Okay — so there have been times in my life when I have started something and midway through stopped to ask, “Whose dumb idea was this?” Of course it was mine.
Of course it was.
When the JusJoJan prompt for today came up, I looked at the word — symbiotic — and thought, whose dumb was that?! I think you know the answer.
I had quickly submitted it as a prompt word while feeling very frustrated with the state of our country. We’re at odds with each other too much.
I think the beauty of our country has been that we don’t always have to agree. We are free to disagree. We are free to speak about what we believe. We are free to be who we want to be. AND we are free to seek a mutual good for us all.
Until now.
But I don’t want to focus on that.
Symbiosis is when two different species or organisms live intertwined lives.
Here are three different symbiotic relationships:
- Commensalism
- Mutualism
- Parasitism
Commensialism is where one species benefits and the other remains neutral. An example is barnacles on whales. The barnacle benefits from the free ride and access to plankton; the whale is unaffected. In politics, it may be the politician who considers a bill doesn’t really affect his constituents and doesn’t come with a big pricetage. It may benefit another state significantly without costing him anything. He votes FOR it.
Mutualism is where both species benefit, like bees and flowers. In politics, this may be the behind-the-scenes negotiating on some big bill. The politician may say this part benefits me and that part benefits you. Let’s do it.
Parasitism is when one species benefits and the other is harmed. Ticks immediately come to mind. Blood-sucking disease-bearing arachnids that we can all do without. Political analogy? I’ll leave that up to you.
Sally – you’ve hit on it perfectly. I have my own examples for that last one! But I’m betting they are very similar to your own unstated analogy! I love this one more than tongue can tell!