I sat at a
local grocery store deli. My heart was
heavy, thinking about the attacks, and my teacher who was in a hospital half
way around the world in a coma. I
thought of the words I had shared that morning about kindness, and my thoughts
returned to the kindness of my teacher.
My mind flooded with all of the expressions of and reflections of his
kindness that I had read since that sudden morning. I bowed my head to offer a simple prayer over
my meal, and to pray, once again, for Richard.
Almost instantly
I heard a voice say, “You are fifteen dollars short.” My head snapped up and
something propelled me out of my seat and over to the register.
“Can I pay
the difference?” I heard myself say.
As the bag
boy was beginning to remove two large packages of chicken thighs from the
grocery bags, I looked at the customer in line.
There stood a tall, very dark, kind looking man. He spoke to me in a thick accent.
“What you
mean?”
“Can I pay
for the rest of the groceries?”
I looked at
the cashier.
“You can
pay for them if you want to,” she said.
“My teacher
is in the hospital,” I began to stammer, my voice thick with emotion. “He was
injured in the attacks yesterday. He is
in a coma.
“He was hurt? I so sorry,” the customer with the kind eyes
replied.
“I invited my friends to share
kindness today on his behalf. Will you
please let me do this, for him?”
“Yes, thank you. “
As the
young boy returned the chicken, the cashier instructed the man to swipe his
card, and then allowed me to swipe mine for the remainder.
The amount
was $14.43.
“Please
pray for Richard,” I implored.
“We will,”
said the customer, the cashier, and the bagger. “We will pray for him.”
It took all
of three minutes. Three minutes to share
the light. Three minutes to join together
in common humanity, kindness, and faith.
It cost all
of $14.43 to create a shift in the darkness, to invite strangers into the light
of hope, to share the light.
The
customer needed kindness. Richard would
have offered that kindness. He wasn’t
there, but I was.
We all have
three minutes. We all have some
resource. We all have kindness within
us.
Choose to
share the light. Choose to chase away
the darkness. Choose to act. Small
things, multiplied, can change the world. Go and do something today.
Share the light with others by tagging your stories #sharethelight, and post to our Facebook group Share the Light. Join the movement. Make a difference. Shine on.
16 comments:
Thank you for sharing your eloquent words and feelings.
Thanks for your comment. I hope you will join the movement and share the light today!
Kindness moves the world forward. I hope your friend is recovering.
Thank you Jeannette. He is slowly making his way back to recovery.
Lovely story. Wish more would act that way.
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