Deep Creek Jamin Java Devotion September 9, 2010
My instinctive reaction was to continue walking up the mountain, forget about her, and go straight home. Then a thought surfaced: “When you are ‘down-and-out’ do something for another. It will turn your thoughts around.” “Well, I’ll try it,” I said to myself. “After all, it has probably been a bad day at the nursing home, too.”
2 Corinthians 1:4 He comforts us in all our affliction, so that we may be able to comfort those who are in any kind of affliction, through the comfort we ourselves receive from God.
When I got to her room, she was lying on her bed, gazing out the window, watching the raindrops fall. A tear, as big as a raindrop, slid silently down her face. “Good evening,” I said. “It’s a dreary day, isn’t it?” She did not speak, but I can imagine what she would say, “You don’t know how dreary unless you were here. This kind of weather makes me depressed, and I have more aches than normal.”
I talked with her for a few minutes, and soon she was smiling. Her face reminded me of the sky after the rain has passed. Then I thought of my feelings. In trying to lift her feelings, I found that my bad mood had disappeared. I had been reluctant to come, but that was exactly what I had needed to do. Reaching out to others in love can solve many of our problems. The next time we are depressed, we need to remember to reach out to someone more depressed than we are. Lifting others up can bring a smile, not only to their face, but to ours as well. Think of others when you are depressed.