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 From: [email protected]
To: [email protected], [email protected],  [email protected], 
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CC: [email protected],  [email protected], [email protected], 
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Sent: 11/15/2010 12:58:06 A.M. Central Standard  Time
Subj: Fw: The Cab Ride....worth reading again






----- Forwarded Message ----
From: "[email protected]"  <[email protected]>
Sent:  Sun, November 14, 2010 8:03:37 PM
Subject: The Cab Ride....worth reading  again


 
AWESOME!   I think this one will  stick with you awhile :) 
 
 
 

 

 
     
The 
Cab  Ride


I arrived at the address and  honked the horn. 
after waiting a few minutes
I walked to  the 
door and knocked.. 'Just a minute', answered  a 
frail, elderly voice. I could hear something 
being  dragged across the floor.

After 
a long pause, the door  opened. A small woman in 
her 90's stood before me. She was  wearing a 
print dress and a pillbox hat with a veil  pinned 
on it, like somebody out of a  1940's 
movie.

By her side was a small  nylon 
suitcase. The apartment looked as if no one  had 
lived in it for years. All the furniture  was 
covered with sheets.

There were no 
clocks  on the walls, no knickknacks or utensils 
on the counters. In  the corner was a cardboard 
box filled with photos  and 
glassware.

'Would you carry my bag 
out to  the car?' she said. I took the suitcase 
to the cab, then  returned to assist the 
woman.
She took my arm and we  walked 
slowly toward the curb.
She kept 
thanking me  for my kindness. 'It's nothing', I 
told her.. 'I just try to  treat my passengers 
the way I would want my mother to  be
treated.'
'Oh, you're such a good 
boy, she said. When  we got in the cab, she gave 
me an address and then asked,  'Could you drive 
through downtown?'

'It's not  the 
shortest way ma'am,' I  answered 
quickly..

'Oh, I don't mind,'  she 
said. 'I'm in no hurry. I'm on my way to  a 
hospice.

I looked in the rear-view 
mirror.  Her eyes were glistening. 'I don't have 
any family left,' she  continued in a soft 
voice.. 'The doctor says I don't have  very 
long.' I quietly reached over and shut off  the 
meter.

'What route would you like me 
to  take?' I asked.
For the next two 
hours, we drove through the  city. She showed me 
the building where she had once worked as  an 
elevator operator.
We drove through  the 
neighborhood where she and her husband had  lived 
when they were newlyweds She had me pull up  in 
front of a furniture warehouse that had once 
been a  ballroom where she had gone dancing as a 
girl.

Sometimes  she'd ask me to slow 
in front of a particular building or  corner and 
would sit staring into the darkness,  saying 
nothing.

As the first hint of sun  was 
creasing the horizon, she suddenly said,  'I'm 
tired. Let's go now'.

We drove in 
silence  to the address she had given me. It was 
a low building, like a  small convalescent home, 
with a driveway that passed under  a 
portico.

Two orderlies came out to 
the cab as  soon as we pulled up. They were 
solicitous and intent, watching  her every move. 
They must have been expecting  her.

I 
opened the trunk and took the small suitcase  to 
the door. The woman was already seated in  a 
wheelchair.

'How much do I owe you?' 
She  asked, reaching into her 
purse.

'Nothing,'  I 
said

'You have to make a living,'  she 
answered.

'There are other 
passengers,' I  responded.

Almost 
without thinking, I bent and gave her  a hug. She 
held onto me tightly.

'You gave  an 
old woman wonderful moments of joy,'  she 
said.
'Thank you.'


I squeezed  her 
hand, then walked into the dim  morning 
light.. Behind me, a door shut. It was the  sound 
of the closing of a life..

I didn't 
pick  up any more passengers that shift. I drove 
aimlessly lost in  thought. For the rest of that 
day, I could hardly talk. What if  that woman had 
gotten an angry driver, or one who was  impatient 
to end his shift?
What 
if I had refused  to take the run, or had honked 
once, then driven  away?

On a quick 
review, I don't think that I have done  anything 
more important in my  life.

We're 
conditioned to think that our lives  revolve 
around great moments.

But great 
moments  often catch us unaware-beautifully 
wrapped in what others may  consider a small 
one.

PEOPLE MAY NOT REMEMBER  EXACTLY 
WHAT YOU DID, OR WHAT YOU SAID ~BUT~THEY  WILL 
ALWAYS REMEMBER HOW YOU MADE  THEM 
FEEL.

You won't get any big surprise 
in 10  days if you send this to ten people. But, 
you might help make  the world a little kinder 
and more compassionate by  sending.
it on and 
reminding us that often it is the random  acts of 
kindness that most benefit all  of 
us.


Life 
may  not be the party we hoped for, but while we 
are here we might  as well dance.
 
 













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