Author
Unknown
Even though it was only September, the air was crisp
and the children were already whispering about Christmas plans and Santa Claus.
It made the already long months until Christmas seem even longer. With each
passing day the children became more anxious, waiting for the final school
bell. Upon its ringing, everyone would run for coats, gloves and the classroom
door, racing to see who would be the first one home: everyone except David.
David was a small boy with messy brown hair and
tattered clothes. I had often wondered what kind of home life David had and
often asked myself what kind of mother could send her son to school dressed so
inappropriately for the cold winter months without coat, boots, or gloves. But
something made David special. It wasn’t his intelligence or manners for they
were as lacking as his winter clothes, but I can never recall looking at David
and not seeing a smile. He was always willing to help and not a day passed that
David didn’t stay after school to straighten chairs and clean erasers. We never
talked much, he would just simply smile and ask what else he could do, then
thank me for letting him stay and slowly head for home.
Weeks passed and the excitement over the coming
Christmas grew into restlessness until the last day of school before the
holiday break. I can’t recall a more anxious group of children as that final
bell rang and they scattered out the door. I smiled in relief as the last of
them hurried out. Turning around, I saw David quietly standing by me desk.
“Aren’t you anxious to get home, David?” I asked.
“No,” he quietly replied.
Ready to go home myself I said, “Well, I think the
chairs and erasers will wait, why don’t you hurry home.”
“I have something for you,” he said and pulled from
behind his back a small box wrapped in old paper and tied with string. Handing
it to me he said anxiously, “Open it!”
I took the box from him, thanked him and slowly
unwrapped it. I lifted the lid and to my surprise saw nothing. I looked at
David’s smiling face and back into the empty box and said, “The box is nice,
but David, it’s empty.”
“Oh, no it isn’t,” said David. “It’s full of love.
My mom told me before she died that love was something you couldn’t see or
touch unless you know it’s there...can you see it?”
Tears filled my eyes as I looked at the proud dirty
face I had rarely given attention to. “Yes, David, I can see it,” I replied.
“Thank you.”
David and I became good
friends after that Christmas and I can say that with the passing years, I never
again let the uncombed hair or dirty faces bother me, and I never forgot the
meaning behind the little empty box that still sits on my desk.
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