The teacher gave her fifth grade class an assignment: Get their parents to tell
them a story with a moral at the end of it. The next day the kids came back and
one by one began to tell their stories. Seema said, "My father's a farmer and
we have a lot of egg-laying hens. One time we were taking our eggs to market in
a basket on the front seat of the pickup when we hit a bump in the road and all
the eggs went flying and broke and made a mess."
"And what's the moral of the story?" asked the teacher. "Don't put all your eggs
in one basket!"
"Very good," said the teacher. "Now, Geeta?"
"Our family are farmers too. But we raise chickens for the meat market. We had
a dozen eggs one time, but when they hatched we only got ten live chicks. And
the moral to this story is, don't count your chickens until they're hatched."
"That was a fine story Geeta." Then Little Chintu Singh raised his hand. The teacher
said, "Chintu, do you have a story to share too?"
"Yes, ma'am, my daddy told me this story about my Uncle Santa. He was a pilot
in Kargil war when his plane got hit. So he had to bail out over enemy territory
and all he had was a bottle of whiskey, a machine gun and a machete. He drank
the whiskey on the way down so it wouldn't break and then he landed right in the
middle of 100 enemy troops. He killed seventy of them with the machine gun until
he ran out of bullets, then he killed twenty more with the machete till the blade
broke. He killed the last ten with his bare hands."
"Good heavens," said the horrified teacher, "What kind of moral did your daddy
tell you from that horrible story?"
"Don't f_ _ k with Uncle Santa when he's been drinking."