Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Lending a helping hand

A client of mine recently shared an experience she had and I was so touched by how the story ended, I just had to share.

She was on her way to a shopping center, in the hopes of unwinding from a stressful couple of days.  She was on a frontage road that has a lot of traffic, but no houses, shops or gas stations near by, when all of the sudden her car died.  Fortunately, she was able to coast over to the side of the road and mostly out of the way of passing cars but when she looked in her purse for her cell phone to call for help, she realized she had left her phone at home.

A recent knee injury prevented her from walking a few miles to the closest gas station, so she sat there, trying to figure out what to do, all the while hoping that one of the passing cars may stop to help her.  For over twenty minutes, she sat there while car after car drove past but not a single person stopped to see if she needed help.  She even noticed that people seemed to avoid having eye contact, as if they didn't want to be bothered and thought it would be easier to pretend they didn't see her.

She was beginning to feel really discouraged when a homeless man walked up to her and asked her if she needed any help.  He has seen her on the side of the road from a little ways down the road and wanted to make sure she was OK.  When she explained that she didn't have a phone and thus couldn't call AAA for assistance, he said that one of his friends had a cell phone and offered to go find him.  She couldn't believe how generous he was being but she welcomed the help.

The man walked far out into a nearby field until he found his friend and returned with both his friend and the phone.  When she called AAA she was told it could be an hour, or possibly two hours before anyone could get there.  It looked like this was going to be a long day.

After returning the phone to the one man, they asked if she knew what was wrong with her car.  She told them that either it was out of gas or out of oil, so the men offered to check her oil and sure enough, that's what she was out of.  If she could just get some oil in her car, she'd be able to drive home.

The homeless gentleman with the phone mentioned that he also had a bike and she offered to pay him if he'd ride his bike to the gas station down the road to buy oil.  Not only did he agree to do this for her but when he returned, he found some paper to make a funnel and even put the oil in her car for her.

They waited to make sure her car was in running order, then the one man let her use his phone again to cancel the AAA tow truck.  She gave them both some more money as an expression of her gratitude and instead of proceeding to the shopping center, she decided to go home.

The experience had put her in a different frame of mind . . . no longer feeling the need to de-stress by wandering around some stores, instead she felt deep gratitude that these men went out of their way to help her the way they did.  She said she was still shocked that all the people who drove by in their fancy cars didn't give her the time of day, but that the two homeless men were the ones who reached out to her.

Her story shined a spotlight on the fact that no matter how little you may have, it is still possible to help someone else.



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