'Friends are God's way of taking care of us.'
This was written by a Metro Denver Hospice
Physician:
I was driving home from a meeting this evening about 5,
stuck in traffic on Colorado Blvd., and the car started to choke and splutter
and die - I barely managed to coast into a gas station, glad only that I would
not be blocking traffic and would have a somewhat warm spot to wait for the tow
truck. It wouldn't even turn over. Before I could make the call, I saw a woman
walking out of the quickie mart building, and it looked like she slipped on some
ice and fell into a gas pump, so I got out to see if she was
okay.
When I got there, it looked more like she had been
overcome by sobs than that she had fallen; she was a young woman who looked
really haggard with dark circles under her eyes. She dropped something as I
helped her up, and I picked it up to give it to her.. It was a
nickel.
At that moment, everything came into focus for me: the
crying woman, the ancient Suburban crammed full of stuff with 3 kids in the back
(1 in a car seat) , and the gas pump reading $4.95.
I asked her if she was okay and if she needed help, and
she just kept saying 'I don't want my kids to see me crying! ,' so we stood on
the other side of the pump from her car. She said she was driving to California
and that things were very hard for her right now. So I asked, 'And you were
praying?' That made her back away from me a little, but I assured her I was not
a crazy person and said, 'He heard you, and He sent
me.'
I took out my card and swiped it through the card
reader on the pump so she could fill up her car completely, and while it was
fueling, walked to the next door McDonald's and bought 2 big bags of food, some
gift certificates for more, and a big cup of coffee. She gave the food to the
kids in the car, who attacked it like wolves, and we stood by the pump eating
fries and talking a little.
She told me her name, and that she lived in Kansas City
Her boyfriend left 2 months ago and she had not been able to make ends meet. She
knew she wouldn't have money to pay rent Jan. 1, and finally, in desperation,
had called her parents, with whom she had not spoken in about 5 years. They
lived in California and said she could come live with them and try to get on her
feet there.
So she packed up everything she owned in the car. She
told the kids they were going to California for Christmas, but not that they
were going to live there.
I gave her my gloves, a little hug and said a quick
prayer with her for safety on the road. As I was walking over to my car, she
said, 'So, are you like an angel or something?'
This definitely made me cry. I said, 'Sweetie, at this
time of year angels are really busy, so sometimes God uses regular
people.'
It was so incredible to be a part of someone else's
miracle. And of course, you guessed it, when I got in my car it started right
away and got me home with no problem. I'll put it in the shop tomorrow to check,
but I suspect the mechanic won't find anything
wrong.