A huge vessel was sailing across the vast ocean when one day, it crashed into a gigantic boulder.
The boulder had long been there. But the captain of the ship overlooked it.
The ship was wrecked partially. And a part of it sank.
Somehow, miraculously, the other part of it managed to stay afloat amidst the circumstances.
In the interminable stretch of waters, it floated, from north to south to east to west.
In one way or another, it could just stay buoyant.
That large boulder ought not to be there in the first place.
Because it made part of the vessel sink and you don't know to what extent it was wrecked. It was disastrous.
Does being a boulder gives you the liberty to damage?
So what if since day one, the boulder had been there, going through all sorts of storms?
So what if it might had been weathered and worn off in all sorts of way?
The vessel is yet another vulnerable piece of metal. To put it in a nicer way, it's a ship. But still, it's just scrap.
The captain might be responsible too. But who will notice that huge boulder in nowhere of the vast ocean?
And the purpose of the ship in the first place is not meant to be sunk and destroyed.