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The Little Girl and The Well

It was spring, and a little girl named Rebecca skipped and

danced through the grassy field near her farmhouse. Her

pigtails bounced up and down as she skipped and ran through

the field of bluebonnets and wildflowers. At the back of the

farmhouse was an old well. Her inquisitive mind wanted to

see what was inside the well and imagined what could be

 hiding there. Instead of seeing something that might lurk in

 her imagination, Rebecca saw a reflection of a little girl with rosy

cheeks, freckles, and auburn hair. She smiled at her reflection, watched the clouds roll, and played hide

and seek with her friends.

The next time the well saw Rebecca was in autumn when

she was a young lady. The well noticed that she was dressed

up with a pretty skirt and blouse, and on her feet were high

heels. Her makeup was perfect, and her hair was brushed, curled, and styled.

Rebecca walked up to the well and saw a different reflection.

She noticed imperfections with her hair

and weight and how she could improve. The well saw that the

little girl was changing and was not content with herself.

“I’ve got to hurry, or I will be late” was the last words

the well heard that reflected the young girl’s exact reflection.

New reflections could be seen now and then, and

the image looked different each time. One morning the girl’s

review was in a pretty wedding dress, and the next time, the well saw a reflection of a woman taking her little girl for

a walk.

The well saw several seasons of good and stormy weather

and observed that Rebecca did not have as much spring in her

step as before. There were seasons of summer, spring,

fall, and some frozen winters, but the woman survived. What

became clear is that despite the troubled times and pitfalls,

the young lady stayed hopeful. One fabulous winter day, the well-thought-about lady who used to visit and wondered what

had happened.

He waited for her return and wanted to know how her

life was going. An older woman walked by and the well

thought she looked familiar, but he hardly recognized her. The

reflection showed wrinkles, bags under her eyes, gray hair,

and a disposition that was “tired, run-down, and beat.” The

woman looked at her reflection in the well and started to cry,

“What happened to me? Is nothing left of my youth?”

The well said,

“It was replaced with something much better.” The

woman exclaimed in a puzzled voice,

“What can be better than youth?”

The well smiled through the ripples in the water.

“Rebecca, you have wisdom, grace, and more beauty

than ever before because each wrinkle reflects the moments

of good and bad that you have gone through. Each gray hair

on your head was placed there for the times you worried and

prayed for your loved ones and family. Swiftness had now

gone to your little girl, that likes to climb trees and jog along

the track. You are slowing down, but that’s OK. You rarely rest because there is still that “sparkle” in your

eye that “I’m not finished yet.”

The older woman smiled and said,

“You never worried about how you looked, and you are

getting rusted around the metal, and you have cobwebs where

you have not been taken care of.”

The well said,

“I never worried about how I looked because I wanted others

to see a positive reflection when they looked inside me. It was

more important that others saw the best in themselves.”

Rebecca pondered what a well would want to be and

then asked the question.

“What were you meant to be then?”

The well replied,

“Just a well and being what I was created to be is just

fine with me.”

The woman got reflective and said,

“You know, being what I was created to be is OK with

me too!

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