🛡️ The Daily Shield: The Law of Necessity

English teacher Zubeyir Yurtkuran (Kru Zuu) smiling and explaining the English idiom "Beggars can't be choosers" for the Daily Shield blog series.

“Beggars can’t be choosers.”


😈 The Villain (The Diva)


You are stranded at the airport. Your phone is dead. You need to call your mom. A stranger offers you an old, cracked Android phone to use. You look at it with disgust. “Ew, I only use iPhones. Does this thing even have FaceTime?” You refuse the help because it isn’t ‘perfect.’

The Result? You are stuck at the airport all night. You are cold, lonely, and stubborn. You let your pride destroy your survival. 🧟‍♂️


😇 The Hero (The Survivor)


You are in the same situation. You need help. You have zero options. The stranger offers the old, cracked phone. You say, “Thank you so much!” instantly. You don’t care about the brand, the screen, or the color. You only care about the function.

The Result? You make the call. You get home safely. You understand that when you have nothing, anything is a gift. You value utility over vanity. 🛡️


⚖️ The Reality
Options are a luxury. We live in a world of endless choices (Netflix, Uber Eats, Amazon). We are used to getting exactly what we want. But sometimes, life hits “Reset.” When you are in a position of need, your “Right to Choose” disappears.

💎 The Secret: Gratitude turns “not enough” into “enough.”

🧐 The Anatomy of the Proverb


This proverb teaches us about humility and reality.


Beggars (Noun): People who ask for charity or help because they have nothing. 🤲


Can’t (Modal Verb): Cannot; it is impossible for them to.


Choosers (Noun): People who select the best option from many.


Simpler Version: Take what you are given.


📚 Vocabulary Vault


Entitled (Adjective): Believing you deserve special treatment (The enemy of this proverb!). 😤


Necessity (Noun): Something that is absolutely needed.


Alternative (Noun): Another available possibility.


Compromise (Verb): To accept standards that are lower than is desirable.


Pick (Verb): To choose.


🧠 Grammar Focus: Modals & Plurals


Modals of Ability (Can’t) Here, “Can’t” doesn’t mean they physically cannot choose. It means they possess no logical or social right to do so.


Example: “You are late? You can’t complain about the bad seats.”


Nominalization (Verbs into Nouns) English loves turning verbs into people nouns by adding -er or -or.


Beg (Verb) → Beggar (Person)
Choose (Verb) → Chooser (Person)
Teach (Verb) → Teacher (Person)

📜 History: Origin and Spread


This isn’t just modern slang; it is ancient wisdom.


The Origin: It first appeared in John Heywood’s collection of proverbs in 1546! For 500 years, people have been trying to teach “Entitled” people to be humble.


Global Cousins


🇹🇷 Turkish:“Dilenciye hıyar vermişler, eğri diye beğenmemiş.” (They gave the beggar a cucumber, he didn’t like it because it was crooked.) — This captures the humor perfectly!


🇩🇪 German:“In der Not schmeckt die Wurst auch ohne Brot.” (In need, the sausage tastes good even without bread.)


🇪🇸 Spanish:“A caballo regalado no se le mira el diente.” (Don’t look at the teeth of a gifted horse.)

🎭 Short Story: The Barnyard Banquet


Let’s visit a farm where three animals are having a very different lunch.


🌟 The Cast


🐱 Cleo the Cat (The Beggar / The Diva)


🐔 Henriettta the Chicken (The Provider)


🐸 Fred the Frog (The Wise Observer)


The Situation: It is a rainy Tuesday. Cleo the Cat has been sleeping all day and forgot to hunt. She is starving. Her stomach is growling like a lion.


She walks over to the barn where Henrietta is eating.

Cleo: “Oh, Henrietta, darling! I am fainting with hunger. Do you have anything for a sophisticated cat to eat?”


Henrietta is kind. She kicks a bowl forward.

Henrietta: “Sure, Cleo. Here is some dry corn and a piece of old bread crust.”


Cleo looks at the corn. She sniffs the bread. She wrinkles her nose.

Cleo: “Corn? Bread? Are you joking? I need Salmon. Or perhaps a bowl of warm milk. This is dry! This is for… peasants!”


Suddenly, Fred the Frog hops onto a rock. He catches a fly with his tongue. Slurp.

Fred: “Hey Cleo, are you hunting today?”

Cleo: “No, it’s too wet outside.”

Fred: “So you have no food?”

Cleo: “None.”

Fred: “And you have no money?”

Cleo: “I’m a cat, Fred. Of course not.”

Fred: “Then eat the bread, Cleo. Beggars can’t be choosers.”


Cleo refuses. She walks away, nose in the air, waiting for a salmon that will never come.

The Ending: Cleo went to sleep hungry and cold. Fred and Henrietta went to sleep full.


The Moral: Pride doesn’t fill your stomach. If you don’t hunt, don’t complain about the menu. 🐱

🎓 Lesson for English Learners


Don’t wait for the “Perfect Teacher.”


The Trap: You want to learn English, but you say: “I will only learn if I can go to London,” or “I don’t like this free app, the interface is ugly.”


The Reality: You are the “Beggar” (you need knowledge). The resources are the “Givers.”


The Solution: Use the ugly app. Read the old book. Talk to the non-native speaker.


You Say: “My English isn’t perfect, so I will use whatever tools I have. I cannot afford to be picky if I want to be fluent.”


💬 Your Turn: The Reality Check 🚀


Have you ever given someone a gift, and they complained about it? Or have you ever had to accept something you didn’t like because you had no choice?


Tell us your story in the comments! 👇


What was the item?


Did you accept it or reject it?


(Remember: Even a crooked cucumber feeds a hungry stomach!)

By Zubeyir YURTKURAN

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