🐖 The Three Little Pigs and the House of Awareness
Three Pigs
Once upon a time, three little pigs left home to build their lives in the world. The wise elder pig gave them one piece of advice:
“Whatever you build on the outside must be supported by what you build on the inside.”
But each pig understood this differently.
🐖 Pig One: The House of Straw
House of Straw Pig One rushed into life with excitement but no awareness. He built his house from straw — fast, easy, and without thinking.
Inside his mind, he also built with straw:
- scattered thoughts
- unexamined habits
- borrowed opinions
- reactive emotions
He believed the outer world was more important than the inner world.
When the Big Bad Wolf — representing life’s pressures, challenges, and karmic consequences — came to test the structure, Pig One panicked.
The wolf huffed. The wolf puffed. The house fell instantly.
Pig One realised too late that speed without awareness collapses under pressure.
🐖 Pig Two: The House of Sticks
House of Sticks Pig Two was a little wiser. He took more time and used sticks — stronger than straw, but still not stable.
Inside his mind, he built with sticks:
- half‑formed intentions
- inconsistent practice
- moments of clarity mixed with confusion
- good ideas without follow‑through
He believed awareness was helpful, but optional.
When the wolf came, Pig Two tried to hold the door shut with his own strength. But the wolf huffed. The wolf puffed. The house shook, cracked, and collapsed.
Pig Two realised that awareness without discipline cannot withstand life’s tests.
🐖 Pig Three: The House of Bricks
House of Bricks Pig Three understood the wise elder pig’s teaching.
He built his house from bricks — slow, deliberate, and with full awareness.
Inside his mind, he also built with bricks:
- clear thinking
- daily integrity
- emotional regulation
- conscious action
- inner nourishment and anti‑BS systems
- alignment of inside → out, up → down
He knew the inner world creates the outer world.
When the wolf arrived, Pig Three did not panic. He stood in awareness, breathing steadily, mind clear.
The wolf huffed. The wolf puffed. The house stood firm.
The wolf tried again. The house remained unmoved.
Pig Three realised that inner integrity creates outer stability.
🐺 The Wolf’s Final Lesson
Wolf Lesson The wolf eventually gave up and walked away.
Not because Pig Three fought him. Not because Pig Three hid from him. But because Pig Three had built a system the wolf could not penetrate.
The wolf represents:
- confusion
- reactivity
- karmic consequences
- subconscious patterns
- life’s challenges
- the pressure of the world
When the inner system is strong, the wolf has no power.
🌿 Teaching Section of the Blog Post
Teaching Section
1. The House Is Your Mind/Body System
Straw, sticks, and bricks represent levels of awareness:
- Straw → unexamined mind
- Sticks → partial awareness
- Bricks → full integrity and inner governance
2. The Wolf Is Life’s Pressure
Life will always “huff and puff.” The question is: What have you built inside?
3. Awareness Must Come First
Pig Three put the light on before building. This is the essence of the philosophy:
- inside → out
- up → down
- awareness → action
4. Integrity Is the Daily Brick
One brick at a time:
- clear thinking
- regulated emotion
- conscious speech
- integrous action
This builds a mind that cannot be blown (is a stable vehicle).
5. Education Must Teach Inner Construction
Children learn to read and write, but not how to build their inner house. Theprogramme teaches:
- nourishment system
- anti‑BS system
- mental/ emotional regulation
- awareness in action
This is the missing curriculum.
Closing Line
Closing Line The Three Little Pigs show us that the world tests every structure we build. Only the house built from awareness, integrity, and inner order can withstand the wolf.
