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Creative
Ways to Transform Challenges:
Living
in the Moment
Life’s Hidden Beauty Kent Nerburn
Last week I was sitting on a park
bench, reading a book, taking in the rich, warmth of an early springtime
day. A child kept moving around me,
making noises, puttering, going back and forth. I tried to pay no attention, but
the intrusion was getting irritating. There was no one else around, and this
child seemed intent upon either annoying me or getting my attention.
Finally, a bit exasperated, I
looked up. A young boy of maybe ten or twelve was straddling the bar of his
dirt bike, staring at me. He was small for his age, and had a kind of
indeterminate retardation that made me feel ashamed for my annoyance. His hair
was black and stringy, his eyes wide apart, and his teeth crooked and ill-cared
for. When he saw me looking, he grinned and waved. His movements were stiff and
jerky, as if his muscles were a beat behind his intentions. But his look had
the innocence of angels.
He said something to me, but it
was unintelligible.
“Excuse me?” I said, hoping now to engage him
in conversation since he so clearly wanted my attention. His eyes darted quickly. My inability to
understand him had reinforced his sense of isolation. “Nothing,” he said
clumsily, and looked down.
My mind raced back over the
unintelligible syllables, trying to reconstruct them. There had been three,
mumbled in a kind of singsong way that faded out at the end.
I took a chance. “Did you say,
“What’s my name?’” I asked. His grin opened like the sun. He waved his hand in
ecstatic affirmation and nodded his head vigorously.
“It’s ‘Kent’,” I said.
He laughed, and nodded wildly.
“Kent,” he repeated. “Kent.”
Then he said it again, more
quietly, as if savoring it; as if it were some sort of magical incantation.
“My bike,” he said proudly,
pointing at the dented, rusty dirt bike he was riding. It was his pride, his
self worth, his closest and perhaps only friend.
I was about to ask him his name
when he pushed on one of the pedals and went wobbling off down the sidewalk.
He circled once to make sure I was
watching.
“Kent,” he said, waving and watching. “Kent.”
In his lonely world, he had made
what passed for a friend.
I watched
as he rode happily down the street. His
track was straight and true. Somehow the
bike gave him a steadiness his own hands and feet could not provide.
He rode
to the middle of the next block, turned his bike abruptly, jumped the curb, and
slid to a perfect stop in the middle of a yard.
A woman
was standing on the steps, waiting for him. She gathered him to her, pulling him close, as
if he had been gone too far, or too long.
They
stood there in the afternoon sun. She stroked his hair like one strokes the
hair of a toddler, or an infant. He
leaned against her, making no effort to pull away, resting in his mother’s
embrace like a peaceful and weary child.
I thought
of my own son, only a few years older than this boy and increasingly
uncomfortable with parental touch as he seeks to separate and define himself in
an autonomous adult world. How much his
mother and I would love to receive a hug of this purity and innocence. But those days are gone now. He is a child breaking away into his own
private manhood, and his love is expressed with more caution and
circumspection.
I glanced
back at the woman and her child. It was
a tableau to melt the hardest heart.
There, in the gentle grace of the afternoon sun, a mother and child
stood, comfortable in each other’s embrace, framed by the glowing springtime
light.
How lucky
you are, I thought, to know such guileless love. What a gift you have been given, to know a
child who will never grow beyond childhood innocence.
How blind we often are to life’s hidden gifts. This boy, who looks for all the world like a
burden to be born, is, truly, a blessing to be cherished. In his childish joy, his simple life in the
present tense, he offers the gift of a pure and unmediated heart to those who
are lucky enough to look up and meet his gaze.
I sat
back on the bench and returned to my book.
The day seemed gentler, the sun, warmer. A young boy and his mother had given me a
glimpse into life’s hidden beauty, and I, on that day, had been blessed enough
to see it.
I hope
that I will keep this understanding, and not turn my eyes back only to the sadness
and difficulty that is everywhere around us.
For there are blessings in the shadows, beauty in life’s most ordinary
moments.
The greatest gift we can give to
ourselves and others is to learn to see these blessings, then to pass that gift
along.
Based on the book The Hidden
Beauty of Everyday Life © 2006 by Kent Nerburn. Printed
with permission of New World Library, Novato,
CA. http://www.newworldlibrary.com or
800-972-6657 ext. 52.
Kent Nerburn holds a Ph.D. in Religion and Art and writes books
that reveal the spiritual dimension of the ordinary moments of our everyday
lives. His most recent work, The Hidden
Beauty of Everyday Life joins Simple
Truths and Small Graces as the
conclusion of a trilogy filled with inspirational stories. He lives with his
wife and son in northern Minnesota.
Copyright
© 2006
Life Challenges
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