BE A RAINBOW IN SOMEONE ELSE'S CLOUD
“The
most important trip you may take in life,” Henry Boye said, “is meeting people
halfway.”
When I look closely
at the nature of our existence, it strikes me, that we all are strangers
meeting halfway along our journeys… No matter who they are – our parents or
spouses, our children or grandchildren… clients, borrowers, lenders, neighbors,
strangers, friends or enemies… yes, whosoever they are… we all have met halfway
– somewhere along – our respective journeys…
And, the closer
I look at it clearer it becomes to me… that, it is the simple, random – spontaneous
– act of kindness from our hearts that makes our life journeys fruitful.
If I have
touched many lives through my own random acts of kindness... so have others done
to me. Neither have I kept the count of my kindness acts nor have others. Our
acts of kindness are like the wild seeds of a jungle… We simply drop them, here
and there, as we journey along… And, when time comes, these seeds grow
into mighty oaks!
Mr.
Rao is a gentle soul who is in his mid sixties. Manohar, too, is a kind soul,
who is in his late thirties. They both live in my housing complex and just as I
met them halfway my journey , they met each other the same way… Some two years
ago, when Manohar was seeking admission for his little daughter in one of local
convent schools, the application was rejected. When Mr. Rao – who did not know
Manohar – learnt about it through a common friend in our colony, Mr. Rao took upon him the responsibility, used his good contacts and got the little
daughter of Manohar admitted to the school. For Mr. Rao, such acts are routine
in his life. He has done it to umpteen number of people, umpteen times in his
life… getting someone a job, here or abroad… getting someone admission in a school
or college… helping someone obtain a loan… yes, he has done such random acts of
help with no strings attached… He isn’t a social worker or politician… He isn’t
a wealthy man either. All that he has is the desire to be resourceful. He
operates from that clean space… and, leaves it at that.
“A kind act,”
as it is said, “is like a boomerang… it comes back!”
Some eight
months ago, Mr. Rao’s wife had to go to America when their daughter was to
deliver. Due to some complications during the delivery, Mrs. Rao ended up
staying there for eight months. Back home, here, Mr. Rao had to live alone.
During this entire eight-month period, Manohar and his wife – who are a busy
working couple with two little children – saw to it that Mr. Rao had his dinner
every night with them… Mr. Rao was shy and reluctant to do so… But, Manohar’s
wife would not leave him… Their little children would not eat till their ‘Ajja’ (grandfather) came home… If they
went out, they would make it a point to be home before the dinner time… “Sir, two
or three chapattis, this little quantity of dal, vegetable and rice will make
no difference to us,” was how Manohar’s wife would repeatedly reassure Mr. Rao
each time she noticed the shyness on his face…
Two days ago,
Mrs. Rao returned from America. And, I am sure, she alone knows how much
difference this genuine act of kindness from Manohar and his wife had made to
her husband and their family!
If at all we
need a religion in life, I think, it should be this religion called ‘Kindness’.
When kindness springs from a clean space in our hearts, it is spiritual… very
holy. “Be a rainbow in someone else’s cloud,” when Maya Angelou tells us this,
what she tells us is: “Be blessed!”
This world
maybe a rough and tough place where we all live. But, let’s not allow our
hearts of shrink with despair… “Sure the world breeds monsters,” let us be inspired
by May Karr, “but kindness grows just as wild.”
GERALD D’CUNHA
Pic.: Internet
Comments
Dear Jerry - Lovely post and Thanks for all the kind words.
We also have become regular in having dinner at proper time because of Sir.