My feel-good stories might have started as bus stories but, as I’ve written previously, later spread far and wide beyond the confines of public transportation.
I resumed taking buses when I did, only because I started working at The Jerusalem Post – after a period of predominant unemployment – and frankly, I preferred to avoid the stress of grappling with other drivers on the highways on my way to work and then back home after a long day on the job.
But even if I was leaving the driving to the Superbus company, it was a bit nerve-racking just being a passenger. Measuring two meters between where I sat and the person closest to me, wondering whether to move to another seat when another passenger boarded the bus and moved closer, and making sure that a window was open nearby.
But I digress. I’d like to address the questions which I’ve been asked many times about my anecdotes on day-to-day life: Is this story really true, how come these stories happen only to you, do you have a sign on your forehead which asks people to do something nice?
Let me first address another question which I am asked: Don’t bad things happen to you?
The answer to that question is simple: Yes.
There have been many days when something has frustrated me, perhaps even angered me. I apologize to my wife that she’s been there to hear my wrath from those experiences. On the other hand, my social media audience has been lucky enough to get the good that has come out of my day.
Case in point: I never posted this story. This is officially a Jerusalem Report exclusive.
I was walking down the street, not taking the bus but passing near the stop where I usually board to travel to work. I wanted to glance at the electronic schedule board to see how frequent the service was amid the COVID clampdown.
I noticed a man wandering and pondering near the stop. I was nervous. During these difficult times, I’ve much preferred it when people just stand in one place: at the bus stop, the street prayer service, wherever.
And then, as I walked by the man and toward the electronic board, it happened.
He sneezed.
Your brain tells you to just continue walking forward. Your emotion, however, makes you look at the perpetrator. My fears were realized; he was not wearing a mask. Well, he was, but since we don’t sneeze from our chin, I think we can say he wasn’t wearing a mask.
I stared at him, trying to keep a distance, with a look of horror on my mouth-and-nose-covered face: “You sneezed... and without a mask!” I shouted at him.
I can laugh now because I have finished counting the days since that incident happened. As I write these words, a week has passed. I am also starting to feel more confident about taking walks and getting on buses because I have taken both Pfizer anti-COVID injections, though I realize that we are still far from being out of the woods.
However, on that Monday evening, January 18, I was shaking. Yes, I know that it’s coughing, not sneezing, that’s a symptom of the virus, but he had just spewed his germs into the air.
Then, I stopped, and I told myself that my Facebook audience would not hear about this story. I reminded myself of what I had seen a few moments before the scary incident.
Upon arriving home from that walk, I sat down at the desk in my office, and typed the following story for my followers to enjoy:
When I witnessed that story, I was uplifted. And I decided that it would be the story that would stay with me that night and that the world would hear about on social media.
The stories are out there and we live at a time when the sadness must be confronted by the goodness that gives us hope. On Saturday night, January 23, I was driving in Jerusalem. There was a very quick roadblock that was actually planted there probably not as part of the corona crackdown but due to the nearby weekly protests against the prime minister.
This story is so heart-warming and yet another indication of how so many people in Israel feel like family. It’s a story of a cop at a roadblock but it turns into a sign of solidarity, a gesture to perpetuate the memory of yet another person who has died from the virus.
We live in a country that is filled with people who can be tough but also loving, who constantly reveal the true inner concern that each shares for the other.
And the bus drivers are continuing to call me to make sure that I have bus stories even if I’m still not using public transportation as much as in the past.
Late one night in January, a driver wanted to tell me about something that happened on his bus that day.
Finally, to answer that often-asked question: How come these stories happen only to me? Actually, I don’t know the answer, but on January 26, Facebook sent me a memory from last year. This is what I had posted:
That, my friends, was the kind of story that was far more likely to happen before COVID-19 struck. It was just before the pandemic struck. May those better times return speedily. ■