1. Living habits of rabbits
The rabbit is a timid animal. Sudden noise, strangers and strange animals, such as cats and dogs, will make it panic. In the management of feeding, we should try to avoid the noise that causes rabbits to panic, and at the same time prohibit strangers, cats and dogs from entering the rabbit house. Rabbits have a keen sense of hearing and smell, but they are timid and good at running. It is sleepy at night, active at night, quiet during the day, gentle but unsociable.
2. Rabbit's action activities
Rabbits may turn in circles when they are adults. Turning in circles is a courtship behavior, and sometimes purrs at the same time. Usually, courtship in circles begins, which means the rabbit should be neutered. Turning around may also mean wanting attention or asking for food.
3. Behavior characteristics of rabbits
In the face of danger or pressure, rabbits often choose to escape, with short concentration time and easy dispersion, and the pursuit of their own interests exceeds the consideration of long-term goals.
4. The social behavior of rabbits
Rabbits have hierarchical relationship and territorial consciousness in the community; Rabbits may choose to give up their territory and run away when facing challenges; Rabbits have relatively weak social skills and are not good at dealing with complex interpersonal relationships.
5. Abandon allusions halfway
The tortoise-rabbit race is about a tortoise and a rabbit arguing about who can run fast, so they decided to have a race. As a result, the rabbit slept under the tree because of arrogance, and finally the tortoise won. The story of children's gossip tells us that the weak who work hard can also overcome the arrogant and complacent strong, so don't underestimate others easily; Modesty makes people progress, while pride makes people lag behind.
Summary:
Abandoning halfway is a metaphor for rabbits, because rabbits have no patience, are easily disturbed, like to avoid difficulties and choose a comfortable environment, and have strong reproductive ability, but their behavioral characteristics and living habits make them not good at dealing with complex environments and problems, and their social skills are relatively weak. These characteristics * * * together constitute the metaphor of "giving up halfway".