세탁소에서 생긴 일 - 꽃자리 (Wrtten many years ago)
An Incident at the Dry Cleaner’s – “Flower Seat” (Written Many Years Ago)
Flower Seat (poem by Koo Sang)
So warm, so grateful, so joyful.
The seat you sit on is a flower seat.
The very seat you now feel like a thorny cushion
is indeed your flower seat.
So warm, so grateful, so joyful.
—Koo Sang
It’s been 19 full years since I started running a dry-cleaning shop here in Brooklyn in 1990, now entering its 20th year.
The history of our dry-cleaning shop parallels the age of our eldest son.
We started this business when Jun-gi(Andrew) was born.
Reflecting on nearly 20 years of running the shop, we managed to buy a home, and our children grew up without major troubles, for which I should be endlessly grateful.
Yet I confess I spent much more time complaining and grumbling than offering thanks.
To be fair, it wasn’t easy to leave home every day at 5:30 a.m. to open the shop by 7 a.m.
The constant fatigue was like a shadow over my life.
During our busiest periods, I often worked through the day without time for lunch
At such moments, I would glance at the crucifix in the shop and vent all my frustrations.
“Lord, instead of just standing there staring at me, why don’t you come down and do this work for me?
I’ll take your place on the cross!”
Like a petulant child, I would pour out complaints in this manner.
Only now, in this economic downturn, do I realize that those busy times weren’t burdens but blessings of material grace.
Running a dry-cleaning shop comes with its challenges, one of which is dealing with filthy, foul-smelling clothes. Occasionally, I’d feel as if I were buried under a heap of trash.
How often have I pitied myself, thinking it pathetic to live like this in America?
Dissatisfaction with my work and the thought that coming to America had “ruined my life” crossed my mind more times in a single day than I could count.
Indeed, my workplace, where I spent 12 hours a day, felt like a thorny cushion—a gashi bangseok.
I often grumbled that I bore a cross on my shoulders no lighter than that of Jesus himself.
Then, a couple of weeks ago, James, one of our regulars, walked in just as I opened the shop.
Holding some clothes, he asked if I could have them cleaned by the afternoon since he had a hospital appointment.
James, a widower living alone, often brought in dirty clothes with the distinct odor of bachelor life, which made me inwardly recoil. That day was no different—my brow furrowed instinctively as soon as he stepped inside.
“Oh, what a life I’ve got…”
But then I noticed something unusual about his wrist as he set his clothes on the counter.
The bone in his wrist protruded to the size of a ping-pong ball.
Taken aback, I asked about it, and he explained that he had a spinal and bone condition that caused him lifelong pain. His father and siblings had suffered from the same illness, and the surviving siblings were still enduring the agony.
Unexpectedly, I felt a surge of compassion.
I gently held his wrist and offered words of comfort from the depths of my heart.
Encouraged by this, James confided that he was also suffering from an enlarged prostate, which made even urinating a struggle. That very morning, he had spent over 30 minutes trying to relieve himself.
Through James, I came to realize how much I took for granted, from eating to drinking to simply going to the bathroom without pain. These daily acts, which I had always considered mundane, were actually immense blessings.
That day, James left the shop with a smile so bright it seemed as if his ailments had vanished.
But in truth, it was I who had a more transformative experience.
Simply by opening my heart and listening, I had made him happy, and his happiness, in turn, filled my day with joy.
Heaven, as some spiritual writers suggest, might be the state of breaking free from the prison of oneself and entering into true communion with God and neighbor. When the fog lifts and the world reveals itself in clarity, that is when heaven unfolds before us.
Living with such a heart makes even the thorny cushion we sit on transform into a flower seat.
On that day, through his innocent smile, James gently reminded me of this truth.
'나의 이야기' 카테고리의 다른 글
겨울 해바라기 (3) | 2024.12.05 |
---|---|
월동준비 (23) | 2024.12.03 |
가끔은 멈추어 서서 돌아보기 (2) | 2024.11.29 |
백수가 모닝 커피 즐기는 법 (3) | 2024.11.23 |
Carpe Diem - 종이 비행기(7년 전 이야기) (13) | 2024.11.22 |