There were about twelve hours of self absorbed stress and feelings of overwhelm, and then it happened. The outpouring of help and concern from our friends, got through to me. The frantic survival instinct melted into deep feelings of peace. “Take our space heater,” “Why don’t you all spend the night,” “Anything you need,” “Dinner, a warm bed.” We stayed up in people’s kitchens, sipping wine, eating left-overs, lighting Hanukkah lights with their extended families. We were homeless, and yet more connected than I had felt in weeks. The need for survival brought out people’s deepest truth – their love and altruism.We are a disconnected society, connected mostly through our devices, computers, tweets. But when the real need for community surfaces, it’s amazing to find it is still there. So, let’s make it a goal to find that humanity in ourselves even when there is no power outage or mechanical crisis. Holiday time is as good as any to start looking for ways to help others, apart from just buying them gifts:
- Drop off home baked cookies to someone who doesn’t even expect a gift from you
- Lend a space heater
- Help a friend clean their clutter
- Invite over a family going through a hard time
- Build a fire and have friends over for donuts
- Send a personal email or letter catching up with an old friend, rather than just a generic holiday card.
Linger just a little longer, sharing a friendly nod, or a smile over a glass of cider.