My mother once told me that the most beautiful things in life are often the things that go unnoticed. And I’ve been thinking a lot about that.
I believe she’s right. After all, I’ve never known Mama to be wrong.
Mama was right when she told me to always wear clean undies. She was right when she told me to never eat yellow snow. I believe she was right about nearly everything.
As it happens, this morning I read about a few beautifully unnoticed things. These items came to me in the form of emails.
I receive a lot of emails. Many of these messages come from people I’ve never met, who live in places I’ve never been. These perfect strangers write to me about small events that took place; microscopic happenstances that go unseen by society.
Like the woman from Michigan who told me about a young single father who lives in her building.
The father needed a ride to work because his car died and he couldn’t afford a cab. His jobsite was located nine miles away. So
he walked.
This became a routine. The man arose each morning and hoofed nine miles. Then he walked home after work.
He was walking 45-plus miles every week. Until last week.
Last week an older woman who drives a truck for a courier service had been noticing this man each morning. She pulled over and offered him a ride.
The man said no he’d be fine, and he kept walking. But the lady insisted, she did everything short of begging him to get in.
He got in. When she dropped him at work she asked, “What time you get off, hon?”
He told her.
She smiled. “I’ll be waiting right here to take you home.”
She’s been giving him rides all week. No charge.
I received another message from an elderly man in northern California who said he was out…