goodweblistings.com goodweblistings.com
Search:    Index Page :> About Us :> Privacy :> Terms of Use :> Add Your Link :> Submit Article   
 

Developing Your Successor - The Mentoring Process

This article is about succession throughout the organization. The future of your company depends on ... - Rick Johnson
 

Adults Building Self Confidence

If you?re a parent, you would have read about 1,001 articles and about a few dozen books on how impo ... - Marsha Maung
 

I Don't Really Care What You Know!

Most people don't care what we know these days. They want to see what we are doing in order to belie ... - Adebola Oni
 
 

Keep Buggering On - Winston Churchill

How Winston Churchill defied the odds and kept going in the face of adversity. - Stephen Hopson
 

How to Recognize Alcoholism

Alcoholism is a devastating disease that effects millions of people every year. Recognizing alcoholi ... - Stephen Kreutzer
 

10 Reasons Why Friendliness Is A Leadership Necessity

In leadership, friendliness is not simply a nice personality trait but an essential requirement of g ... - Brent Filson
 

One Single Secret to Goal Setting Success

Smart thoughts about goal setting ? be inspired! - Yuliya Muravey
 

Achieve Your Goal

Have you seen those ads that promise to make thousands and millions of dollars over night, they are ... - Kenia Morales
 
 

Index Page › Self Help › Grief Loss & Recovery
 

An Unexpected Letter

 

It was a couple of weeks after Christmas, and I was standing by my mailbox in the vestibule of the apartment building where I lived in Lexington, Kentucky, holding a letter I had just received. The handwriting was not familiar and neither was the return address, although it was postmarked Seattle, Washington, the same place where Hannah Paulson used to live.

Many years ago when I was a little girl growing up on our dairy farm in west central Wisconsin, the Paulsons had lived next door to us. The two farms were the only residences located on our mile-long stretch of isolated country road, and during the summer, I journeyed down the hill a couple of times a week to visit Hannah. With her hair arranged in waves swept back from her forehead and kindly blue eyes twinkling from behind wire-rimmed spectacles, she wore cotton shirtwaist dresses in the summer and a blue-and-white or pink-and-white checkered apron.

Going to see Hannah was the highlight of my summer vacations. There was just something about Mrs. Paulson that drew me to her like the bees that were drawn to the wild roses growing around her big, old-fashioned farmhouse. I never considered that it might be rather unusual for me to enjoy visiting our elderly neighbor, even though there were no other neighbors with children for me to play with, and no other children in my family (my brother is twenty-one years older than me and my sister is nineteen years older).

During the summer, Hannah and I would cut and arrange flowers because Mrs. Paulson loved to have flowers in her house. At other times I would find her working on a project, like cleaning out the old chicken coop, or painting the barn, or weeding her garden. No matter what Hannah was doing, she always let me help.

On days when it was too hot to be outside, we sat in Mrs. Paulson's kitchen and ate homemade oatmeal cookies. Hannah would ask me about the books I was reading (I loved to read), and she would tell me about the books she had liked to read when she was a little girl.

Hannah and her husband, Bill, had lived in Seattle before they bought the farm next to ours. The farm had belonged to a relative of theirs, and they had wanted to live in the country again. At one time, they had owned a farm in South Dakota. Hannah had been a kindergarten teacher when they lived in Washington, although she was retired by the time they were our neighbors. As the Paulsons grew older and the farm became too much for them to take care of, they decided to move back to the west coast and settled in Oregon. And yet, as I contemplated the letter I had just received at my apartment in Lexington, I still couldnt figure out who would be writing to me from Seattle. Especially since I knew it wasnt Hannah.

I took the letter upstairs to the apartment to read it. I sat down at the kitchen table, and inside the envelope was a single sheet of note paper covered with elegant, spidery handwriting. I glanced at the name on the bottom but didnt recognize it, then I went back to the top and began to read

Thank you for all of your kind words to my sister, Hannah Paulson. I dont know who you are, but you must have had a special, wonderful relationship with her. Unfortunately, Hannah died the day before your letter arrived

I sat there for a few moments, stunned.

Hannah was dead? And she hadnt read my letter?

You see, for some inexplicable reason, a few weeks before Christmas I was overcome by the strongest feeling that I ought to write to our former neighbor and thank her for being so kind to me when I was a little girl. Although the longer I considered the idea the more ridiculous it seemed to write to someone I hadnt seen in about fifteen years just to say thank you for being nice to me when I was a kid. So, I kept telling myself I didnt have to do it right now that I could always do it tomorrow.

I knew my mother still occasionally exchanged letters with Hannah, and when I finally concluded the nagging feeling was not going to go away, I called my mother in Wisconsin, got Hannahs address, wrote a letter and sent it in a Christmas card. After I mailed the envelope, I felt a certain sense of satisfaction, as if I had finally paid off an old debt.

Except that now Hannah was dead. And she hadn't read my letter.

As soon as the shock wore off a little bit, I called my mother. And when I told her that Hannah had died, we both began to cry.

All those years when I could have written, but I didnt, I said in a choked voice. And now shell never know"

I heard Mom heave a deep sigh. Oh, sweetheart, of course Hannah knew. Besides, she enjoyed your visits as much as you enjoyed going to see her.

Nothing my mother said made me feel any better. If only I had written a week earlier. Or even just a day

Twenty years later, I still cant help wishing that Hannah had been able to read my letter. She was one of the best friends I've ever had, but I never told her what her kindness meant to a lonely little girl who had no one to play with.

Then again, maybe that was Hannah's greatest gift to me. Through my procrastination in writing one simple letter, I learned that I should never put off until tomorrow telling my dearest friends and loved ones how I feel about them. No one knows, after all, when there might not be any more tomorrows.

******************

Author: LeAnn R. Ralph
 
Author Bio:
LeAnn R. Ralph is a well-known scripter. LeAnn likes to create articles about this industry.
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Sell More & Speak Better By Relaxing Until It's Too Late
 
For the New Widow - Deal Yourself a Deck of Joy - 52 Ways to Manage Your Grief
 
Improve Your Conversations By Watching Talk Show Hosts
 
Remembering What You Read - Nine Effective Strategies
 
Anxiety & Panic - Make Your Information Work for You
 
The Healing Powers of Journaling
 
What is Stress Relief: Part 1
 
Are We Running out of Time?
 
The Main Thing Is To Keep The Main Thing, The Main Thing
 
Alchemy Of Creating Reality - A to Z
 
 
 
Multiple links exchange
 

Drink & Food

Shopping Online

Recreation

Self Help

Computers & Networking

Teens & Kids

Family & Home

Art & Creative

Careers & Employment

Fitness & Health

Fashion & Relationships

Medicine & Treatment

Law & Politics

Automobile & Automotive

Science & Research

Events & News

Outdoor & Sports

Online & Board Games

Society & Issues

Business & Services

Tour & Travel

Education & Learning

Property & Estate

Finance & Investment

 
Index Page :> Privacy :> Terms of Use
© 2008 www.goodweblistings.com All Rights Reserved.