By Metta Lepouse Mayer
It is easy to get discouraged by the endless needs around us. I try to keep in touch with suffering through my involvement with Amnesty International. Their meetings, videos and pamphlets are often agonizing, but they succeed in shattering my bourgeois tranquility. I write letters and keep in touch, hoping for a Burmese sister, a Sudanese grandfather, or a Haitian child. Letterwriting seems so humble in the midst of great suffering, but the results are tangible.
By Metta Lepouse Mayer
It is easy to get discouraged by the endless needs around us. I try to keep in touch with suffering through my involvement with Amnesty International. Their meetings, videos and pamphlets are often agonizing, but they succeed in shattering my bourgeois tranquility. I write letters and keep in touch, hoping for a Burmese sister, a Sudanese grandfather, or a Haitian child. Letterwriting seems so humble in the midst of great suffering, but the results are tangible. Over 1,000 prisoners were released in 1994. Only a drop in an ocean of tears, but that drop relieves!
This is one thing ordinary, non-heroic people can do. There are countless more. We can take on one thing at a time. One cause, one person, one breath at a time.
Metta Lepouse Mayer, True Abode of Trust, is a registered nurse in Vancouver, Washington.