Remember Who You Are
Even eagles forget they can fly—until the sky calls them home.

Remember Who You Are
> There comes a moment when you stop looking outside for validation—and start reaching inside for strength.
---
In the heart of a vast mountain range, cloaked by morning mist and silence, stood an eagle’s nest on the edge of a towering cliff. In that nest, long ago, was born a majestic eagle named Arion. From the beginning, he was different—bold, sharp-eyed, wings broader than most, and with a spirit that trembled not in fear but in potential.
But fate had another idea.
When Arion was still young, a storm of unimaginable fury struck the mountain. The winds howled like ancient beasts, tearing trees from the ground. His nest was shattered, and Arion was thrown from the cliffside. He flapped with desperation, but he was too young to fly.
He fell.
Not to his death, but to a place far below—a quiet valley carved between the hills, where people lived in a small village and tended to their sheep and chickens. A farmer found him, broken and still, and took him in. But the man didn’t know what Arion was. To him, the bird looked odd—too big for a hawk, too proud for a crow. Still, he nursed the eagle back to health and placed him with his chickens.
And so, the eagle grew up among them.
---
Years passed.
Arion learned to scratch the dirt like the chickens. He learned to fear the fox and hide in coops when danger came. He ate grain and lived in a cage at night. He looked up at the sky sometimes, his chest stirring, something deep inside whispering—fly.
But he never did.
Because the chickens never flew.
And he thought he was one of them.
He forgot.
Forgot the feeling of cold air brushing against feathers.
Forgot the thrill of wind beneath wings.
Forgot what he truly was.
Until one day, the sky brought a reminder.
---
A shadow passed over the field. The chickens scattered. Farmers looked up in awe.
Above, circling in wide, majestic loops, was a wild eagle—bigger than any bird the villagers had seen. Its wings sliced the air like blades of light. It called out—a piercing cry that echoed through mountains and memories.
Arion froze.
Something deep inside him woke up. The call—it wasn’t just sound. It was recognition.
Something stirred in his blood, in his bones, in the places untouched by years of forgetting.
The eagle called again.
Arion looked up at it. Then down at his talons. Then at the chickens beside him, who were already running for shelter.
And then… he climbed to the top of the wooden fence, wings trembling.
He opened them wide.
They were larger than he remembered.
The wind rustled his feathers. He hesitated—what if he fell again? What if he wasn’t strong enough?
Then he heard the eagle cry a third time.
And with a single breath, he jumped.
---
At first, it was chaos. His wings flapped too hard. He wobbled, dipped, twisted—
Then something clicked.
The air caught under his wings. His body shifted. His heart caught rhythm.
He rose.
Higher. Faster. With each flap, the world grew smaller below, and his memory grew sharper within.
He soared toward the other eagle. And when they met in mid-air, they didn’t speak.
They didn’t need to.
They simply flew—together, across the mountain tops, where the wind belonged to no one and the sky held no ceilings.
---
Back in the village, the farmers whispered about what they saw.
Some said it was magic.
Others called it a miracle.
But one old woman simply smiled and said:
> “He just remembered who he was.”
---
From that day on, the chickens often looked to the sky.
And the children pointed, shouting,
“There! The King of the Sky returns!”
But Arion didn’t come back to scratch the ground.
He came back only to remind others—
That you are more than your cage.
More than what people mistake you for.
More than your fear.
You are what you were born to be.
Even if the world tries to make you forget it.
---
🌟 Moral of the Story:
> You don’t become less just because others fail to see your greatness.
The world may put you in a cage, call you something smaller, train you to stay low—
But you are meant to rise.
The sky never forgot you.
So… remember who you are.
About the Creator
Moto Khan
Better late than never



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