In this era, where a lot of people are becoming more and more indifferent towards one another, kindness is coming at an expensive price. It is not often that you see people showing kindness towards others. BUT. . .I found this video recently where there was a prepared set of different videos to prove that wrong. Throughout the video, you can watch Santa providing warm clothes to homeless people or older woman praising stranger for doing cool tricks with skateboard and many others. As always I hope this afflicts the Caring Catalyst in you that by merely watching the video, you will realize that kindness in humanity hasn’t been lost completely and there are still people out there ready to show acts of kindness not only to their close ones, but also to any random strangers and make them emotional or even cry by their acts of kindness. THAT it’ll inspire you to bring a special warmth to Another’s CHILL. . .Enjoy watching the video. . .
JUST A MOMENT: HOPE BLOOMS IN EVERY SEASON
Shortly after I created this YouTube video I was attacked by the recent poem of one of my favorite poets, James Crews who just happened to post the following:
Let Hope Stay
Even as October wind tugged
at the bundles in my arms, sending
the last yellow leaves tumbling down
into my face and hair, I gathered up
the stalks of black-eyed Susans
cut back from the fading garden,
and after tossing them on the brush pile,
felt a few loose seeds clinging
to my finger, impossibly tiny and
easily swept away. Aren’t our hopes
like that, hoping to spread and grow,
becoming full-blown volunteers
at the edges of our lives, unlikely
blooms that multiply and come back,
giving us daily beauty in exchange
for letting them stay?
I was helping my husband Brad gather the stalks of butterfly bushes and black-eyed Susans he had just cut back from the garden, and as I carried bundle after bundle to the brush pile, the wind blew wildly, intent on tugging the last of the yellow leaves from the trees. When I looked down at my hand after my last trip, I found a few seeds still clinging to the skin, of one finger. I was astonished by how small they were. Volunteers from the perennial garden pop up everywhere in our yard, and on the margins of the woods that surround our house, tenacious and resilient—sunflowers, echinacea, and Joe Pye weed willing to try sprouting up almost anywhere. I always argue for keeping them, loving the abandon with which some plants spread. But I forget that they begin from something as humble and tiny as a splinter, which somehow contains everything they need to reach full blossom. As Julia Cameron, author of The Artist’s Way, has written: “Gardens start with seeds. Seeds are tiny and look like nothing much. And yet, it is from seeds that we get blooms and from blooms that we get hope.” It is not overly dramatic to say that my hope is restored each day by time spent in nature, and by small actions taken on behalf of others and myself. I don’t discount the hopelessness so many of us might feel right now, or suggest that it is easy or even simple to find again. Yet, a walk in the woods or hour of yardwork reorganizes my anxious heart-mind, allowing certain worries to fall away like useless husks as soon as I can lay down my phone and shut off the news for an hour or two. Likewise washing the car, sweeping the steps, vacuuming the carpets and gathering up all of that dust. A phone call or lunch with a friend, or an email thanking a colleague for some kind thing they did can all repair my beleaguered spirit, and plant the seeds that will help me do the same again tomorrow.
Invitation for Writing & Reflection: Begin with the phrase, “Let hope stay,” and see where the writing leads you. You might reflect on those times in daily life when you feel most hopeful, when the despair seems to fall away, and the seeds of a deeper faith are revealed.
WHICH INSPIRED THIS:
THERE
Among mulchings
there is something that seeks the
Seeing Eye
It’s Color
snaps neurons to believe
THERE
is always a Somethingness of More
Even
Especially in Death
and though
we often Feel
crinkly crumbled
THERE
shows us we are always
Becoming
a Furthermoreness
A Smoreness
that Toasts us
deliciously warm

So BLOOM ON. . .
H O P E
No matter what Season you are Feeling you’re in, right now. . .
NOT JUST A HAT
IN A WORLD WHERE WE ARE KNOWN AND OFTEN CHAMPIONED
FOR ALL OF THE HATS WE WEAR. . .

WHO WOULD THINK
IT’S NOT THE ONE’S WE WEAR
IT’S THE ONE’S WE DON’T WEAR

THAT JUST MAY MATTER
THE MOST. . . .
(Sometimes it all comes down to a hat. . .)
(My thanks to Amina Amdeen and Joseph Weidknecht, via StoryCorps.)
P O O F
POOF
She wore a diamond cross around her neck
He wore teak mala beads on his wrist
They wore Star of David’s
Some wore homemade bracelets
Most wore nothing
And when the old man
with a long robe and a wispy beard
spoke of his pain being our pain
WE didn’t understand
not even when we heard the
P O O F
before the sizzle of lightning
that struck where we were all sitting
ALL gone
before we could even think about
what it was to be
NO MORE
together

