One
day a teacher asked her students
to list the names of the other students
in the room on two sheets of paper,
leaving a space between each name.
Then
she told them to think of the nicest
thing they could say about each
of their classmates and write it
down.
It
took the remainder of the class
period to finish their assignment,
and as the students left the room,
each one handed in the papers.
That
Saturday, the teacher wrote down
the name of each student on a separate
sheet of paper, and listed what
everyone else had said about that
individual.
On
Monday she gave each student his
or her list. Before long, the entire
class was smiling. "Really?"
she heard whispered. "I never
knew that I meant anything to anyone!"
and, "I didn't know others
liked me so much," were most
of the comments.
No
one ever mentioned those papers
in class again. She never knew if
they discussed them after class
or with their parents, but it didn't
matter The exercise had accomplished
its purpose. The students were happy
with themselves and one another.
That group of students moved on.
Several
years later, one of the students
was killed in Viet Nam and his teacher
attended the funeral of that special
student. She had never seen a serviceman
in a military coffin before. He
looked so handsome, so mature.
The
church was packed with his friends.
One by one those who loved him took
a last walk by the coffin. The teacher
was the last one to bless the coffin.
As
she stood there, one of the soldiers
who acted as pallbearer came up
to her. "Were you Mark's math
teacher?" he asked. She nodded:
"yes." Then he said: "Mark
talked about you a lot."
After
the funeral, most of Mark's former
classmates went together to a luncheon.
Mark's mother and father were there,
obviously waiting to speak with
his teacher.
"We
want to show you something,"
his father said, taking a wallet
out of his pocket. "They found
this on Mark when he was killed.
We thought you might recognize it."
Opening
the billfold, he carefully removed
two worn pieces of notebook paper
that had obviously been taped, folded
and refolded many times. The teacher
knew without looking that the papers
were the ones on which she had listed
all the good things each of Mark's
classmates had said about him.
"Thank
you so much for doing that,"
Mark's mother said. "As you
can see, Mark treasured it."
All
of Mark's former classmates started
to gather around. Charlie smiled
rather sheepishly and said, "I
still have my list. It's in the
top drawer of my desk at home."
Chuck's
wife said, "Chuck asked me
to put his in our wedding album."
"I
have mine too," Marilyn said.
"It's in my diary."
Then
Vicki, another classmate, reached
into her pocketbook, took out her
wallet and showed her worn and frazzled
list to the group. "I carry
this with me at all times,"
Vicki said and without batting an
eyelash, she continued: "I
think we all saved our lists."
That's
when the teacher finally sat down
and cried. She cried for Mark and
for all his friends who would never
see him again.
The
density of people in society is
so thick that we forget that life
will end one day. And we don't know
when that one day will be.
So
please, tell the people you love
and care for, that they are special
and important. Tell them, before
it is too late.
Remember,
you reap what you sow. What you
put into the lives of others comes
back into your own.
May
Your Day Be Blessed As Special As
You Are
|