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There’s nothing like being home for the holidays. But for families with a child in the hospital, being home for Christmas might not be a reality. I vividly remember one Christmas when my sister, then undergoing treatment at two years old, and our family found ourselves celebrating Christmas in the hospital. The room exuded an air of gloom and despair, casting a dark shadow over what should have been a time of celebration.


Unexpectedly, a nurse appeared at our door, announcing a visitor. Intrigued, we wondered who would be dropping by on Christmas Day. In walked a group of unfamiliar faces, a congregation of kind souls from a local church. Their offering? A meticulously crafted, stunningly beautiful gingerbread house. Every detail was meticulously designed, even the interior of the gingerbread house was decorated. We had never seen anything quite like it. Their gesture might have seemed small to them, but its impact to us was immeasurable. That gingerbread house brought an abundance of joy to our family in that darkened hospital room. Throughout the day, my sisters and I couldn't take our eyes off that marvelous creation.


Years later, that memory remains etched in my mind. It was a simple act of kindness by strangers that left an indelible mark on our family. So much so we made it a tradition to pay forward the kindness we received every Christmas Eve. Each of us would craft our own gingerbread houses and take them to local hospitals, gifting them to families enduring similar challenges. It became a tradition I cherished, seeing smiling faces from families in the hospital when they received the gingerbread houses.


This story serves as a gentle nudge, a reminder that even the smallest acts of kindness can yield extraordinary power, especially when someone needs it most. When the group of ladies walked into our room that morning, it was as if God was telling our family, “I see you, you are not forgotten, and you will get through this.”


What small act of kindness can you share to bring light to someone's holiday season?

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