I was reflecting on the ultra-marathon we've all run over the past year when I received an email from Nicole Crooks of Overtown, Florida. She wrote to thank me for the 400 Years of Inequality timeline and my work on root shock. I was very touched to receive a note from a stranger who'd taken time to find my email and write some kind words.
It reminded me of a story I once heard about a man who visited Hell and Heaven with an angel. Hell was horrible. Everyone was at a banquet, but starving, trying to get the plentiful food into their mouths, but the spoons they were using had handles too long to fit -- they kept missing their mouths. Then the angel took the man to Heaven -- same setup, everyone at a banquet table, same long-handled spoons but everyone was having a great time. "What's different?" the man asked. The angel replied, "They've learned to feed one another and so get fed themselves." The long-handled spoons worked perfectly for giving food to another person.
If we were running a marathon, there would be people lining the side of the course and handing us cups of water as we went by. There's nobody outside this marathon who can hand a runner water -- we're all runners. But what if we thought of this as a problem of long-handled spoons? Nicole, from her own goodness, gave me a sip of kindness. What if each of us could share out a bit of kindness with another? I don't think we'd say, "Wow, this is Heaven," but I do think each day might be a little easier and we'd emerge from pandemic state in better shape.
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