I wanted to share this with you all.

Nancy Melucci
LACCD
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I thought Gould's comments very connected to the kindness topic.

Peace

Dan
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>From Portside:

A Time of Gifts

By STEPHEN JAY GOULD
September 26, 2001
<http://www.nytimes.com/2001/09/26/opinion/26GOUL.html?searchpv=nytToday>

The patterns of human history mix decency and
depravity in equal measure. We often assume,
therefore, that such a fine balance of results must
emerge from societies made of decent and depraved
people in equal numbers. But we need to expose and
celebrate the fallacy of this conclusion so that, in
this moment of crisis, we may reaffirm an essential
truth too easily forgotten, and regain some crucial
comfort too readily forgone. Good and kind people
outnumber all others by thousands to one. The tragedy
of human history lies in the enormous potential for
destruction in rare acts of evil, not in the high
frequency of evil people. Complex systems can only be
built step by step, whereas destruction requires but
an instant. Thus, in what I like to call the Great
Asymmetry, every spectacular incident of evil will be
balanced by 10,000 acts of kindness, too often
unnoted and invisible as the "ordinary" efforts of a
vast majority.

We have a duty, almost a holy responsibility, to
record and honor the victorious weight of these
innumerable little kindnesses, when an unprecedented
act of evil so threatens to distort our perception of
ordinary human behavior. I have stood at ground zero,
stunned by the twisted ruins of the largest human
structure ever destroyed in a catastrophic moment. (I
will discount the claims of a few biblical
literalists for the Tower of Babel.) And I have
contemplated a single day of carnage that our nation
has not suffered since battles that still evoke
passions and tears, nearly 150 years later: Antietam,
Gettysburg, Cold Harbor. The scene is insufferably
sad, but not at all depressing. Rather, ground zero
can only be described, in the lost meaning of a grand
old word, as "sublime," in the sense of awe inspired
by solemnity.

In human terms, ground zero is the focal point for a
vast web of bustling goodness, channeling uncountable
deeds of kindness from an entire planet — the acts
that must be recorded to reaffirm the overwhelming
weight of human decency. The rubble of ground zero
stands mute, while a beehive of human activity churns
within, and radiates outward, as everyone makes a
selfless contribution, big or tiny according to means
and skills, but each of equal worth. My wife and
stepdaughter established a depot on Spring Street to
collect and ferry needed items in short supply,
including face masks and shoe inserts, to the workers
at ground zero. Word spreads like a fire of goodness,
and people stream in, bringing gifts from a pocketful
of batteries to a $10,000 purchase of hard hats, made
on the spot at a local supply house and delivered
right to us.

I will cite but one tiny story, among so many, to add
to the count that will overwhelm the power of any
terrorist's act. And by such tales, multiplied many
millionfold, let those few depraved people finally
understand why their vision of inspired fear cannot
prevail over ordinary decency. As we left a local
restaurant to make a delivery to ground zero late one
evening, the cook gave us a shopping bag and said:
"Here's a dozen apple brown bettys, our best dessert,
still warm. Please give them to the rescue workers."
How lovely, I thought, but how meaningless, except as
an act of solidarity, connecting the cook to the
cleanup. Still, we promised that we would make the
distribution, and we put the bag of 12 apple brown
bettys atop several thousand face masks and shoe
pads.

Twelve apple brown bettys into the breach. Twelve
apple brown bettys for thousands of workers. And then
I learned something important that I should never
have forgotten — and the joke turned on me. Those 12
apple brown bettys went like literal hot cakes. These
trivial symbols in my initial judgment turned into
little drops of gold within a rainstorm of similar
offerings for the stomach and soul, from children's
postcards to cheers by the roadside. We gave the last
one to a firefighter, an older man in a young crowd,
sitting alone in utter exhaustion as he inserted one
of our shoe pads. And he said, with a twinkle and a
smile restored to his face: "Thank you. This is the
most lovely thing I've seen in four days — and still
warm!"

Stephen Jay Gould, a professor of zoology at Harvard,
is the author of "Questioning the Millennium."
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