True Fortune
By DESIREE DONN P. MAGLANOC
One day while we were having our Literature Class, we discussed a story entitled “Once Upon a Time” by Nadine Gordimer. She is an African writer who never wrote any children stories. But a particular incident - the current situation of her country during her time inspired her to do so.
Have you ever heard of the apartheid issue in Africa wherein they separated the blacks from the whites and the latter was given more importance?
The story revolves around a white family - a wealthy one. The couple had a son. They had plenty of workers, servants and guards. Their mansion was surrounded by high, thick and majestic walls that the mansion would look like as if it was a prison for top-class criminals. Broken pieces of glass and barb wires added decoration to the already high-end security wall. The grounds were safeguarded by big, active, monstrous watchdogs that would bite anyone that they do not know. And if that wasn’t enough, each corner of the mansion was adorned by security cameras recording every move made within it. This was done so because the whites were afraid that the blacks would one night, break in to their homes, kill everyone inside and get their most prized possessions. The couple had a hard time sleeping every night because of the fear that was developed within themselves, thinking that such things would happen. And every time that the couple would go out, bodyguards would always envelop them almost not allowing any air to pass through them. To put these in simple terms, the couple was practically concerned of their treasures and with their lives as well.
One day while the son was playing outside their house, he was imagining that he was a prince and that the wall that he was facing was a tower where on the other side is his princess waiting for him. So, he was super curious of what was on the other side of the wall and what awaits him on the top. Quickly, he got a ladder went up the steps unaware of the dangers that await him when he reaches the top. When he reached it, he imagined that the barb wires were some kind of a forest that he needed to pass through it slashing each vine that would come in his way. As his feeble and tiny body went deeper into the barb wires, his hands went through the broken glasses, he looked liked a tiny fish that got caught in between the shark’s jaws. The gardener saw the boy struggling for his life and the gardener rushed on top, slowly got the boy’s body out of the intertwining wires and out. His parents saw what happened and they quickly ran to the boy. The boy’s bloody body lay dead in his parents arms.
End of story.
What’s the moral lesson of the story? The world offers so many grandeous things and these things do cover up and block the simplest things that we really need that really make us happy.
After our class, I got a bit hungry so my friends and I went to our cafeteria. After eating, I got bored so I started to observe some students in the cafeteria. Honestly speaking, you can easily distinguish the ”financially blessed” students from those who are not. The rich people eat light foods like salads or sandwiches or a meal that you cannot understand what is it made up of. But the “not-so-blessed” people are not picky with what they eat and they are often shy when they line up and pay for their meal. But, there’s just one thing that I cannot understand: Why do the rich people pay so much for their food and yet they do not finish eating it?
As I weigh things, relating it with the story that we discussed in our class and the observations that I’ve made with the students, I’ve reached a conclusion. One thing is missing in the lives of the family in Africa and of the students in the cafeteria - CHRIST.
When you put Christ in the center of your life, you need not worry of the things that you would need for tomorrow for He has planned and prepared it all. If He can provide the things that the birds need everyday for their survival, how much more to us, the most precious creature He has created and loved the most? What I’m trying to say is, prices may go up, life may get a bit harder as time goes by, money is even harder to find and earn, but one thing will and shall remain - that we have one God to lean on in times of trouble.
Let me close this with a simple mathematical equation that I’ve made to counter the problems that we face everyday:
ADD God in our lives and let Him take control of it, SUBTRACT all your worries and fears, DIVIDE the things that are of no worth and those who have and MULTIPLY not our treasures here on earth but our eternal deposits and investments in Heaven.