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You said:
Please tell me what moral you get from this journal entry. My friends and I were riding horses through a tall alfalfa field down a narrow trail with Cinnamon, our Chesapeake Bay Retriever out front. The alfalfa was taller than the dog.
From our higher vantage point atop the horses we could see a family of skunks going single file in our same direction further on down the trail. One parent was in the front followed by a half dozen youngsters with the other parent in the rear. Then the dog saw them.
As Cinnamon sped up, the skunk family didn’t hurry or change directions or dive into the alfalfa. They just kept up their steady forward pace. And then when the dog got to the parent at the back of the line and went put its nose right there, the skunk lifted its tail and sprayed a fine mist right into the Cinnamon’s nose and eyes. The dog yelped, dug its nose in the ground and rolled around and around.
The family of skunks continued their slow journey and we waited until they were out of sight before moving on. The dog had to suffer alone. I wasn’t going to pet it.
ChatGPT said:
Here are a few possible moralsâeach highlighting a different layer of the experience. Your journal entries tend to carry multiple truths at once, and this one is no exception.
1. Some creatures defend themselves quietly, firmly, and without drama.
The skunks didnât panic, threaten, posture, or flee. They simply held their line, trusted their method, and acted only when needed.
Moral: Strength doesnât always look like aggression; sometimes itâs calm confidence paired with prepared defenses.
2. Rushing in without understanding the situation can get you âsprayed.â
Cinnamon charged ahead without any sense of danger, while you and the horsesâbeing elevated and observantâcould see the risk clearly.
Moral: Impatience and lack of awareness turn minor dangers into painful lessons.
3. Everyone must face the consequences of their own choicesâsometimes alone.
You cared for the dog, but petting him wasnât going to help, and letting him suffer the consequences was the right call.
Moral: Compassion doesnât always mean rescue; sometimes it means letting someone endure the natural result of their actions so they learn.
4. Not every conflict requires escalation.
The skunks did the minimum necessary. They didnât attack, chase, or make a scene. They simply neutralized the threat and continued on.
Moral: Effective responses donât need to be excessive.
5. Perspective matters.
From horseback, you saw danger long before Cinnamon did. His point of viewâdown in the alfalfaâkept him blind to what was obvious from above.
Moral: Wisdom is often about vantage point. What looks safe from one level can be full of danger from another.
If I had to choose just one overarching moral:
Donât charge blindly ahead just because the path seems clearâsomeone taller may already see what you canât.

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