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WHAT CAN ONE PERSON DO?


 

The question returns like an old echo in the walkways of the human soul: What can one person do? Not shouted in defiance, but whispered in weariness. I have heard it too often—posed by good men and women who find themselves overwhelmed by the world’s harshness, dismayed by its injustices, and perhaps most hauntingly, paralysed by the fear that they are too small to make any dent in its great, groaning machinery.

 

There is a peculiar despair that afflicts the modern man—what psychologists might call learned helplessness, but what I believe is more accurately a poverty of imagination. The world has taught us, relentlessly, that only the grand matters—the institution, the influencer, the revolution. And yet, history teaches the opposite: that evil creeps not by armies alone but by the silence of the good; that hope is often kindled not by thunder, but by a candle lit in an unseen room.

 

It was on such a reflection that I wandered one warm afternoon with my youngest cousin through the polished marble halls of a luxury mall. As the harsh sun gave way to a gentler dusk, the air of London turned cool and almost forgiving. We stopped to purchase shoes at Salvatore Ferragamo and were soon swept into coffee and conversation with two of his classmates.

 

The boys—young, intelligent, talkative—rambled through a litany of modern passions: cars, algorithms, championships, and boasts. My cousin was largely silent. But I have come to understand that silence is not always the absence of thought; more often, it is the presence of discernment. He, unlike many, did not need to prove his presence by volume.

 

My cousin is a paradox of the sort that modern psychology rarely accounts for: a soul both rooted and free. He is possessed of a strong body, sharpened by athletics and discipline, and yet governed by a tender spirit—one capable of laughter, of kindness, and of clarity. He will enter a rugby field with bruising force, and emerge bloodied but calm, speaking to me not of pain, but of joy. And even when I—driven by the anxious love of an older brother—scolded him for such recklessness, he placed his hand on my shoulder and said gently, “I understand, big bro. But the game is such, and I’ll be careful next time.”

 

Now, it may seem a small thing, this restraint, but it reveals something of greater import. In a world intoxicated with self-expression, he possesses self-possession. He does not argue when he can persuade with peace. He does not boast, for he knows who he is.

 

And on that same afternoon, I watched him do something simple, yet infinitely telling. Two elderly women were struggling up the ramp toward the café. He rose instantly, moved his chair aside, and gestured for them to take our table. They declined with warmth, but the gesture lingered. His friends, however, scoffed.

 

“Only pansies behave courteously,” said one.

 

I saw my cousin smile—not in scorn, but with the gentleness of one who sees through the smoke of bravado. “What if she were your grandmother?” he asked.

 

“She wasn’t,” they retorted.

 

No argument followed. Only a silence, which he accepted without resentment. Later, he confided in me, “I don’t mind the jokes, big bro. It’s the fear behind them that saddens me. They are afraid of seeming weak. But they don’t see that goodness is not weakness—it’s strength disciplined by love.”

 

And there it was—the answer. The very answer I had been seeking, not for my diary or my article, but for myself. We often look for wisdom among grey beards and gilded titles, but sometimes, it comes from the mouth of one ten years your junior, holding a glass of orange juice with the serenity of a monk.

 

He spoke further. “I think,” he said, “if I were a doctor during a plague, I would feel heartbroken that I couldn’t save them all. But I would still do what I could for the few I could reach. That’s enough, isn’t it?”

 

It is. And this, I think, is where we most deeply err—not in our lack of action, but in our false belief that only large actions matter. Yet our Lord Himself, in that oft-forgotten parable, did not commend the man who ruled nations, but the one who offered a cup of cold water in His name. There is no scale of value in the moral life—only faithfulness.

 

Philosophy has long debated the concept of agency—how much we are truly able to will and act upon the world. Modern determinists would say we are but the sum of cause and effect. But I have never yet seen a deterministic explanation that could account for love, or for courage. When my cousin offered his chair, he defied the world’s economics. He gained nothing. He acted not from strategy, but from character.

 

And herein lies the great mystery: character is not formed in public, but in secret. It is not taught by lectures, but by example. And though it may go unnoticed, it is never insignificant. One person of integrity, acting with quiet courage, is a lighthouse to many in stormy waters.

 

As we walked to the car that evening, I wrapped my arm around him, not merely as a brother, but as a fellow pilgrim. I saw in him the union we all desire—to be modern, yes, but not rootless; to be bold, but not callous; to be joyful, and yet grounded in something ancient and good.

 

Many who read this may prefer tales of celebrity, actors or athletes adorned with fame. But I, for one, find more hope in the untelevised gestures of ordinary people whose goodness is not performed, but lived. My cousin is no saviour. He knows, with the humility of true strength, that he cannot redeem the world. But he speaks when he must. He listens when he ought. And he acts when others pause in indifference.

 

This is what one person can do. They can be a moral compass in a drifting age. They can remind us that though we cannot do everything, we must not, therefore, do nothing. In a world growing ever louder, they can keep a quiet fire burning.

 

And for those still waiting for the right time, the perfect audience, the grand platform—perhaps you need none of these. Perhaps all that is required is to speak, when truth calls; to act, when kindness urges; to live, in such a way that someone else watching might dare to do the same.

 

For though we are small, our choices are not.

 

And the world, in the end, is changed not by the great events, but by the great souls who live quietly among us, choosing the good because it is good—even when no one is watching. For it is always the smallest lights that pierce the darkest nights.

 

 

Picture: Portrait of Two Friends by Italian artist Pontormo, c. 1522

 

 



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