There's a kid down the hall. He's got a baseball game--the whole team was in the motel's breakfast room not long ago, a sea of red. He's one of 'em, cap on backwards for style.
We're away from home and in a motel for the first time in a long, long time, my first trip out from home since Thanksgiving, not that last one either. We're going to see how it goes, this tag-team of me and my wife/nurse/housemaid. I'm not swift.
I've left the room before her because I couldn't be slower if I was harpooned. It's not that long ago that it took the a whole baseball team to get me out of the car, but I've graduated from the wheelchair, and then from the walker, and I'm on the cane now, slow as molasses and wobbly as a drunken sailor.
So this kid--I swear, fifty feet down the hall--spots me coming and kindly opens the inside exit door. Two of his teammates have already exploded out, but he sees the crippled guy stumbling down the hall and he think what he really should do is hold the door open. So he does.
Little inklings of grace.
So when I get up to him, I tell him what a wonderful thing it was for him to think of this guy with the cane way up the hallway. I want to grab him and hug him, but it wouldn't be kosher. Maybe if I was female.
Anyway, I stumble through the door and by now his brawny coach/dad has just caught up. He heard me. In a minute he knew the whole story. "That's really great, Jonathan," he says as I finally get out the door.
Inklings of grace.
And another. I'm several days off on my visit to the dentist. I thought the appointment was today. When I drive in, I'm sort of non-plussed because the parking lot is empty, but I park, stumble up the curb (got the cane again), and a dental assistant steps out. "Are you here for an appointment?" she says sweetly.
I tell her yes, and that I think I'm on time.
"Wrong date," she says, follows me in. "No appointments today--we're working on some new program.. . ."
She's very sweet, accustomed to dealing with old joes with memory issues. Then, just as I turn around, she says, "Your shoestring is open"-- and, lo and behold, it is. . .hence the photograph.
So here's to all of those who help those of us who require more help--the kid in the baseball cap and the office manager who make my life--and the lives of countless others--just a step or two easier.
Inklings of grace. You're a blessing.
(I'd like to hug you, but it wouldn't be kosher.)