
She came up to me as I was walking off stage after speaking at a conference recently.
“I’m so sorry to bother you, but my aunt, Mary, is a long-time reader of your blog. When she found out I was going to be at a conference your were at, she was SO excited.”
She paused and then said, “I hate to ask this of you, but is there any way we could get our picture taken together and you could hold up a piece of paper in the picture that says, ‘Hi, Mary!'”
“Of course”, I replied. But then I thought for a second and said, “However, what if I were to write her a note instead? Maybe that would be more meaningful?”
The conference attendee looked taken aback. “You would do that??”
“Absolutely!” I replied. “But since I don’t know your aunt, could you tell me something I could write to her that would be meaningful?”
It was then that I was taken aback because this sweet woman in front of me all of a sudden got very misty-eyed and choked up.
Finally, she managed to get the words out, “Could you tell her that there are no small ideas? That her ideas and dreams matter?”
I wanted to know the story behind that request, but the next session was starting and I didn’t have time to ask. I grabbed a pen and paper and went to sit down at the back to compose a note.
I wasn’t sure what to say, but I prayed that God would give me the words that this woman needed to hear. And then I just started writing.
My note was something like this, “Dear Mary, I don’t know you, but I want you to know that your ideas matter. The world needs you. We need your gifts and your talents. We need your ideas. God has uniquely gifted you and equipped you. So keep dreaming, don’t give up, and know that there is no idea that is too small. They all matter. You matter. You have a purpose and a story. I am looking forward to seeing how God is going to use you and your ideas. I am cheering for you! -Crystal”
When I was finished, I took the note over to the woman. I bent down and handed it to her and whispered to her to ask her if she could read it to make sure it was appropriate — since I didn’t know her aunt or her aunt’s situation.
She read through it and, as she did so, tears started flowing. She looked at me, gave me a huge hug, and said, “This is perfect. You have no idea how much this will mean to my aunt.”
I walked away with a spring in my step, knowing that the short amount of time I just invested to write that note could possibly change someone’s life — or at least give someone the exact boost they needed to keep moving forward and not give up.
It also made me wonder how many opportunities like that I have overlooked or walked right past — all because I was so focused on my tasks and to-do’s. There are opportunities to reach out and bless someone like this all around us, if we just take the time to see those opportunities and act on them.
Today: Take time to ask how someone really is. Take time to smile. Take time to speak a kind word. Take time to look into someone’s eyes and listen — really listen — to what they are saying.
Write that note, send that text, make that phone call, invite that person over, or do that little extra something to let someone know that you care and that they matter.
We can’t do everything, but we can do something.
We can’t help everyone, but we can help someone.
We can’t change the entire world, but we can make a difference in one life.
So today, I challenge you as I’ve been challenging myself, “Do for one what you wish you could do for all.”
Together, let’s make a difference in our homes, in our neighborhoods, in our communities… and around the world.

Photo quote above from the post on How to Be a Light This Christmas — go read it; it’s excellent.


























