
The Parable of Gus and the Thunder
Once upon a time, in the small town of Whistlewood, there lived a man named Gus who, for reasons unexplained, always carried a bright yellow umbrella—rain or shine. Now, this wasn’t because Whistlewood was known for rain. Quite the opposite; Whistlewood’s biggest storm was Mrs. Collins’ weekly bridge game.
But Gus was convinced that lightning followed him. You see, every time he tried to be happy—when he baked a cake, the oven short-circuited; when he walked his dog, Bobo, thunder rumbled like someone moving celestial furniture upstairs. The townspeople whispered, “Gus has the thunder spirit!” (which was only marginally better than calling him “the guy whose hair always stands up”).
One day, after being startled out of his nap by a rogue cloudburst indoors (Bobo had overturned the flower vase), Gus decided enough was enough. “Spirit or no spirit, I’m tired of this suffering!” he declared. Which, in Gus-fashion, meant taking his umbrella, a banana, and the spirit of hope to climb Whistlewood Hill—the highest, least thunderous spot nearby.
At the top, Gus shook his fist at the sky. “Why must my spirit long for peace but get static?” he bellowed. The sky, naturally, responded with a clumsy grumble—thunder’s way of clearing its throat.
But before Gus could return to his dramatic monologue, a tiny field mouse climbed onto his shoe. “Do you know why you suffer, Gus?” squeaked the mouse (which was, admittedly, a surprise). “You think the thunder means harm, but it’s just the sky’s way of saying, ‘I’m here!’ You’re longing for peace, but you’re running from all the music life makes.”
Gus pondered. For a moment, the clouds parted, and a ray of sun illuminated only the umbrella’s tip, making it look (in Bobo’s expert opinion) like a very happy lemon.
That’s when Gus laughed—a big, belly-shaking sound. Even the heavens paused. “All this running from thunder and hiding from rain, and I missed the sunshine!” he realized. “What if the longing of my spirit to stop suffering is just my heart wishing I’d join the dance—even if it’s got a little storm?”
So, from that day onward, Gus stopped fearing thunder. He danced in the rain, walked Bobo in the drizzle, and only ever used his umbrella as a limbo stick at block parties. The townspeople stopped whispering, and Gus’s “thunder spirit” nickname transformed into “Whistlewood’s Good Cheer Ambassador (and occasional meteorologist).”
In time, the thunder didn’t stop—but Gus found joy anyway. Because sometimes, the suffering we long to lose is really an invitation to live out loud through storm and sun. And, as Gus would say: “If life gives you thunder, dance until it gives you a rainbow.”
The spirit may long for peace, but it’s not suffering that makes us whole—it’s the courage (and wit) to stand in the storm and remember that joy, like sunshine, may be just behind that next rumble.
…
DCG

