I'm covering altruism tonight in social psych., and came across an old story
I used to tell to discuss some considerations about whether or not to help
when they've determined a "victim" is in need.  I thought maybe other
TIPSters might find it  It's a story Gloria Steinem told.

Beth Benoit
University System of New Hampshire

~ Always Ask the Turtle ~

Gloria Steinem, the writer and leader in the feminist movement, once learned
an important political lesson as a student on a geology field trip.

"I took geology because I thought it was the least scientific of the
sciences," she told an audience at Smith College.

"On a field trip, while everyone else was off looking at the meandering
Connecticut River, I was paying no attention whatsoever. Instead, I had a
found a giant, GIANT turtle that had climbed out of the river, crawled up a
dirt road, and was in the mud on the embankment of another road, seemingly
about to crawl up on it and get squashed by a car.

"So, being a good codependent with the world, I tugged and pushed and pulled
until I managed to carry this huge, heavy, angry snapping turtle off the
embankment and down the road.

"I was just putting it back into the river when my geology professor arrived
and said, 'You know, that turtle probably spent a month crawling up that
dirt road to lay its eggs in the mud by the side of the road, and you just
put it back in the river.'

"Well, I felt terrible. But in later years, I realized that this was the
most important political lesson I learned, one that cautioned me about the
authoritarian impulse of both left and right.

"Always ask the turtle."


Gloria Steinem


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