
“What am I doing here? Why am I doing this?” He had stopped in mid-thought to contemplate the meaning of his very existence. He felt he had to know the reason why he was put on this planet, as if he had to have a Reason. Could it be as simple as what he was told — to love God and to love his neighbor, understanding that everyone and anyone was his neighbor? No, it was not just that imperative, it was to share that imperative with his neighbors — to share it with everyone and anyone.
It seemed too simple — wouldn’t people get tired of his constant repetition? “Oh there’s the one-note wonder again, he’s such a one-trick pony. ‘And now for my next trick, another variation on “Love God and love your neighbor, and did I mention that everyone is a neighbor?”’ Boh-ring.”
“I want to love my neighbor,” said one neighbor, “but THOSE PEOPLE don’t want to be my neighbors.”
“Love them anyway,” he said.
“Easy for you to say,” said another neighbor, “but what about HIM? You can’t possibly mean to include —”
“Oh, yes, I do,” he said. “Even he, with all his annoying and alarming proclamations and habits, even he is my neighbor, and I must love him if this is going to work.”
“There’s the flaw in your logic — ‘if this is going to work’ — but it can’t work unless everyone buys into it,” another neighbor insisted.
“No, that’s not true, either,” he said. “It starts with me, doing unto others, and one at a time, we all will love one another eventually.”
“That will take forever, long past our lifetimes,” said another.
“It has been more than 2,000 years now,” he admitted. “Still, there is more love in the world than there was 100 years ago, so it’s slowly working.”
Several neighbors scoffed. “That’s pretty slow progress,” two or three said simultaneously.
“The one who said it first did not say the world would change all at once,” he said.
“Yes, he did,” countered one wag of a neighbor, “something about ‘in a twinkling of an eye,’ as I recall.”
“That’s something else,” he said. “In any case, I have the answer to my original question. This is what I’m here for.”
“What is?”
“To have this conversation. Over and over.”
“Aren’t you bored?” asked a neighbor, “or at least incredibly frustrated?”
“Not yet,” he said, smiling. “I kind of love it.”






