As a man walked a
desolate beach one cold, gray morning he began to see another figure, far in the distance.
Slowly the two approached each other, and he could make out a local native who kept
leaning down, picking something up and throwing it out into the water. Time and again he
hurled things into the ocean.
As the distance between them continued to narrow, the man could see that the native was
picking up starfish that had been washed upon the beach and, one at a time, was throwing
them back into the water.
Puzzled, the man approached the native and asked what he was doing. "I'm throwing
these starfish back into the ocean. You see, it's low tide right now and all of these
starfish have been washed up onto the shore. If I don't throw them back into the sea,
they'll die up here from lack of oxygen."
"But there must be thousands of starfish on this beach," the man replied.
"You can't possibly get to all of them. There are just too many. And this same thing
is probably happening on hundreds of beaches all up and down this coast. Can't you see
that you can't possibly make a difference?"
The local native smiled, bent down and picked up another starfish, and as he threw it back
into the sea he replied, "Made a difference to that one!"
Each of us is but one person: limited, burdened with our own cares and responsibilities.
We may feel there is so much to be done, and we have so little to give. We're usually
short of everything, especially time and money. When we leave this shore, there will still
be millions of starfish stranded on the beach. Maybe we can't change the whole world, but
there isn't one of us who can't help change one person's whole world. One at a time. We
can make a difference.