Anya and the Whispering Wind
Anya was a curious little girl who loved to talk. She lived in a small village where everyone knew each other. She liked telling funny stories, but sometimes… she added things that weren’t true.
One day, she saw her friend Rohan drop a loaf of bread. He picked it up and brushed it clean. Later, when Anya told the story to her friends, she added, “And then he ate it without washing it!” She laughed, thinking it was harmless.
The next morning, the baker’s wife asked Rohan, “Why did you eat dirty bread yesterday?” Rohan’s cheeks turned red. He told her he didn’t—but the story had already spread.
A few days later, Anya saw her neighbor’s goat run away for a moment before returning. She told another friend, “The goat went all the way to the forest!” Soon, everyone in the market was talking about the “wild goat adventure.”
Anya didn’t know it, but the wind in her village was special. It carried words from one ear to another, moving faster than people could walk. Each time Anya told a story that wasn’t true, the wind picked it up and whispered it through windows and doors.
One afternoon, Anya overheard two women talking.
“Don’t tell Anya anything,” one said. “She changes the story.”
“Her words can’t be trusted,” said the other.
Anya’s heart sank. She didn’t mean to hurt anyone—she just thought she was making stories more interesting.
That night, she sat by her window and whispered to the wind, “I’m sorry.”
The wind replied in a soft voice only she could hear:
“Words, once spoken, cannot be taken back. But you can fill the air with truth from now on.”
From the next day, Anya made a promise to herself. If she didn’t know something for sure, she wouldn’t say it. If she told a story, she would keep it exactly as it happened.
At first, people were unsure, but slowly they began to trust her again. And when the wind carried her words now, they were words of truth and kindness.
Moral: Truth may travel slowly, but lies blow back quickly.
The Idea






