. the moral of this tale is reported interior the perfect line of the myth: Little acquaintances would instruct tremendous acquaintances. "No act of kindness, no count how small, is ever wasted" ______________________________________... The Wolf in Sheep's clothing in accordance to the myth, a hungry wolf chanced on a sheep's fleece mendacity on the floor in a field. The wolf realized that if it wore the fleece, it may seem as if a sheep from a distance. that could enable the wolf to sneak up on a flock of sheep and thieve a lamb for its supper, in the previous the shepherd pronounced his presence. The wolf positioned on the fleece, and went off in seek for of a flock of sheep. It spied a flock of sheep only because the daylight develop into placing, and approached the flock. only because it develop into about to pounce on a lamb, a shepherd got here through, searching for a sheep to slaughter for supper. questioning the disguised wolf develop right into a sheep, the shepherd instantly grabbed and killed the wolf. an determination version is, yet another wolf is sneaking round searching for a sheep for dinner, and pounces on the wolf in sheep's clothing, killing it and eating it for supper somewhat of a actual sheep. The meant lesson develop into, "Frauds and liars are continually chanced on, ultimately, and pay for his or her moves for this reason." the moral is often also advised as "The evil doer frequently includes damage via his personal deceit". wish this enables you to get an theory.

2016-11-25 00:36:07 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Yes, I should be about a moral lesson you learned in your life. It will make it a lot easier.

2007-02-04 00:45:16 · answer #6 · answered by ? 6 · 0 0

How about the Little boy who cried wolf?

Or any of Aesop's Fables, even Fairy Tales?

Morality lessons are all over the place.

2007-02-04 01:00:59 · answer #7 · answered by Finlay S 3 · 2 0

Maybe think of the worst time you've been through in your life- and then think of the good, if any, that came out of it. Did that experience make you appreciate more what you've got? If so, you can write about how we shouldnt take anything for granted.

2007-02-04 02:05:56 · answer #8 · answered by nate 2 · 0 0

How much money would it take for you to press a button and know that an anonymous person on the other side of the world would die as a direct result of your action?

2007-02-04 02:22:06 · answer #9 · answered by Scouser 1 · 0 0

Use life experience....it's aways easier to draw from that. It doesnt matter if it's a lesson you learned or if it was somone you are close to.

2007-02-04 00:58:01 · answer #10 · answered by ♥Mommy to 3 year old Jacob and baby on the way♥ 7 · 0 0

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