Who Packs Your 'Chute

Sometimes in the daily challenges that life gives us, we
miss what is really important. We may fail to say hello, please, or thank you,
congratulate someone on something wonderful that has happened to them, give a
compliment or just do something nice for no reason.
Charles Plumb, a US Naval Academy graduate, was a jet
fighter pilot in Vietnam. After 75
combat missions, his plane was destroyed by a surface-to-air missile.
Plumb ejected and parachuted into enemy hands. He was
captured and spent 6 years in a communist Vietnamese prison. He survived the
ordeal and now lectures on lessons learned from that experience.
One day, when Plumb and his wife were sitting in a
restaurant, a man at another table came up and said, "You're Plumb! You flew jet
fighters in Vietnam from the aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk.
You were shot down!"
"How in the world did you know that?" asked
Plumb.
"I packed your parachute," the man replied.
Plumb gasped in surprise and gratitude.
The man pumped his hand and said, "I guess it worked!"
Plumb assured him, "It sure did.
If your chute hadn't worked, I
wouldn't be here today."
Plumb couldn't sleep that night, thinking about that man.
Plumb says, "I kept wondering what he might have looked like in a
Navy uniform a Dixie cup hat, a bib in the back, and bell bottom trousers."
I wondered how many times I might have seen him and not even said good
morning, how are you or anything because you see,
I was a fighter pilot and he was just a sailor."
Plumb thought of the many hours the sailor had spent at a
long wooden table in the bowels of the ship,
carefully weaving the shrouds and folding the silks of each chute,
holding in his hands each time the fate of someone he didn't know.
Now, Plumb asks his audience, "Who's packing your
parachute?" Everyone has someone who provides what they need to make it
through the day. Plumb also points out that he needed many kinds of parachutes
when his plane was shot down over enemy territory-He needed his physical
parachute, his mental parachute, his emotional parachute, and his spiritual
parachute. He called on all these
supports before reaching safety.