Monday, July 9, 2007

conversation overheard on the train

So almost every morning I wake up to my alarm and my first thought of the day is generally, "Oh man i REALLY don't want to go to work today." So i lay in bed until the last possible minute and then ultimately I'm forced to begin my day. It wasn't until this morning that I felt somewhat foolish and even spoiled for my attitude when I happened to overhear a conversation on the train.

It was just my luck that I was sandwiched in between two people who were having a conversation. My initial reaction to this was severe annoyance as they seemed to talk through me, as if I didn't even exist. It was a conversation between two strangers that was continuing from the train platform where they initially met a few minutes earlier. It was between a man and a woman in their late 40's. At first I simply thought that the man was hitting on this woman, and perhaps he was. Since I was stuck right in the middle of their conversation, I had nothing better to do than sit there and listen.

The man offered the woman a business card of a temp agency where he assured her she could find a temp job that paid up to $12 an hour. At first I was really surprised at how responsive she was to this offer. I mean in Chicago you can barley buy a drink for $12 let alone make an actual, survivable living.

So the man exits the train after a few stops and then the woman makes a cellphone call. She relays to the person the other end about what just happened and exclaimed, "God is great. God is great." She was sincerely grateful for the chance encounter that just happened.
That statement immediately brought me back to a week earlier when I had attended a Baptist service with a friend I was visiting. During the service this same phrase was exclaimed over and over. Although I'm not a terribly religious person, I can certainly recognize and appreciate the underlying truth and purpose of that statement.

I couldn't help but feel horribly self-centered and in-compassionate. It's not that I'm a bad person. It's that I very rarely take stock in what I have and what I have accomplished and truly feel grateful... that is until that humbling experience this morning. So often I focus on the smaller inconveniences in life... my commute, my student loan payments, not having a trust fund to fuel my every desire. Instead I should remember how genuinely lucky I am to have been afforded an education that has given me a not just a job but a career and a shot at a future that a lot of other people would be jealous of. The hard part is just trying to remember that at 6:30am.

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