EVEN WHEN IT’S OVER. . .
THERE’S ALWAYS A WHISP OF SOMETHING THAT REMAINS. . .
N O
Q U E S T I O N

JUST A MOMENT: A SCRIBBLE IS AN UNRAVELIING STRAIGHT LINE
IT’S TRUE. . .
SOMETIMES OUR MONKEY MIND
MAKES US BELIEVE THAT
I T
IS ALL JUST ONE JUMBLED/TUMBLED UP MESS OF UNLEASHED THOUGHTS
SEEMINGLY UNCAGED AND RUNNING AMOK. . .
B U T
ESPECIALLY WHEN
S O REMEMBER
AND REMEMBER
A LINE IS JUST A LINE
NO MATTER WHERE IT BEGINS AND ENDS
OR HOW JUMBLED UP
IT EVER SEEMS. . .
FAR FROM THE TREE
BACKPACK HIDER
HAVE YOU EVER BEEN A BACKPACK HIDER or a “I WILL MAKE SOMEONE’S LIFE BETTER WITHOUT THEM KNOWING ABOUG IT” kind of person. . dare you think the following story might change you just a tad. . . ?
I’m seventy-two. My name’s Harris. I used to be a high school history teacher in Ohio.
Now I hide backpacks.
Not in schools. Not in libraries. Not in food banks with lines around the block.
I leave them where kids disappear.
Behind the bleachers at the football field no one uses anymore.
Beside the boarded-up convenience store that still smells like spilled beer.
Under the bridge where spray-paint tags scream louder than adults ever do.
People ask why.
Because that’s where I used to find my students.
When my wife died, the classroom was the only place that kept me standing. Then the district closed my school. Budget cuts, they said. Fewer kids “worth saving.”
I drove around those first months like a ghost, parking in old lots, remembering faces. The boy who used to doodle in the margins. The girl who never took her hood off. The one kid who sat through three funerals in a semester and still turned in his essays.
I started noticing where kids hid when they had nowhere else to go.
And one night, I remembered something: the way my students’ backpacks told the whole story.
Worn zippers, missing straps, heavy with secrets no curriculum could carry.
So I bought a few used packs from Goodwill. Filled them with small, stubborn things.
A peanut butter sandwich wrapped tight.
A notebook and a Sharpie, with my scrawl inside: “Write it down. It matters.”
A pair of headphones and an old MP3 player loaded with free audiobooks and a playlist I called “Stay.”
A bag of trail mix. A bottle of water. A cheap phone card.
I didn’t put in Bibles or pamphlets. Didn’t tape motivational quotes to the straps.
Just pieces of normal life. Things that say: you still belong in this world.
The first time I left one, under the bleachers, my hands shook like I was committing a crime.
Next week, it was gone.
In its place? A folded piece of paper: “Thanks. I ate the sandwich. I’m still here.”
That was enough.
Week by week, I left more. And the backpacks started talking back.
A hair tie, left for the “next girl who forgets hers.”
A library card, taped to a thank-you note: “They reopened. Go check it out.”
A Polaroid of a dog with “He’s waiting at home. So am I.”
Last winter, a backpack showed up on my porch.
Inside: a sandwich. A notebook. A pair of socks.
And a letter.
It was from a boy who used to linger behind the gas station. He’d planned to join a gang that night. Said the backpack stopped him. Not because of the food, but because of one scribble in the notebook:
“You deserve to see another season.”
He wrote, “I chose life. I got a dishwashing job. Now I’m leaving backpacks too. With your list.”
I sat on the porch until my coffee went cold, holding that letter like it was oxygen.
Now my neighbors help. A retired nurse slips in first-aid kits. A baker leaves muffins with a note: “Still good. Still loved.” Kids from the neighborhood ride their bikes over and toss packs into the trunk of my car. Nobody signs their names. Nobody takes credit.
It isn’t politics. It isn’t charity drives or photo ops. It’s just one quiet thing in a loud, divided country.
The world talks about walls, borders, crime rates, and statistics.
But when you stand under a bridge at dusk, you don’t see numbers.
You see a kid trying not to cry where nobody’s watching.
That’s who the backpacks are for.
My grandson asked me once, “Grandpa, why don’t you just hand them out?”
I told him, “Because shame is loud. Kindness has to whisper. Sometimes people can only pick up help when no one’s looking.”
I don’t know how many backpacks I’ve left. I don’t keep count.
But I know this: in a world that makes so many feel disposable, something as small as trail mix and a Sharpie can turn a night around.
You don’t have to save the country.
You don’t have to fix politics.
You don’t even have to change a life.
Just leave something soft where a broken soul might land.
Sometimes all it takes is a backpack—forgotten by the world, but found by the one person who needed it most.
And that, I’ve learned, is still teaching.
Kind of makes you want to go out and buy some backpacks or. . .hide a few, huh?

You are somebody’s front porch to God.
You are someone’s doorway to mercy.
You are the world’s threshold to
kindness.
You are my entrance to letting go of regret.
No pressure, but…
Your life is a gateway to peace
for both strangers and friends alike.
Whether you realize it our not…
Empathy has chosen you to turn your
heart into a welcome mat for others.
This is purpose of your life…
To let your existence become a candlelit
veranda of hope for the rest of us to
gather on during the long night.
~ john roedel
JUST A MOMENT: MORE THAN A POTHOLE
We always do our best to avoid potholes. . .Wait a second, aren’t we a whole lot like them? Sometimes, don’t we avoid people that are like the divots, the potholes of our lives. . . wait a second, oh no, do people avoid us and treat us like a chuckhole in their lives? You know, in either case the fix-ability of a pothole is right in front of us. We all have patch-abilities to us normally to receive, but to give. . .
Now will we? Because that may be the biggest pothole that we need to avoid of all, and usually the one that does the most damage, especially when we don’t even see it. . .

We avoid potholes~~much like we do imperfections in others and even in ourselves because of the damage we think they may cause instead of the patching we may bring. . . .
PIROUETTE
ALLOW ME TO EXPLAIN WHAT YOU JUST SAW:
Pirouette” by Ciara Borgards – The film shows how a misfortune can be the necessary force to transform our lives for the better. A metal ballerina is standing on a turning platform supported by a frame inside a music box. But suddenly her support breaks, her music box closes, and the ballerina finds herself in a strange world. . .
M E A N I N G:
We are shattered; sometimes utterly broken. We are all nicked up and chipped; Imperfect
We do not live undefeated and yet there’s a power in us that. . .that we often mistake and even less notice and recognize that so very often, it’s our Super Power

Sometimes out of our shattered brokenness comes a dance that would’ve been impossible to conceive, let alone achieve as the jaggedness,
the incompleteness of us
made something whole
that couldn’t have been otherwise~~
DANCE ON
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