The symmetry of kindness

The train slammed into the station, injuring hundreds. The engineer was critically hurt. People toppled over each other, bouncing across seats and against windows. There was blood and glass everywhere.

One woman shimmied her way to the platform when part of the station ceiling fell, pinning her. She thought she would die. Then the hands of fellow passengers lifted her, one to another, and she was saved.

Later, she wanted to say thank you but didn’t know who to thank. Once on the mend, she retrieved a list of those who were with her that day. Now, one by one, she looks them up, asking if they had helped her. Each of them smiles and says no.

Once with them, she can see what each needs, and so she helps them along. She unpacks groceries for an old woman, listens to a widower’s story, and gives a single mom her umbrella. This has gone on for weeks. She keeps trying to find those who helped her, only to help those she finds.

Finally, it occurs to her that this is God’s symmetry of kindness. She will never know who helped her, so she can thank and help everyone she meets along the way.

Source: Mark Nepo,
Things That Join the Sea and the Sky: Field Notes on Living

More stories at https://philipchircop.wordpress.com/

Image courtesy: https://www.roots.gov.sg/

This is a stamp from a set of 10 launched by the Singapore Kindness Movement to commemorate the Movement’s 10th anniversary (1997-2007). First showcased at the Esplanade as part of Singapore Biennale 2006 and based on the theme of kindness, the drawings on the stamps were chosen from over 500 entries by children aged 3 to 12 years old for the ASEAN-Japan Children’s Kindness Movement installation.