When we started the 365 Days of Compassion Challenge I thought that it might be difficult to find an opportunity for compassion each and every day. Now, almost three weeks into the challenge, I've been relieved to find that some days unexpected opportunities just seem to present themselves, as if the universe was encouraging me along, but other days it takes considerable effort and thought to figure out what to do next. It's lead me to wonder what even qualifies as an act of compassion; does it require something as involved as volunteering at a homeless shelter, or could it be simply smiling at a stranger on the bus?
On one particular day when I felt that I had not done enough, I shared this concern with a co-worker and he told me, "Compassion is compassion. It doesn't need to be groundbreaking, it doesn't need to be world-moving, but if you connect with just one person, in some small way, to make their day a little bit better, than you've succeeded."
His words brought me back to Day 6 of the 365compassion twitter campaign, when my contribution involved a homeless woman I had passed on the street during an especially cold and rainy night in San Francisco. This particular woman had caught my eye because she was using her shoe for a pillow and consequently one of her feet was bare to the elements. I thought, here it is, this is a sign, this is my opportunity to really make a difference. I'm going to buy her some socks.
Thursday, February 4, 2010
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Compassion is compassion. The fact that acts of compassion feel so alien to us is a sad commentary on today's world.
ReplyDeleteA smile to a stranger, a nod to someones existence can sometimes be enough. The sad thing is that most homeless people go unrecognized like trash on the sidewalk. That loss of personal identity is a loss of human dignity. The sense that people don't even acknowledge your existence has to be the cruelest punishment placed on these poor souls.