My daughter
handed me her school progress report. Although it displayed a steady stream of
positive check marks, there was one check mark standing dejectedly alone from
the rest.
“How am I doing,
Mom?” my child asked with a level of maturity that did not match the small disheveled
person gazing up at me with smudged eyeglasses that teetered on the tip of her
nose. With her small finger, she pointed to her teacher’s neatly printed words
next to the lone check mark.
It read:
"Distracted in large groups." But I already knew this. I knew
this long before it was written on an official report card. Since she was a
toddler, this child has offered astute observations of the world around her.
After pointing
out all the positives on the progress report, I told her what was written. Upon
hearing the news, she gave a tiny, uncertain smile and shyly admitted, “I do
look around a lot.”
But before my
child could feel one ounce of shame, one iota of failure, I came down on bended
knee and looked her straight in the eye. I didn’t want her to just hear these
words, I wanted her to feel them. This is what I said:
“Yes. You do look
around a lot. You noticed Sam sitting off by himself with a skinned knee on the
field trip, and you comforted him."
"You noticed
Banjo had a running nose, and the vet said it was a good thing we brought him
in when we did."
"You noticed
our waitress was working really hard and suggested we leave an extra good tip.
You noticed Grandpa was walking slower than the rest of us so you waited for
him."
"You notice
the beautiful view every time we cross the bridge to go to swim practice."
"And you
know what? I don’t ever want you to stop noticing because that is your gift. It
is your gift that you give to the world.”
As I watched my
daughter beam with the glow of acceptance, I realized her approach to life had
the power to change the world.
You see, we are
all just waiting for someone to notice—notice our pain, notice our scars,
notice our fear, notice our joy, notice our triumphs, notice our courage.
And the one who
notices is a rare and beautiful gift.
SOURCE:
~Rachel Macy
Stafford, author of "Hands Free Life." Her author page is
@TheHandsFreeRevolution on Facebook.
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