
Piles of refuse, block after block,
homes and their contents, pushed to the curb,
still wet from the driving rain.
•
And on one of the piles a butterfly flaps
its wings in the bright, warm sunlight.
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The smallest joys—tea, a bird, a smile—are not trivial comforts. They are the fabric of decency and resilience.
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The news is grim, the future uncertain, the problems overwhelming. Against that backdrop, what does it matter if you make a perfect cup of tea, or notice a bird on the windowsill, or thank a stranger who holds the door?
It matters more than we think.
Joy in small things is not trivial. It is moral beauty. To delight in details—to savor light on a wall or laugh with a child—is not escapism. It keeps the soul alive.
Even after a recent earthquake, not all the survivors could focus entirely on misery. Some laughed, shared, found beautiful moments. A strain of music, a sip of water, a self-deprecating joke—these were lifelines for suffering people. When it would have been logical to sink into despair, there was illogical joy as a reminder that life, as long as it remains, presents opportunities for delight.
We underrate this resilience. We extol heroism, but mild, unremarkable cheerfulness is another kind of strength. It radiates peace. Gladness for small things is a gift, both for ourselves and for those around us.
Kindness is the same. Real kindness doesn’t demand reciprocity. It doesn’t demand repayment. It appears when needed, in a word, a touch, a look that says: you are seen.
The good does not appear only in dramatic gestures like staging a rebellion, publishing a fiery manifesto, making a sensational sacrifice. Most of the world’s glue is unseen: the neighbor who checks in on an elderly couple, the nurse who takes the trouble to smile at a suffering patient, the parent who always reads a bedtime story despite exhaustion. We weave the fabric of decency from this little threads of kindness.
To live this way requires attention. You must notice the bird, listen to the story, dismiss the distraction. Such gestures keep humaneness alive even in the midst of the most inhumane atrocities.
They also spread joy, lifting others with you. Noticing little joys is an act of generosity.
So yes, the world is heavy. But don’t dismiss the grace of small things. They aren’t diversions from reality. They are reality peeking through the transient misery.
By sharing them with others, no matter how fleetingly, you save both your own soul and theirs.
About the Creator
William Alfred
A retired college teacher who has turned to poetry in his old age.



Comments (2)
Thanks for sharing!
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