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Ahh, that’s a powerful theme — very much in the spirit of Sai Baba’s teachings about selfless love and karma ❤️
Here’s the story told in that tone.
🌼 The Woman Who Gave Everything
There was once a woman who lost her parents at a young age. Being the eldest, she became mother, father, and guardian to her younger brothers and sisters.
She worked endlessly — cooking, cleaning, sacrificing her education, her dreams, even chances of marriage. When her siblings were sick, she stayed awake through the nights. When they needed school fees, she skipped meals. When they cried, she comforted them.
People would say,
“You are like God for them.”
She would smile and reply,
“They are my world.”
Years passed. Her siblings grew up, got jobs, married, had families of their own. Slowly, they moved away — first physically, then emotionally.
When she became old, her hands trembled, her eyesight faded, and her body grew weak. The same woman who once carried everyone could barely walk without support.
But now…
Everyone was “busy.”
One sent money sometimes.
Another called once in a while.
No one stayed.
She sat alone in a small room, whispering prayers to Sai Baba:
“I cared for them like my own children… Why am I alone now?”
🕯️ Sai Baba’s Lesson
One night, in a dream, Sai Baba appeared and said:
“Daughter, nothing given with love is ever lost.
You were not serving them — you were serving Me in them.
But attachment brings pain.
You gave as a mother, but expected the return of children.
Love should flow, not bind.”
He continued:
“Their actions are their karma.
Your sacrifice is your light.
The world may forget, but the Divine never forgets.
No act of love goes unpaid — just not always by the same hands.”
She woke up with tears — but they were peaceful tears. Her heart felt lighter. She began spending her days praying, blessing others, smiling at strangers.
And people noticed something strange —
Though she had little, peace lived with her.
While her siblings, who had everything, were restless.
🌿 Moral (Sai Baba’s teaching style)
Serve with love, but without expectation.
Attachment to results creates suffering.
Good deeds return — not always from the people you helped.
A soft heart may be hurt by the world, but it is never empty before God.
If you want, I can turn this into a short moral quote, film narration style, or children’s story version.
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