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Extension
Cords Of Hope
by
Victor Parachin
All
of us should live in ways that make a difference to someone, somewhere.
It
was in April 1996, while reading through an optometry journal,
that Cheryl Landry received an overseas calling. The optometrist
from Woonsocket, Rhode island, noticed a recruitment ad for medical
professionals to treat war refugees in Bosnia. When she called
for more information, Landry was told the relief organization
didn't have an established program. However, if she could pay
her own travel expenses and bring all the necessary equipment,
the organization's volunteers would help her reach refugees once
she got there.
When
Landry told her parents and husband, George Rouse, that she felt
compelled to go and help, "it went over like a lead balloon."
While the family was not surprised by her compassion, they were
concerned about her safety. Nevertheless, Landry forged ahead
by launching a massive drive to collect used eyeglasses. Friends,
strangers and eyeglass companies from across the United States
eventually donated 7,000 pairs. For four days prior to her flight,
Landry's living room became an eyeglass "factory". Friends
and colleagues worked around the clock to clean, repair, label
and bag the lenses.
As
soon as she landed with her 18 boxes of glasses in Split, Croatia,
Landry started examining patients at orphanages, asylums and refugee
camps. In a region where a single pair of glasses costs a month's
salary, "people were very grateful," Landry says. Yet,
her accomplishments were bittersweet because Landry could meet
only a fraction of the need.
"When
I tried to leave, people were running after me, yelling, 'Doctor!
Doctor! Please, please!"' she recalls painfully. She returned
again three more times, but on those occasions she tried to focus
on children, the war's youngest victims. Even though she saw go
children per day, some continue to stand out in her mind. There
was a 5-year-old girl whose severely crossed eyes straightened
instantly with proper lenses. And there was a little boy in an
orphanage who had been found in a garbage can. He was farsighted
but was wearing lenses designed for someone with severe nearsightedness.
Because of the great need, Landry is planning additional visits
to the area.
Cheryl
Landry can best be described as a person who is an extension cord
of hope. She brings light into the dark and despairing places
of life. Like Landry, all of us should live in ways that make
a difference to someone, somewhere. "Do all the good you
can, to all the people you can, in all the ways you can, as often
as ever you can, as long as you can," urged the 19th century
minister and writer Charles Haddon Spurgeon.
Of
course, not everyone can cross an ocean to help in a war-torn
country as Cheryl Landry did. Yet there are needs that can be
met in every neighborhood, community even within a family. Here
are some ways of being extension cords of hope where you live
and work:
1) Give someone a break. If it is within your
means, make good things happen to someone who is in need. Be stimulated
by this wisdom from German novelist Johann Paul Friedrich Richter:
"Do not wait for extraordinary circumstances to do good.
Try to use ordinary situations."
Consider
the generosity and compassion exhibited by a few individuals in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. A few years ago, 12-year-old Joey
Jones was living with his mother in a homeless shelter. There
he happened to see ice skating competitions on television. Although
he had never skated in his life, Joey was fascinated by what he
saw. He pleaded with his mother to take him ice skating. When
she was finally able to generate enough discretionary income,
she took him to a local ice rink. There, an ice skating coach
spotted Joey's natural talent and began coaching him free of charge.
Soon
others, inspired by both Joey's ability and the coach's generosity,
began donating money to help Joey train. With available money,
Joey began working out at the rink four hours per day. Within
a year, he won a gold medal at the State Games of America in St.
Louis, Missouri. Today he and his mother are no longer homeless
and Joey has a beautiful dream that motivates his life—he
hopes to make it to the Olympics and become a world champion skater.
2)
Shine light into a dark place. Be the bearer
of light for someone who is in a dark place. Tammy Parker of Dallas,
Texas, is a single mother with one child. They reside in a small
apartment and live from paycheck to paycheck. Every Christmas
Parker receives a bonus. One year she decided to spend a substantial
part of that bonus on someone, like herself, who is struggling
financially.
She
called her local grocery store manager asking if he knew of anyone
who needed some help at Christmas. The manager told her about
a young woman whose husband was injured and unable to work. Parker
also learned the family had two children aged 10 and 4, both of
whom understood why they could not have Christmas that year. Parker
and her daughter, Brittany, went out and spent $200 of her bonus
to make sure the family had a wonderful and blessed Christmas.
For Parker it was not only an opportunity to share from her "abundance"
but to show her daughter that although they don't have much, there
are those who have less and that it is important to remember them.
3) Put love where there is indifference. Be guided
by this wisdom from Mother Teresa: "Let us not be satisfied
with just giving money. Money is not enough; money can be got,
but [people] need your hearts to love them. So, spread your love
everywhere you go; first of all in your own home. Give love to
your children to your wife or husband, to a next-door neighbor".
Remember that the love you share softens the blows of life and
provides a vital buffer against life's bruises.
4)
Use your hardships to make life easier for others.
"Into each life some rain must fall; some days must be dark
and dreary," wrote the poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Take
the rain that has fallen into your life and use that past pain
as a motivator to make life easier for others.
When
singer Shania Twain grew up in Timmins, Ontario, Canada, her father,
Jerry, was regularly out of work. He was too proud to accept any
form of public assistance, which often meant the refrigerator
was empty and the children were hungry. "Most kids feel inferior
if they don't have the right jeans on," says Twain. I was
way beyond that. I was worried about what was in my lunch. Nobody
knew we were hungry, and I did everything I could to hide it,"
often bringing a mustard sandwich to school, she recalls.
Twain
has never forgotten her experience with poverty. Today, proceeds
from her concerts are donated to local charities that aid hungry
children. The connection is intensely personal for Twain: I was
that hungry kid," she explains. "My goal is to save
kids the humiliation, the anguish of feeling inferior."
Like
Twain, we should take whatever suffering, hardship or difficulty
has come into our lives and use the experience to humanize our
soul, sensitize our spirit and energize our will.
Victor
Parachin is a minister and freelance writer living in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

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