The Weeping Lady

I’m not a very good storyteller. I have limited imagination – I usually limit my thoughts to the good and the beautiful; otherwise, my mind can take me to risqué, unwanted scenarios, and these stress me out, sometimes leading to headaches and vomiting episodes. But I do like crafting nice, feel-good stories without the horrid characters. Like this one. 


THE WEEPING LADY

Somewhere in a far away land, there once was a young maiden who came to be known as The Weeping Lady. She was actually a beautiful woman, but since she took to endless crying, her face began to look unpleasant, which depressed her and made her cry even more. Days, weeks and months passed and tears just kept on rolling from her eyes until she has actually cried a river! Well, admittedly, it was just a small river, but hey, that was a river nonetheless.

One day, an old woman chanced upon The Weeping Lady by her river of tears. Taking pity on her, the old woman approached her.

“What troubles you, dear, that you should weep so much?” the old woman asked.

“Oh, I feel so lonely. I don’t want to do anything but cry and cry all the time. I live by myself and no one wants to come near me. I am utterly miserable”, the lady answered in-between sobs.

“Ah, you poor child,” the old woman said in understanding, “loneliness is a natural emotion which visits people sometimes, but you must not allow it to stay. You should be busy, think of other thoughts, and your loneliness will move away. Here’s what you can do – find some blessing behind your sorrows, and share it, and you’ll see, you will be happy again. Here,” she said, opening her sack and fishing out a plant with young, green leaves and brown, sturdy roots, “this is one such thing that will grow from your river of tears.”

“What shall I do with it?” the young lady asked, as she took the plant in her hands.

“Give it space in your little river. Allow it to grow and see what happens,” the old woman answered as she began to leave.

“You are very kind”, the young maiden said as her lips parted in the dawning of a smile.

 Days passed and The Weeping Lady did not weep as much as she used to. She was getting fascinated by the growth of her little plant.

One day, she was very thrilled to find that a lovely pink bud had risen proudly from its roots. And when the sun came and touched it with its warm rays, the bud blossomed into a big, many-petalled flower! The moment she saw it, she shed tears anew because she had not expected something quite so pretty to come out from her river of tears.

Weeks continued to pass and the plant grew so healthily that the Weeping Lady had to divide it into a number more plants. Then, at last, she stopped weeping altogether for she tended her plants so devotedly that she had no time to cry or fret away. Of late, a couple of fish even made a home of her little river, and before long, had it swarmed by tens of their little ones. As a result, children from the neighboring houses came often to watch her little wards. And when they leave, they take some of her flowers to put into their mothers’ vases.

And so it was that the maiden who once was The Weeping Lady forgot all about her aching loneliness. She started to play with the children, laugh with them, and take delight in simple things with them. Later, she even made friends with the children’s mothers, fathers, and elder brothers and sisters. Now, no one calls her The Weeping Lady anymore, for she is always cheerful and smiling, and her loveliness shines in her face anew.

And by the way, she never forgets to thank God everyday for sending her the old woman who taught her how to find blessing amid her misery, and showed her how to be happy again.

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Well, wasn’t that cheezzy.

Actually, something like that is really happening to us – minus the Weeping Lady, and the flowers. Rather, change the flowers to a guyabano tree.

You see, Nally, our home companion, planted a guyabano seed she took from a fruit we ate, (yes, we did not even buy the seed!) and wonders(!), it magically grew!

And you must know, guyabano is touted as a miracle plant because it is widely believed to cure and prevent certain kinds of cancers. That’s why many people from our subdivision – some we know, some we don’t – come knocking at our gates asking for guyabano leaves which they boil so their loved ones can drink its tea.

And we are happy to share our tree, particularly its leaves. Our guyabano is something so simple and yet it has become a source of various blessings – new friends, good health, shade from the sun, an ornament to our front yard, and well, oxygen.

Most of us have probably something in our lives that we can share; and when we do, will make others happy; and by making them happy, we become happy.