What Everyone Should Know


What’s something you believe everyone should know?


Everyone should know that relationships matter. More than success, more than possessions, more than the restless drive to be admired.

When I visit my mother in the nursing home, her world has narrowed to a single room. She doesn’t know what day it is, or sometimes where she is, but each visit circles back to the same tender questions: Do you love me? Have I been a good mother? Have I been a good wife?

We can honestly answer yes to all three. She may feel useless, but she is not. Her life still draws people in — friends, family, nurses — perhaps more visitors than anyone else in the place. They come not out of duty but affection. Her love lingers, even as her strength fades.

In her quiet way, she reminds us what endures. Wealth, influence, busyness — all of it falls away. What remains is the simple, sacred truth that love outlasts everything else. Our relationship with God, with family, with those around us — that is what gives life its meaning.

Daily writing prompt
What’s something you believe everyone should know.


Comments

2 responses to “What Everyone Should Know”

  1. Jo and I learned this lesson from a 90 year old neighbour in Beverly Massachusetts. She was single all her life, her siblings had died before her unmarried and without kids. Mary Burke was the last leaf on the family tree. Yet, she was always receiving visitors, even while aged 96 in an aged care home until the day she died a few hours after our last visit. Her interest in the lives of others was an amazing expression of her habit of loving the people who came to see her. Mary taught us how to grow old.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks Chris. What a great story. People like your neighbour really have an incredible impact on people’s lives.

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