LEAD. April 2020 | Page 22

referred to as “big sister.” I delight in being called “Auntie.” There were more greetings and hugs and explanations of what happened to the electricity. Bob, an elderly man who lives alone, came out of his house holding a fistful of Tootsie Pops for the kids. He smiled as they each politely thanked him before tearing off the wrappers and shoving the trash into parents’ pockets and the suckers into their mouths. And that’s pretty much how the evening went. We laughed and chatted and watched the children play. If we’ve lost our sense of togetherness, it’s because we have learned to rush from one thing to the next, mind our own business, and live a life “looking out for number one.” After a couple of hours, the sun was getting low and the kids were getting hungry. We slowly wandered back up the street to our own home and fed the kids peanut butter and jelly sandwiches for dinner. Later, as I was lying in bed, I thought about the turn of events that evening. We had all truly enjoyed leaving the routine of our homes for a couple of hours and simply gathering together to connect. Why didn’t we do this more often? Why did it take a transformer blowing to coax us out of our 22 homes and into each other’s front yards and lives. In all our day­ to­ day busyness, distractions, and even complacency, we are missing out on something vital: each other. We don’t know who lives in our neighborhoods because we’re too absorbed with what’s happening within our own walls or on our screens to venture out. As I considered this, I felt a bit like an ostrich with her head stuck in the sand who suddenly looks up and discovers what she’s been missing. What did I actually know about my neighbors and what is happening in their lives? Whose heart is breaking a block away? Whose family just fell apart? Who just took in a foster child? Who had to admit their parent into a nursing home? Who just went to the hospital? Do we recognize the lonely among us when we rush by them? Do we recognize the loneliness in ourselves, or have we masked it with routines, activities, and to-do lists? How can we see people, understand them, and feel with them if we’re constantly running past them or jumping to the next event? Empathy, like love, is patient. It takes time. When we call out “Hi! How are you?” as we pass each other on the street, in the store, or in the church hallways, we can pause and turn it from a mindless greeting into a sincere question as we wait for the answer and linger long enough to ask follow­up questions. When we see someone looking sad, confused, or downcast on the bus bench or in the office breakroom, we can stop to ask, “Are you