With dinner dishes rinsed and stacked,
we moved to the living room. Jonathan had brought a book of poetry,
and we took turns opening to a random page and reading aloud the
words found there. When it came into my hands, the book offered us
Kindness, by Naomi Shihab Nye. I read the first lines…
“Before
you know what kindness really is
you must lose things,
feel the future
dissolve in a moment
like salt in a weakened broth.”
I knew at once that this poem had been
written by a woman who knew loss and had something to teach. As I
continued reading aloud words that sculpted the contours of “the
tender gravity of kindness,” I was not disappointed.
Kindness may be appreciated, enjoyed,
greeted warmly, but until we experience “how desolate the landscape
can be,” we cannot know its essential nature. Our thirst must be
great before we grasp the magnitude of our need.
After a lifetime of looking into the
unfathomable reaches of deep space, astrophysicist and astronomer
Carl Sagan wrote, “For small creatures such as we, the vastness is
bearable only through love.”
Love. We are told that God is love. Kindness must be, then, the simplest way to pass on that love. Kindness is the Divine in action.
My second~grade teacher, Mrs. Ross,
rises now from memory~~tall, brown hair swept off her face, gentle
eyes, a soft voice. I joined her class late in the fall after my
parents withdrew me from the Catholic school following an incident of
violence by one of the nuns, the latest in a string of small terrors.
I was placed in Mrs. Ross's class, not
because she had an unused desk or because my test scores matched
those of the rest of her students. No, I was placed there because I
was a shy and frightened child, and Mrs. Ross was kind.
For me, she was the sun shining, a balm
soothing. The principal directed her to focus, not on academics, but
on returning me to a 7~year~old's joy. And she did her job well. Over
the next few months, I relaxed and settled into a classroom much
different from the one I had left. My eyes brightened and my smile
came more easily.
As Valentine's Day approached, we made
small mailboxes, covered in colored paper and adorned with designs of
our choosing. Mrs. Ross made clear that we would give cards to
everyone and receive them from everyone. No popularity test, this.
No, the love Mrs. Ross gave, and taught us to give in turn, flowed
beneath preferences and personalities. It was a nourishing stream. It
was unconditional and all~inclusive.
And this love moves on now in this
belated Valentine's card to you. Though we may not have met in this
world, I greet you as the sparkling stardust you are. Fueled by the
breath of the Infinite, you are Its expression in the world. You are
also love's opportunity, for in moments of kindness, you become love
realized. Love's sweet Valentine.
Love, love and more love, this day and everyday!
Leia Marie
Here is a link to Naomi Shihab Nye's poem, Kindness.
And in the spirit of Valentine's Day, here's a sweet (and short) video with a lovely message I think Mrs. Ross would endorse~~Love Has No Labels
And in the spirit of Valentine's Day, here's a sweet (and short) video with a lovely message I think Mrs. Ross would endorse~~Love Has No Labels