You know what I wish? I wish I could hug everyone in the world.
I think I’d start by hugging the young waitress in the restaurant where I had lunch. Earlier that day, she was cussed out by an angry customer. He screamed at her. Called her a bad name.
“My job is getting so much harder lately,” she admitted. “It seems like people are getting meaner in today’s world.”
Next, I’d hug the supermarket cashier, who seemed sad as I was checking out. Who didn’t think I could tell that her mascara was running as she scanned my items.
When I asked her if everything was okay, she wore a brave smile and spoke in a Slavic accent. “I’m okay.” And I knew she was lying.
I wish I could hug the guy at the drive-thru window, who told me that his dog, Ishmael, just died.
“My dog got me through a time when I had nobody, man. He was my only friend.”
I wish I could embrace the Walmart employee who helped me
find the raisins, which I could not seem to locate within the stereophonically unmitigated hell that is Wally World on a weekend.
The employee and I got to talking. Today was her son’s birthday. He was turning 10. But she would be working doubles at a second job, and would miss his party.
“It sucks,” she said. “I hope he realizes the best gift I can give is food in the fridge and our bills paid. My mom never gave that to me.”
I wish I could hug her so hard.
But more than that. I wish my simple embrace could work like magic. I wish one hug could empty the recipient of all sorrow, and worry, and fear, and doubt, even if only for a few flickering moments.
And I wish that, as I hugged various people, they would feel lighter. As though the…
