In a small mountain village, there live a mother pig and three cute little pigs: toot, purr and whirr. The piglets grew up, and the mother pigs asked them to build their own house and move out.
The boss took half a day to build a straw house and then ran out to play.

It took the second brother three days to build a wooden house and then run out to play.
What about the old three? He wanted to build a stone house. Whirring and pulling stones one trip at a time, tired and sweating profusely.
The eldest and second said to the third, "Hey hey! So tired? Wouldn't it be nice to just build one? Look at us, it's been set up for a long time! ”
The third elder said, "I'm going to build the strongest house!" "It took him a month to build a sturdy and beautiful stone house.
One day, a great bad wolf came from the mountain. The big bad wolf saw Toot and chased after him.
The boss toot panicked and hid in his straw house. The big bad wolf blew hard, and the straw house was too light, and it was blown down at once.
The eldest toot hurriedly fled to the second murky wooden house, and the brothers quickly closed the door.
The big bad wolf said, "Hum, the wooden house can't stop me!" "He slammed hard into the door." With a whoosh, the wooden house was knocked down.
Toot and Toot desperately fled to the old third house. The third elder quickly closed the door and the window and said, "Don't be afraid! Don't be afraid! The big bad wolf can't come in! ”
The big bad wolf blew on the door first, and the house did not move! The big bad wolf slammed the door hard again. "Dang"! The big bad wolf's eyes went straight to Venus, and the house still didn't move.
The big bad wolf had no choice but to climb up to the roof and try to slip through the chimney. When the third man found out, he immediately lit a fire in the stove.
The big bad wolf suddenly fell on the stove. ah! The whole tail of the big bad wolf was burning. He howled, ran away with his tail between his legs.
Century Hengtong Online Summary: This story tells us that we should be down-to-earth in doing things and not rush to achieve results.