There are always people with needs. Just a few years ago it was a viral pandemic that threatened people’s incomes. This year it’s inflation. And that creates an opportunity for us all to help.
Observed on the Tuesday following Thanksgiving (in the U.S.) #GivingTuesday kicks off the charitable season, of holiday and end-of-year giving.
a global generosity movement unleashing the power of people and organizations to transform their communities and the world.
givingtuesday.org
“GivingTuesday was created in 2012 as a simple idea: a day that encourages people to do good. Over the past seven years, it has grown into a global movement that inspires hundreds of millions of people to give, collaborate, and celebrate generosity.”
sharing the HEART of giving
My goal for this blog is to inform and inspire us all to explore the HEART of health in our lives, and the lives of our families and communities. But beyond that, my mission for this blog is
to share the HEART of health with people all over the world,
Watercress Words mission
especially those who face hardship due to poverty, isolation, discrimination, political turmoil, hunger, homelessness, human rights violations, and natural disasters.
So for Giving Tuesday, I’m asking you to give to one or more of the groups I have featured on this blog and personally have or do support. The links below take you to stories about their mission and links to their sites where you can
updated April 23, 2024 Even if you are not old enough to remember the war the United States fought in VietNam in the 1960s and 1970s, you likely have seen the Pulitzer Prize-winning photo of the “Napalm girl” running down a dirt road, fleeing an attack that burned most of her body. Taken to a…
Where will you give?
Besides these places, I know you have needs in your community, maybe your own neighborhood. So look for places like a local food bank, women’s shelter, a homeless outreach, coat distribution, faith-based ministry, school, and many others can can use time, talent, and finances.
Dr. Aletha
Use these links to share the heart of health wherever you connect.
William Sydney Porter was a writer whose tales explored the meaning of life through irony. Born in 1862, he faced personal tragedies and accusations of embezzlement, leading to prison. There, he honed his writing skills, producing over 600 stories before succumbing to addiction and illness in 1910. But before he died he left the world a special Christmas gift.
updated December 15, 2025
Over a century ago a pharmacist told a story, a tale that taught his readers the true meaning of Christmas and giving.
William Sydney Porter was born on September 11, 1862. His father Algernon Sidney Porter was a medical doctor. When William was 3 years old, his mother died of “consumption” (an old term for tuberculosis).
He grew up in Greensboro North Carolina where he clerked for his uncle’s pharmacy, Morley Drug Store. At 19 years old he earned a pharmacy license (although it apparently required no special education or training.)
William developed a chronic cough which caught the attention of Dr. James Hall. He invited William to Texas to visit his son’s ranch, thinking this would help resolve the cough. William recovered and worked on the ranch for two years.
William married a young woman, Athol and they had two children, a son, who died in infancy, and a daughter Margaret. With a family, he needed a reliable source of income so he took a job as a teller at National Bank of Austin. This decision would change the course of their lives.
William started a newspaper called The Rolling Stone. (Apparently, the current magazine of the same name is not related. ) When it went bankrupt, he worked as a reporter for the Houston Post.
Unfortunately, some accounting discrepancies at the bank led to accusations of embezzlement against William. Although the charge was likely unjustified, fearing prosecution, he fled Texas, first to Louisiana, and then to Guatemala, without his wife and child.
In his absence, Athol contracted tuberculosis , an essentially fatal disease in those days. He returned to Texas to care for her, but upon her death in 1897 he was arrested and convicted of embezzlement; he served 5 years in a federal prison then moved to New York City.
He had not wasted his time in prison. As a licensed pharmacist, he was allowed to work as a druggist in the prison hospital, enjoying a better quality of life than most prisoners. Working the night shift gave him time to pursue his writing talent. Under a pen name (since he didn’t want to reveal he was an inmate), he began writing and publishing short stories.
After his release from prison, William published yearly collections of his short stories. People enjoyed his tales because they dealt with common people in ordinary circumstances but with endings that were unexpected and surprising. Whether humorous or tragic, his tales taught lessons about life in a way that left his readers pondering their own responses to life’s ups and downs.
In 1906 the collection was called The Four Million and contained a story that became his most read and beloved. Like in many of his stories, he used irony to create an unexpected ending to what would otherwise have been a sweet but predictable love story. (This and others are affiliate links.)
His writing failures and successes came with a price; his alcohol use turned into an addiction. After writing more than 600 stories, William Sydney Porter died in 1910 of alcoholic liver cirrhosis at 48 years old.
Even though William died more than 100 years ago, he is still very much alive through the words he wrote. He even has a Facebook page. And the man who once published a magazine has one named after him.
You’ve probably guessed this famous writer’s name, his pen name, the one we know him as.
The most common purpose of irony is to create humor and/or point out the absurdity of life… life has a way of contradicting our expectations, often in painful ways.
Irony generally makes us laugh, even when the circumstances are tragic. We laugh not because the situations were sad, but because they jarred our expectations
The contrast between people’s expectations and the reality of the situation is funny and meaningful because it shows us how wrong human beings can be.
Irony is best when it points us toward deeper meanings of a situation.
William’s life illustrated redemption, as did the beloved Christmas story he wrote. Read it at this link…
The four Gospels- Matthew, Mark, Luke, John- relate the life of Jesus, but only Matthew and Luke tell the story of his birth and their versions differ. Luke tells about the trip to Bethlehem and the shepherds’ visit. Matthew misses the Bethlehem journey and the shepherds, but from him we meet the wise men-…
Exploring the HEART of giving
I compiled this brief biography of O. Henry from several different sources, all of which generally conveyed the same events and timeline. Some added details not mentioned in others. All can be easily found by a simple search.
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