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To: William Brotherson who wrote (175)12/6/1999 4:18:00 PM
From: Honor First  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2590
 
Thank You, for the thread. ELane sent me here - and glad to be here, also. Honor



To: William Brotherson who wrote (175)12/7/1999 2:20:00 PM
From: Lazarus Long  Respond to of 2590
 
Thanks Bill!!!

It is one of my favorite stories! It's as the 'ol saying goes... What comes around goes around. Sometimes, its just not quite how we expect it.

Lazarus



To: William Brotherson who wrote (175)12/7/1999 3:43:00 PM
From: Lazarus Long  Respond to of 2590
 
Hey there Bill...

This is a story along the same lines... unashamedly stolen from Scott Adams' Dilbert Newsletter:

(I'm surprised Jack hasn't posted it yet)

*****

In the tradition of the Dilbert Newsletter, I give you a special holiday
story with no humor content whatsoever.

It was one of those cold winter nights in the Haight district of San
Francisco, the kind where the rain hurts, and your breath forms huge
cotton balls that bounce on the pavement. I was driving an eyesore that
could only be referred to as a "car" by someone who was either a
shameless liar or a good friend. Technically, the vehicle was totalled
when I bought it from an unscrupulous neighbor, because it needed an
engine overhaul that would have cost more than the car itself. I added a
quart of oil before every journey. Most of it would leak out along the
way. I tried to imagine I was driving a huge magical snail; that way I
didn't mind the slow speeds and the slime trail it left.

The car's outer paint had transformed into a hideous mixture of rust and
"something brown." The engine sounded like a lawnmower with
tuberculosis. If anyone ever wondered what the inside of an automobile
seat looked like, my car had the answers.

It was a difficult car to drive because you had to keep your fingers and
toes crossed to keep the engine running. That night I must have
uncrossed my fingers to scratch something. The car died in the middle of
a four-lane stretch of Oak Street. I coasted as far as I could, hoping
for a place to turn off, but the street was lined with parked cars and
the nearest intersection was beyond coasting distance. There I sat, in
busy evening traffic, no lights, no locomotion, as tons of steel and
plastic screamed by.

In my rearview mirror I saw a pair of headlights pull up and stop behind
me. I knew what was coming. Soon the horn would start and someone would
be cursing at me. In San Francisco, if you dawdle too long after a light
turns green, you get the horn. If you dare to come to a full stop at a
stop sign, you get the horn from the car behind you. I figured I was
begging for trouble.

But I was wrong.

A stranger got out of the car and came to my window. He shouted, "Do you
want a push?" I was stunned but must have nodded in the affirmative. He
waived to his car and two teens piled out to apply themselves to my
bumper. When I was safely delivered to a side street, they hopped back
into their car and rejoined the sea of anonymous traffic. I didn't get
to thank them.

Over the years I've realized something about the stranger who stopped to
help. I've noticed that every time I'm in trouble, he appears. He never
looks the same. Sometimes he's a woman. His age and ethnicity vary.
But he's always there. I've started to understand he's the best part of
what makes us human beings. The one true thing in this world is an
unasked kindness provided by a stranger. It's the invisible cord that
binds us all together and makes life worthwhile.

This year, when you find yourself immersed in the clutter and bustle of
the holiday season, annoyed by the long lines, baffled about how you'll
get everything done, remember this: One of the people in that crowd is
the stranger. Today, maybe it's you.