Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer, was created in 1939, in Chicago, for the Montgomery Ward department stores for a Christmas promotion. The lyrics were written as a poem by Robert May, but weren't set to music until 1947. Gene Autry recorded the hit song in 1949.
I could have gone to a couple of gatherings at the homes of  friends and family on Boxing Day. I could have stayed home and curled up with a good book all day. The last thing I intended to do with a perfectly good stretch of peace and quiet, was join the throng of post-Christmas shoppers. Yet, when my husband called and asked me to meet him at the mall, I went.

Long lines of loud shoppers stood outside most of the stores. Everyone was noisy and animated. They couldn't get into those stores fast enough to spend their money. We were surprised by the number of young people in the mall. They outnumbered the adults 2 to 1 - easy.

After my husband found what he was looking for, we grabbed a quick bite to eat in the Food Court. I felt a little restless and decided to stay behind and do some research at the book store. I grabbed a pile of reference books, found myself an empty chair, and started making notes.  Four hours slipped away from me.

Still feeling restless, I decided to use the gift certificate  from the bookstore my daughter had given me for Christmas.  I found a beautiful book called 'The Quiet Little Woman' by Louisa May Alcott, and picked it up for my granddaughter.  Then I found 'A Memory of Christmas Tea' by Tom Hegg, and  picked that one up for myself. Since both of the books were  Christmas books, they were 50% off. Perfect. My gift  certificate would cover the cost of both of them.

My research was done, my shopping was finished and I was  getting tired. I couldn't shake the odd, aimless feeling  in my  gut, but I'd run out of excuses to stay in the  store. Finally, I left.

Since my truck had been sitting out in the cold all  afternoon, I let it warm up for a few minutes before  I put it into gear. While I was sitting there, I noticed  a young boy in the next aisle of the parking lot. He
kept ducking down. I knew he wasn't trying to break into  a car, he was in the middle of the aisle-way. The truck  was parked in the farthest spot from the mall entrance,  which gave me plenty of time to watch him make his way  past the cars and trucks.

It wasn't until he crossed over to the aisle I was  parked in, that I realized he was bending down and  picking up change off the ground. He bent down in  front of my truck, and when he stood up, we made
eye contact. I took him to be around ten-years-old.

In that split second, the contrast between the frenzied  kids on their shopping sprees inside the mall, and the  one lone kid picking up change off the ground outside  the mall, was terribly apparent. The youngster in front of me was wearing one blue glove and one tan glove. His coat was about two sizes too small. The zipper was held
in place with a big safety pin. As he walked away from me, I saw his shoes. They looked like they'd outlived their usefulness a couple hundred miles ago.

I rolled down my window and called him over. He came,  sort of. He left a good distance between us, standing hesitantly - poised for flight. I could tell by the fearful look on his face that he half expected me to
yell and chase him off. My heart hurt.

I asked him if he needed some money. His reply was instantaneous. "No, no. That's okay."

The parking lot was wet and slushy. I could tell his feet were cold by the way he kept shifting his weight from one foot to the other.

"Please," I insisted, holding out a five dollar bill. "It's not much, but when money is shared, it seems to go a lot further."

He took a step closer. "Would it be okay if I spend it at McDonald's?" he asked, hiking his thumb over his shoulder, in the direction of the fast food restaurant across the street.

"Sure you can," I answered. "You can spend it wherever you like."

He pulled off one of his gloves and reached for the money. His small hand was red and chafed. That thinly knitted glove wasn't keeping his hand warm at all.

"Would you mind taking these off my hands," I asked, picking up the spare pair of gloves my husband keeps in the truck. They were old, but they were good warm gloves. "I bought my husband a new pair for Christmas, but as long as he's got these ones, those new ones will
sit on the shelf at home and never get used. What do you say? Will you help me out?"

"Okay," he answered. "I'll help you."

He took the five-dollar bill, stuffed it inside his glove and put the glove back on his hand. I passed him my husband's gloves and watched him put them on. A big smile, the first one I'd seen, spread across his face.

"Thanks! These are great!"

"Glad you like them kiddo," were the only words I could get past the lump in my throat. The gloves were way too big for him... and he was so very happy to have them. Most kids his age wouldn't be caught wearing them, period, let alone in public.

He looked over his shoulder, towards McDonalds.

"Are you hungry?" I asked.

He looked down at the ground, "Yes."

"Me too!" I said.

He started to pull the glove off. "Do you want your money back?" he asked, with genuine concern in his voice.

"No, no. I just meant I better get home."

"Oh. Okay."

After another big 'thank you', he walked away. I watched him go. When he got to the road, he turned and waved his small hand, encased in that great big glove, at me.  I waved back, put the truck in gear and drove away. I  didn't want him to see me cry.

The next time I feel restless and off kilter, unable to  figure out why I'm not doing what 'I' think I should be doing, I'm not going to analyze it and wonder what the  heck is wrong with me. I know I'll end up exactly where I'm supposed to be.

© 2000 Terri McPherson
Windsor, Ontario, Canada
"Where I'm Supposed To Be"
"Your friendship is a glowing ember through the year; and each December From its warm and living spark We kindle flame against the dark and with its shining radiance light our tree of faith on Christmas night."
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