Hans misunderstands every instruction from his master through literal interpretation, demonstrating the necessity of true understanding rather than mere obedience to words.
Story
A poor widow has a son called Hans, whom everyone in the village considers foolish and simple. Yet his mother, who understands him better than others, sends him to apprentice with a carpenter, then a shoemaker, then a miller—a full year with each master.
After his first year with the carpenter, his master gives him a piece of wood as payment. Hans, deemed foolish by all, carefully carves the wood into a small figurine of great beauty and sensitivity. Upon showing it, he receives a gift of money from a noble impressed by his skill.
After his second year with the shoemaker, Hans receives a small stone. Everyone mocks him—what value has a stone? Yet Hans, understanding that understanding lies hidden beneath surface appearances, polishes the stone and discovers it is a gemstone of great worth.
After his third year with the miller, Hans receives grain as payment. While others see only flour, Hans understands that grain contains the possibility of bread, nourishment, and life itself. He plants the grain in good earth.
Years later, a harvest grows from Hans's single grain—enough to feed a village. The king, hearing of Hans's persistent wisdom and his ability to understand value where others see only foolishness, summons him and makes him an advisor.
Understanding prudence—the wisdom to look beneath appearances, to recognize potential hidden within ordinary things, and to trust in processes others dismiss—reveals that the "foolish" Hans possessed the deepest wisdom. True prudence understands the world as it truly is, not as it appears.
Moral
Hans misunderstands every instruction from his master through literal interpretation, demonstrating the necessity of true understanding rather than mere obedience to words.
Reflection
ACT values clarification requires genuine understanding of what matters; Hans's lack of understanding shows how values alignment fails without comprehension.
Therapeutic Connection
ACT values clarification requires genuine understanding of what matters; Hans's lack of understanding shows how values alignment fails without comprehension.