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Heart Strings
Author and lecturer Leo Buscaglia once
talked about a
contest he was asked to judge. The purpose of the contest was to find
the
most caring child. The winner was a four-year-old child whose next door
neighbor was an elderly gentleman who had recently lost his wife. Upon
seeing the man cry, the little boy went into the old gentleman's yard,
climbed onto his lap, and just sat there. When his mother asked him
what
he had said to the neighbor, the little boy said, "Nothing, I just
helped
him cry."
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Teacher Debbie Moon's first graders were
discussing a
picture of a family. One little boy in the picture had a different
color
hair than the other family members. One child suggested that he was
adopted
and a little girl said, "I know all about adoptions because I was
adopted."
"What does it mean to be adopted?" asked another child. "It means,"
said
the girl, "that you grew in your mommy's heart instead of her tummy."
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A four-year-old was at the pediatrician
for a check up.
As the doctor looked down her ears with an otoscope, he asked, "Do you
think I'll find Big Bird in here?" The little girl stayed silent. Next,
the doctor took a tongue depressor and looked down her throat. He
asked,
"Do you think I'll find the Cookie Monster down there?" Again, the
little
girl was silent. Then the doctor put a stethoscope to her chest. As he
listened to her heartbeat, he asked, "Do you think I'll hear Barney in
there?" "Oh, no!" the little girl replied. "Jesus is in my heart.
Barney's
on my underpants."
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Whenever I'm disappointed with my spot
in my life, I stop
and think about little Jamie Scott. Jamie was trying out for a part in
a school play. His mother told me that he'd set his heart on being in
it,
though she feared he would not be chosen. On the day the parts were
awarded,
I went with her to collect him after school. Jamie rushed up to her,
eyes
shining with pride and excitement. "Guess what Mom," he shouted, and
then
said those words that will remain a lesson to me: "I've been chosen to
clap and cheer."
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An Eye Witness Account from New York
City, on a cold day
in December: A little boy about 10 years old was standing before a shoe
store on the roadway, barefooted, peering through the window, and
shivering
with cold. A lady approached the boy and said, "My little fellow, why
are
you looking so earnestly in that window?" "I was asking God to give me
a pair of shoes," was the boy's reply.
The lady took him by the hand and went
into the store
and asked the clerk to get half a dozen pairs of socks for the boy. She
then asked if he could give her a basin of water and a towel. He
quickly
brought them to her. She took the little fellow to the back part of the
store and, removing her gloves, knelt down, washed his little feet, and
dried them with a towel. By this time the clerk had returned with the
socks.
Placing a pair upon the boy's feet, she purchased him a pair of shoes.
She tied up the remaining pairs of socks and gave them to him. She
patted
him on the head and said, "No doubt, my little fellow, you feel more
comfortable
now?" As she turned to go, the astonished lad caught her by the hand,
and
looking up in her face, with tears in his eyes, answered the question
with
these "Are you God's Wife?"
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