I was recently reminded of how seemingly unimportant conversations touch others as I sat in a Starbucks in a small town in western Canada and read the handwritten message on the plastic cup that held my iced venti latte.
The message read:
Lethbridge will miss you! – SBUX #4628
For those of you who don’t know me well, I do some of my best work in coffee shops across North America. They give me an opportunity to stay energized on caffeine, an opportunity to concentrate in a place where my anonymity allows me to focus, a chance to get to know the city or town I am in (all the good and bad news of a city flows through the local coffee shop) and an opportunity to interact with amazing people. I become a bit of a local fixture -- the mysterious stranger who engages in passionate conversation about any subject before disappearing as suddenly as he appeared.
I am the type of person who engages in conversation with everybody … sitting beside me on the plane, standing in the line at the supermarket, attending to my table in a restaurant and yes, hanging out at the coffee shop. Some of my greatest friendships have started this way.
When I interact with people like this, I am given an opportunity to gain insight into what makes people happy, sad, angry, perplexed and the whole menagerie of other things we all experience daily.
I also have an opportunity to see that people today, despite all of our connectivity through texting, Facebook, Twitter and other forms of communication, still really appreciate a good ol’ honest-to-goodness face-to-face conversation.
I would almost suggest that we hunger for them more than ever.
Our world is becoming one of instant, quick, often sterile exchanges of information. Sure we insert abbreviations like LOL (laughing out loud), ROFL (rolling on the floor laughing) and the like, but nothing beats real laughter shared in person.
I am also made aware of how many people out there hunger for someone to listen to them; someone who reaches out to a stranger and says a kind word that suggests that if they need someone to listen to, then the “ear” has just arrived. This is not an “ear” that will judge but rather, an “ear” of a new friend who cares and who is genuinely interesting in hearing their story.
For many who need that “ear”, they are not necessarily looking for a solution. However, sharing a burden oftentimes can help lighten someone’s load. To know one is not alone is a powerful aid to overcoming many of today’s challenges.
For a powerful example of the importance of such spontaneous, often short-lived conversations, please click here to read my detailed blog. In it, I tell the story of how two strangers come together for less than five minutes and produce a result that changed the lives of both people forever.
Every conversation has the opportunity to change a life forever.
Perhaps it is someone else’s.
Perhaps it is yours.
As for the wonderful folks at the Starbucks in Lethbridge, I’ll stop in again soon to say hi. The same goes for the great people at Coffee Matters in Paradise, Newfoundland, Canada and my favorite little places in New York, Chicago, Atlanta, Ottawa and everywhere else I have parked myself to muse upon the workings of the world.
And when I get there, perhaps I will be blessed to have a conversation with you. If you’re shy, that’s not a problem. I will say hi first to get us started. :-)
In service and servanthood.
Harry
For my detailed blog, “The Importance of Conversation”, please click here.
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