âThree things in human life are important: the first is to be kind; the second is to be kind; and the third is to be kind.â ~Henry James
Some lessons you learn once, and they last a lifetime.
I loved to bake as a child, and one day I put a bowl of batter in the microwave with the metal whisk I was using to stir it. A minute later, I pulled the bowl out of the microwave and grabbed the hot metal whisk with my bare hand.
When I think about it, I can still feel the burn from the metal that took several weeks to heal.
Some lessons last a lifetime.
And some donât.
When I was a little girl, we had a housekeeper for about a month. We came home one day to find that she had stolen several things from our home.
âMom! Can you believe Lupe stole these things?! How could she?!â
My mom barely reacted to this news. âShe must have needed them more than we did.â
I was outraged. âHow can you say that? What she did was wrong!â
My mom calmly replied, âMelanie, you never know what someone else is going through.â
I wish Iâd remembered that lesson many years later when I was the unit coordinator of an emergency room.
Patients, medical staff, family members, paramedics, and the intercom created a cacophony of voices. People were shouting and running, beeps and buzzers were going off, and the phones were ringing constantly.
There was a separate phone used for patient calls. Its distinctive ring was as welcome as a hammer to my skull on this frenetic day. Just my luck, I was at the desk next to the room of a patient who called every five minutes.
BEEP! BEEP! BEEP!
First, she called for ice chips. She needed her bed raised; she needed her bed lowered. She needed the phone, and then she needed the phone hung up.
Every request she had was heralded by that awful BEEP! BEEP! BEEP!
I could have handled it if she asked for what she needed in a normal voice. Instead, she whined each request, as if she was at deathâs door, which Iâm sure she was not.
âOoh,â she whined, âI need the TV remote.â
Anyone whose biggest problem is not being able to reach the TV remote has it good in the emergency room, wouldnât you say?
I mean, we were in a major trauma center. There were people getting CPR, coming in with gunshot wounds, or rushing to surgery as soon as they came through the door, at the same time this woman was whining about not being able to reach the TV remote.
I thought this was my chance to help her get a new perspective and realize that really, she had it good. It kind of felt like my duty. Like Iâd be doing her a favor.
So I said, âWell, at least itâs just an issue with your TV remote. There are plenty of people here who wonât survive the night, so youâre doing well to be concerned about watching TV.â
Her eyes grew wide with shock. Her voice softened with the awe of someone who had just been given great wisdom.
âWow. Youâre so right. I should be thankful Iâm here and doing okay.â
I sauntered out of her room, feeling great about myself. I really did a good thing. I was like a divine messenger.
When I got back to the nursesâ station, I decided for kicks to look and see why the woman was in the emergency room in the first place. Probably a stubbed toe or something lame like that. I looked at her chart. Heart transplant recipient, renal failure, blood transfusions.
She was only thirty-five years old.
I felt like Iâd been hit with a brick.
And there she was, thanking me for helping her see that her situation wasnât that bad. That just made it worse.
I wanted to walk in there and say, âYou know what? Your situation is bad! You want some more ice chips?â
I may not have a physical scar to show, but the shock and shame I felt after reading that womanâs chart went far deeper than the burn from the metal whisk.
Some lessons last a lifetime.
I still judge people. Who doesnât? Itâs like my brain receives information and immediately makes a decision about it.
But I know enough now to remind myself that Iâm only seeing part of the picture. Maybe the woman in the hospital called me into her room because she didnât want to be alone. Maybe she was scared. I donât know.
And thatâs the point. We never know what someone else is going through, whether itâs a housekeeper stealing from her employer, a woman in the hospital incessantly using her call button, or someone who cuts you off on the highway.
We never know what someone else is going through.
What we can do is give other people the benefit of the doubt and choose to show them kindness and compassion.
I know itâs hard sometimes to feel compassion for someone who is really rude or annoying. Thatâs when I create a story to explain their behavior.
The guy who was rude to me at the grocery storeâdid you know he just got diagnosed with gonorrhea? From his mistress? And his wife is pregnant with another manâs baby?
No wonder heâs in such a bad mood.
Making up silly stories helps me lighten up. It helps me remember that Iâm only seeing one snippet of this personâs life. They could be longing for a breath of kindness, a modicum of compassion.
And thatâs something I can give.
About Melanie Jade Rummel
Melanie Jade Rummel is a Medium who shares positive, loving messages from Spirit Guides. She is the host of the weekly video series, TrueYou TV, which helps you live your truth and love your life. Melanie shares daily inspiration on facebook. Visit her at MelanieJadeRummel.com.