[mountainmilers] It's What You Scatter.....a story I want to share with my friends...

  • From: Golfdood51@xxxxxxx
  • To: mountainmilers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Thu, 5 Jul 2012 19:35:39 -0400 (EDT)


 


 
 
 
 
 
 
 
     
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

I was at the corner grocery  store buying some early potatoes... I noticed 
a small boy,  delicate of bone and feature, ragged but clean, hungrily 
apprising  a basket of
Freshly picked green peas.

I paid for  my potatoes but was also drawn to the display of fresh green 
peas.  I am a pushover for creamed peas and new potatoes.
Pondering  the peas, I couldn't help overhearing the conversation between 
Mr.  Miller (the store owner) and the ragged boy next to  me.

'Hello Barry, how are you today?'


'H'lo, Mr.  Miller. Fine, thank ya. Jus' admirin'
Them peas. They sure look  good.' 
'They are good, Barry.  How's your Ma?'

'Fine.  Gittin' stronger alla' time.'

'Good.  Anything I can help you with?' 

'No, Sir.  Jus' admirin' them peas.'
'Would you like to take some home?'  Asked Mr. Miller. 

'No, Sir.  Got nuthin' to pay for 'em with.'
'Well, what have you to trade  me for some of those peas?'
'All I got's my prize marble  here..'

'Is that  right? Let me see it' said Miller.

'Here 'tis.  She's a dandy.'

'I can see  that. Hmm mmm, only thing is this one is blue and I sort of go 
for  red. Do you have a red one like this at home?' the store owner  asked..
'Not zackley but almost.'

'Tell you what. Take  this sack of peas home with you and next trip this 
way let me look  at that red marble'. Mr. Miller told the boy.
'Sure will.  Thanks Mr. Miller.'

Mrs. Miller,  who had been standing nearby, came over to help  me. 
With a smile she said,  'There are two other boys like him in our 
community, all three are  in very poor circumstances. Jim just loves to bargain 
with 
them  for peas, apples, tomatoes, or whatever.
When they come bac k  with their red marbles, and they always do, he 
decides he doesn't  like red after all and he sends them home with a bag of 
produce  for a green marble or an orange one, when they come on their next  
trip 
to the store.' 
I left the  store smiling to myself, impressed with this man. A short time  
later I moved to Colorado , but I never forgot the story of this  man, the 
boys, and their bartering for  marbles. 

Several years went  by, each more rapid than the previous one. Just 
recently I had  occasion to visit some old friends in that Idaho community and  
while I was there learned that Mr. Miller had died. They were  having his 
visitation that evening and knowing my friends wanted  to go, I agreed to 
accompany them. Upon arrival at the mortuary we  fell into line to meet the 
relatives of the deceased and to offer  whatever words of comfort we could.

Ahead of us in lin e  were three young men. One was in an army uniform and 
the other two  wore nice haircuts, dark suits and white shirts...all very  
professional looking. They approached Mrs. Miller, standing  composed and 
smiling by her husband's  casket. 
Each of the young men  hugged her, kissed her on the cheek, spoke briefly 
with her and  moved on to the casket. Her misty light blue eyes followed them 
 as, one by one; each young man stopped briefly and placed his own  warm 
hand over the cold pale hand in the casket. Each left the  mortuary awkwardly, 
wiping his  eyes. 

Our turn  came to meet Mrs. Miller. I told her who I was and reminded her 
of  the story from those many years ago and what she had told me about  her 
husband's bartering for marbles. With her eyes  glistening,
She took my hand and led me to the  casket.


'Those three  young men who just left were the boys I told you  about.

They just told me how they appreciated the things  Jim 'traded' them. Now, 
at last, when Jim could not change his  mind about color or size......they 
came to pay their  debt.'

'We've never  had a great deal of the wealth of this world,' she confided, 
'but  right now, Jim would consider himself the richest man in Idaho  .' 
With loving gentleness she  lifted the lifeless fingers of her deceased 
husband. Resting  underneath were three exquisitely shined red  marbles. 
The  Moral: 
We will not be  remembered by our words, but by our kind deeds. Life is not 
 measured by the breaths we take, but by the moments that take our  breath 
away. 

Today I wish  you a day of ordinary miracles ~ A fresh pot of coffee you 
didn't  make yourself...
An unexpected phone call from an old friend...  Green stoplights on your 
way to work....
The fastest line at  the grocery store.... 
A good  sing-along song on the  radio... 
Your keys found right  where you left them. 

Send  this to the people you'll never forget.

I just  did...

If you don't send it to anyone, it means you are in  way too much of a 
hurry to even notice the ordinary miracles when  they occur. 

IT'S NOT  WHAT YOU GATHER, BUT
WHAT YOU SCATTER THAT TELLS WHAT KIND OF  LIFE YOU HAVE LIVED! 





























 
 
      
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