My Friend's Wife
A friend of mine opened his wife's
underwear drawer and picked up a silk paper wrapped package:
'This, - he said - isn't any ordinary
package.'
He unwrapped the box and stared at both
the silk paper and the box.
'She got this the first time we went to
New York , 8 or 9 years ago. She has never put it on , was saving it for a
special occasion.
Well, I guess this is it.
He got near the bed and placed the gift
box next to the other clothing he was taking to the funeral house, his wife had
just died.
He turned to me and s aid:
'Never save something for a special
occasion.
Every day in your life is a special
occasion'.
I still think those words changed my
life.
Now I read more and clean less.
I sit on the porch without worrying
about anything.
I spend more time with my family, and
less at work.
I understood that life should be a
source of experience to be lived up to, not survived through.
I no longer keep anything.
I use crystal glasses every day....
I'll wear new clothes to go to the
supermarket, if I feel like it.
I don't save my special perfume for
special occasions, I use it whenever I want to.
The words 'Someday.... .' and ' One
Day...' are fading away from my dictionary....
If it's worth seeing, listening or
doing, I want to see, listen or do it now...
I don't know what my friend's wife would
have done if she knew she wouldn't be there the next morning, this nobody can
tell.
I think she might have called her
relatives and closest friends.
She might call old friends to make peace
over past q uarrels.
I'd like to think she would go out for
Chinese, her favourite food.
It's these small things that I would
regret not doing, if I knew my time had come.
Each day, each hour, each minute, is
special.
Live for today, for tomorrow is promised
to no-one.
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