Showing posts with label generosity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label generosity. Show all posts
Monday, May 24, 2010
On the Kindness of Strangers
This is the second time this happens to me. In a previous post,p from May 10th, titled: "Museum Piece: The First Cuca's Things," which it should be renamed, "Vous etes ravissante!" the best piropo I heard in my life, I already talked about this, superficially. About what I call the kindness of strangers.
In that post I told a similar story in which an act of kindness, of uninterested generosity from a total stranger, changed my face effectively and without need of drugs for the rest of the day. And now, after that it happened again, I discover a pattern and form a theory. It sounds very scientific, eh? Well, it's not. I realized that the two times in which this act of kindness has happened, in 1995 and now, I was having one of those days where my emotional state could be classified as vulnerable, or perhaps, low, basement level... or just plain shitty.
I am having stomach problems, and I don't sleep well. Last night it was awful. I didn't sleep much. I had to teach in the morning but I stayed in bed longer than usual because I wanted to win my tiredness off. At noon I didn't t go swimming, I was still feeling bad, weak, but I decided to go to Food 4 Less to buy some stuff I needed for my stomach pain. I was dressed in orange, with an orange blouse and orange matching sweater that my mother gave me years ago. I was cold, even though outside it was sunny. I arrive at F4L, park, and on my way to the shopping carts a man that passes by, a man on a yellow shirt, says, "You look very good on that orange." Thanks! I reply. The fact that, even with my gloom and bad mood and feeling like shit, this man tells me that I look good, it's something to celebrate and be thankful for!
I always said that I am a very sensitive person, like a sponge. I absorb everything that's floating around me, and I think, well, I guess there is other people like me, very sensitive, I wouldn't think I am the only one, right? And maybe when I am on one of those low mood days, navigating the dangerous waters of depression, I send screams of help! to the air, which is already overwhelmed with other pollutions as to also having tolerate my humors and mood states, and they catch on it. I think they are out there, these people, like the piropo guy in París, and this gentle observer in Pasadena, and... wait! There is another one: the cashier lady at F4L. This is the second time that this exact same thing happens with a cashier of F4L. I get to the cash register, I'm going to pay, and she says: You have very pretty eyes. Oh! Thanks! And then I think, maybe they notice that I am vulnerable, that I need a little push, a little encouragement, and there they come, to rescue me, without they even knowing.
Anyway, celebrating small, every-day happiness.
In that post I told a similar story in which an act of kindness, of uninterested generosity from a total stranger, changed my face effectively and without need of drugs for the rest of the day. And now, after that it happened again, I discover a pattern and form a theory. It sounds very scientific, eh? Well, it's not. I realized that the two times in which this act of kindness has happened, in 1995 and now, I was having one of those days where my emotional state could be classified as vulnerable, or perhaps, low, basement level... or just plain shitty.
I am having stomach problems, and I don't sleep well. Last night it was awful. I didn't sleep much. I had to teach in the morning but I stayed in bed longer than usual because I wanted to win my tiredness off. At noon I didn't t go swimming, I was still feeling bad, weak, but I decided to go to Food 4 Less to buy some stuff I needed for my stomach pain. I was dressed in orange, with an orange blouse and orange matching sweater that my mother gave me years ago. I was cold, even though outside it was sunny. I arrive at F4L, park, and on my way to the shopping carts a man that passes by, a man on a yellow shirt, says, "You look very good on that orange." Thanks! I reply. The fact that, even with my gloom and bad mood and feeling like shit, this man tells me that I look good, it's something to celebrate and be thankful for!
I always said that I am a very sensitive person, like a sponge. I absorb everything that's floating around me, and I think, well, I guess there is other people like me, very sensitive, I wouldn't think I am the only one, right? And maybe when I am on one of those low mood days, navigating the dangerous waters of depression, I send screams of help! to the air, which is already overwhelmed with other pollutions as to also having tolerate my humors and mood states, and they catch on it. I think they are out there, these people, like the piropo guy in París, and this gentle observer in Pasadena, and... wait! There is another one: the cashier lady at F4L. This is the second time that this exact same thing happens with a cashier of F4L. I get to the cash register, I'm going to pay, and she says: You have very pretty eyes. Oh! Thanks! And then I think, maybe they notice that I am vulnerable, that I need a little push, a little encouragement, and there they come, to rescue me, without they even knowing.
Anyway, celebrating small, every-day happiness.
Labels:
flattery,
generosity,
kindness,
life,
strangers,
vulvnerable
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