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Comparing Two Sides 4-2-2021 |
The Scale Tips The Wrong Way In Hawaii, I've seen three lanes of solid traffic just silently merge into two so the ambulance never had to slow down. Cars, a sheet of paper from each other, windows down so side mirrors can overlap. People smile and talk to total strangers. After, the cars once more, silently, resume their original lanes and continue on in their journey. Yesterday, three lifetimes passed, and someone died because people couldn't get out of their own way. In Hawaii, Kapuna speak softly and the children listen even if they do not always hear the message with both ears. Eventually, the ears will dance, and the child learns. Today I watched a tired child pull on mother's arm as mother pulled reluctant one along. Until his legs folded, collapsed mid-aisle. In tears, he lay on the floor. The mother yelled, her voice strident as squawking goose. There would be no dancing. In Hawaii, people stop when the sun sets beyond the mountain or sinks into the sea. Cars pull to the side of the road, And the people, as one, native and tourist, acknowledge the passing of the day they've been given. At home, we stop even though the sun sets over neighbor's house, bisected by trees and wires, allowing but a glimpse. Did you see the sunset? But no, they hadn't noticed at all. Any more than the day they took for granted. |