A physician was once summoned to attend to an unusual case. He found a pale, sad, seventeen-year-old, reclining on a sofa, in an ornate room adorned with rich, silk tapestries. Her eyes were half-closed, her head was bowed, and she was pale like a marble statue. Several doctors had been called to examine her and, unable to diagnose her condition, had concluded that her problem was psychosomatic.
At a glance the doctor realized what was wrong with her. she languished in her gilded cage, a self-absorbed prisoner, for she did not know what it was to go out to give happiness to those in need. The doctor asked her to get ready to go out with him.
"With you?" asked the girl. "Where?"
In an undertone, the doctor said to her, "That is a secret. I can only tell you that it is for your own good."
The girl got ready and the doctor took her to a quarter where poor people lived. They carried with them many gifts in cash and kind.
At the first house which they visited, the doctor had to help her to keep her balance, as she walked.
At the second, she went ahead of the doctor.
At the third,she almost ran. When the children kissed her hand and the poor women thanked her, she cried with joy.
The outing seemed too short to her. From then onwards, everybody she searched for those whom she could make happy.
She was restored to good health; she found the joy and happiness, which did not dwell in her palatial home but in the broken cottages of the poor to whom she gave the love of her generous heart.
THE END
by J.P. Vanswani
ကၽြႏ္ုပ္တုိ႔ေပးလိုက္တဲ့ ေပ်ာ္ရႊင္မႈဟာ ကၽြႏ္ုပ္တုိ႔ဆီကိုပဲ ျပန္လာ႐ိုး ထံုးစံပါ.
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