Hello Everyone
This is well worth reading.
God bless
Abraham
Fujairah/UAE


THAT'S WHAT FRIENDS DO
Jack tossed the papers on my desk  his eyebrows knit into a straight line
as he glared at me. "What's wrong?" I asked.
He jabbed a finger at the proposal. "Next time you want to change anything,
ask me first," he said, turning on his heels and leaving me stewing in
anger.
How dare he treat me like that, I thought. I had changed one long sentence,
and corrected grammar -- something I thought I was paid to do.
It's not that I hadn't been warned. The other women, who had served in my
place before me, called him names I couldn't repeat.
One co-worker took me aside the first day. "He's personally responsible for
two different secretaries leaving the firm," she whispered.
As the weeks went by, I grew to despise Jack. It was against everything I
believed in -- turn the other cheek
and love your enemies.
But Jack quickly slapped a verbal insult on any cheek turned his way. I
prayed about it, but to be honest, I wanted to put him in his place, not
love him.

One day, another of his episodes left me in tears. I stormed into his
office, prepared to lose my job if needed, but not before I let the man know
how I felt. I opened the door and Jack glanced up.
"What?" he said abruptly.
Suddenly I knew what I had to do. After all, he deserved it.
I sat across from him. "Jack, the way you've been treating me is wrong. I've
never had anyone speak to me that way. As a professional, it's wrong, and
it's wrong for me to allow it to continue," I said.
Jack snickered nervously and leaned back in his chair. I closed my eyes
briefly. God help me, I prayed.
"I want to make you a promise. I will be a friend," I said. "I will treat
you as you deserve to be treated, with
respect and kindness. You deserve that," I said. "Everybody does." I slipped
out of the chair and closed the door behind me.
Jack avoided me the rest of the week. Proposals, specs, and letters appeared
on my desk while I was at lunch, and the corrected versions were not seen
again. I brought cookies to the office one day and left a batch on Jack's
desk. Another day I left a note. "Hope your day is going great," it read.
Over the next few weeks, Jack reappeared. He was reserved, but there were no
other episodes. Co-workers cornered me in the break room.
"Guess you got to Jack," they said. "You must have told him off good." I
shook my head.
"Jack and I are becoming friends," I said in faith. I refused to talk about
him. Every time I saw Jack in the hall, I smiled at him.
After all, THAT'S WHAT FRIENDS DO .
One year after our "talk", I discovered I had breast cancer. I was 32, the
mother of three beautiful young
children, and scared. The cancer had metastasized to my lymph nodes and the
statistics were not great for
long-term survival. After surgery, I visited with friends and loved ones who
tried to find the right words to say. No one knew what to say. Many said the
wrong things . Others wept, and I tried to encourage them. I clung to hope.
The last day of my hospital stay, the door darkened and Jack stood awkwardly
on the threshold. I waved him in with a smile and he walked over to my bed
and, without a word, placed a bundle beside me. Inside lay several bulbs.
"Tulips," he said. I smiled, not understanding.
He cleared his throat. "If you plant them when you get home, they'll come up
next spring." He shuffled his feet. "I just wanted you to know that I think
you'll be there to see them when they come up."
Tears clouded my eyes and I reached out my hand.
"Thank you," I whispered.
Jack grasped my hand and gruffly replied,"You're welcome. You can't see it
now, but next spring you'll see the colors I picked out for you." He turned
and left without a word.
I have seen those red and white striped tulips push through the soil every
spring for over ten years now. In fact, this September the doctor will
declare me cured. I've seen my children graduate from high school and
enter college. In a moment when I prayed for just the right word, a man with
very few words said all the right things. After all, THAT'S WHAT FRIENDS DO
.

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