And now:Ish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

The news here this evening also made mention of the fact that most people who give in 
the state of Michigan to help out others have incomes under $30,000.  Those who seem 
to have the least to  give are those who seem to give the most..
COMMUNITY is COMing together in UNITY
Ish


Out of a Jam

It was 1933. I had been laid off from my part-time job and could no longer make my 
contribution to the family larder. Our only income was what Mother could make by doing 
dressmaking for others. Then Mother was sick for a few weeks and unable to work. The 
electric company came out and cut off the power when we couldn't pay the bill. Then 
the gas company cut off the gas. Then the water company. But the Health Department 
made them turn the water back on for sanitation reasons. The cupboard got very bare. 
We had a vegetable garden and were able to cook some of its produce on a campfire in 
the back yard.

Then one day my younger sister came skipping home from school saying, "We're supposed 
to bring something to school tomorrow to give to the poor."

Mother started to blurt out, "I don't know of anyone who is any poorer than we are," 
when her mother, who was living with us at the time, shushed her with a hand on her 
arm and a frown.

"Eva," she said, "if you give that child the idea that she is `poor folks' at her age, 
she will be `poor folks' for the rest of her life. There is one jar of that home-made 
jelly left. She can take that."

Grandmother found some tissue paper and a little bit of pink ribbon with which she 
wrapped our last jar of jelly, and Sis tripped off to school the next day proudly 
carrying her "gift to the poor." After that, if there ever was a problem in the 
community, she just naturally assumed that she was supposed to be part of the solution.

By Edgar Bledsoe from A Cup of Chicken Soup for the Soul Copyright 1996 by Jack 
Canfield, Mark Victor Hansen & Barry Spilchuk

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