The Ticket

This was my first published work. See www.HeroicStories.com

 

Towards the end of July 2004, Japan's west coast was beset by another typhoon, the latest in a record-breaking series to hit the mainland. The news featured typhoon rains for days. Large areas in Niigata and Fukui prefectures (states) were devastated. My wife's in-laws are from that area, and  we were relieved they escaped real damage. Luckily, they lived on high ground. Others not so lucky were missing; at least three people were dead.

 

The TV showed roads washed away, bridges collapsed, houses half-buried in mud and flotsam, cars washed away by the floodwaters' force. It showed images of people on rooftops escaping floods below, waiting to be rescued, waving and calling for help to helicopters filming them. Thousands were evacuated until the floodwaters receded.

 

Despite all this grim coverage, only days later did a news report finally bring tears to my eyes. Somebody sent a letter to the Fukui disaster management center, addressed to the Governor of the prefecture. They expressed condolences to those who had suffered loss, and offered assistance in the form of a lottery ticket. They apologized for sending the ticket without cashing it first, and for not delivering it in person, as they wished to remain anonymous.

 

The prefectural government found that while the return address on the letter was fake, the ticket itself was real. It was a ticket for the nationwide "TAKARAKUJI" lottery held a month previously. Not just any ticket though,  -- it was the winning ticket, for the top prize of 200 million yen (US$1.8 million).

 

After the taped news report, the announcer wondered aloud what kind of person would do such a thing. This person had held this winning ticket for over a month, probably planning all the ways they would enjoy their newfound wealth. They probably wondered how to invest it, how much to splurge, what luxuries to buy first, whether they could quit their job, how their life would change in so many ways...

 

Yet this person, who received a once in a lifetime stroke of good luck, chose to let it go. They realized that others needed that good luck more than they did. It was a person selfless enough to give it all, rather than give a portion of their winnings and retain the rest. Someone humble enough to apologize for not delivering the money in person, and for troubling the prefectural government to cash the ticket. Someone wise enough to realize that helping others might just be a bigger prize than lottery winnings.

 

At a press conference, the Governor of Fukui promised the money would be divided among the families whose homes were lost or damaged. He said he wished he could meet the donor directly, and thank them face to face. Expressing thanks in Japan is an important social responsibility.

 

Yet the donor's choices created a gift within a gift. Each person helped by the donor may now wonder of everyone they meet: Is this the one who was selfless, wise and humble enough to give up their lottery ticket to help us in our time of need? Is this who I should thank? They would never be able to take anyone they meet for granted again. Every person they meet might be the person who helped them. Then again, they might think, every person they meet might be someone who may help them in the future. And for that reason, they should treat them with respect. They should even go so far as to help that person if they can. Because of that donor's selflessness, many people in that region are probably being a lot nicer to each other now than they were before, and that makes the world a better place.


 

Copyright (C) 1997-2011 A.Keyes All Rights Reserved.

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