I’m probably the last to see this commercial, but Kleenex has an ad campaign called “Let it out.” In the spot, a man looking friendly enough asks, “Got a minute to talk?” and strangers sit down on his couch in the middle of a busy street and evidently spill their guts out. Some laugh, some cry, but all have this bonding moment where they then view this guy as their best friend. At first it seems so juxtaposed in its setting and its outcome, but maybe it isn’t. People are starved for deeper companionship, deeper conversations, and being real. So much is expected of us and stress levels are increasing as our lives seem to spin out of control. We move at the speed of light and rarely stop to assess. Most of us have more responsibility than we know what to do with, and more on our “to do” lists than we can humanly accomplish. Some of us, somewhere along the way, have stopped living and reverted to automatic pilot, and left meaningful relationships out of the equation.
Maybe instead of asking the perfunctory, “How are you?” “Fine. How are you?” “Fine.” what if we stopped and asked, “Got a minute to talk?” And we meant it. And we listened. And someone else felt the weight of the world lifted off their tired shoulders.
In a strange sense, the phenomenon of becoming friends in “blogworld” is like that—strangers pull up a chair and ask “Got a minute?” and care enough to take the time to listen and encourage. Maybe the couch on the street isn’t so weird after all. And being real is sometimes more genuine on a blog post than with a cup of coffee around a kitchen table.



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