Locking Up the Kangaroo
The new kangaroo arrived at the zoo and the zookeeper kept it in the grass field with 1 meter high fences specially prepared for it.
The next morning, the kangaroo was found hopping merrily around outside the fences. Quickly, the zookeeper incresed the fences to 2 meters high and drove the kangaroo back behind the fences.
On the 3rd morning, the zookeeper saw the kangaroo outside of the fences again. He hurried the kangaroo into the grass field once more and went on to build the fences up to 3 meters.
The giraffe in the next cage asked the kangaroo, "Well, what do you think? How high must the fence be to keep you in?"
"I don't know," the kangaroo replied. "Maybe 5 meters, maybe 10 meters, or even 100 meters - as long as the zookeeper keeps forgeting to lock the gate at night."
A wrong action leads to a failed result.
No matter how much effort you put in, you cannot rectify the result if you cannot analyze the cause of the failure correctly.
The next morning, the kangaroo was found hopping merrily around outside the fences. Quickly, the zookeeper incresed the fences to 2 meters high and drove the kangaroo back behind the fences.
On the 3rd morning, the zookeeper saw the kangaroo outside of the fences again. He hurried the kangaroo into the grass field once more and went on to build the fences up to 3 meters.
The giraffe in the next cage asked the kangaroo, "Well, what do you think? How high must the fence be to keep you in?"
"I don't know," the kangaroo replied. "Maybe 5 meters, maybe 10 meters, or even 100 meters - as long as the zookeeper keeps forgeting to lock the gate at night."
A wrong action leads to a failed result.
No matter how much effort you put in, you cannot rectify the result if you cannot analyze the cause of the failure correctly.

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