What makes someone believe they have the right to stand above others?

Susan Narrating
It was an ordinary Wednesday — that “meh” middle of the week. Not the chaos of Monday, not the slow fade-out of Friday. Just… Wednesday.
Well, ordinary for everyone else.
For me, the morning started with Oishi giving me those puppy eyes as I was leaving for work. Tail wagging, looking up at me like he’d just been abandoned by the entire cast of a soap opera. Obviously, I caved and took him with me.

At my desk, Oishi curled up under the table with his squeaky toy. Then Yohanes barged in, dramatic as ever, announcing there was chaos in the customer service lounge — customers fighting over who should be served first. One claimed she was a doctor, the other a lawyer. Dinah, our resident gossip, just said, “Let them fight it out, see who wins.” I chimed in, “The lawyer, duh.”

Pete — our by-the-book accountant (and unsolicited tax adviser) — picked up Oishi and calmly told Yohanes to defuse the situation by figuring out whose need was more urgent. Yohanes agreed and left.
For those who don’t know Pete, he’s our accountant — a good one. He even lectures me on filing taxes. I pretend not to care, but I remember every tip when it’s time to file. If it weren’t for him, your girl’s butt would’ve been in trouble last year.
Pete sat across from me, Oishi still in his lap, and suddenly asked:
“What makes someone believe they have the right to stand above others?”
I froze mid-siopao bite. “What made you ask that?”

Pete’s Story
November 12, 2015. Pete said he’d never forget that day.
We didn’t know he was a volunteer worker. That day, he was in El Shur — a small, beautiful country with its share of darker realities.

He was assigned to distribute relief goods. As soon as the chopper touched down, people ran toward them. He told them to line up, assuring there was enough for everyone. But desperation overpowered order. People shouted, cried, begged to be served first.
Pete understood. Hunger does that.
But then, someone approached him privately, offering money — a bribe — to get their goods first.
“Why not buy food instead?” Pete asked.
The answer hit him hard. They couldn’t. Their area was on lockdown, boundaries guarded so insurgents wouldn’t cross over. They were stuck in the crossfire. Still, relief goods had been delivered regularly — they had enough for months.
But this person said,
“We’re prominent. We should be served first.”

Then, almost as an afterthought, they added, “Besides… you don’t want trouble with the K.N.A.V.E.S.”
Pete didn’t know who or what that was. But the way they said it — calm, low, like a warning — stuck with him.
“That’s what made me ask,” Pete said quietly. “No matter how much you have, no matter who you are, that’s not the right perspective. We should help each other up. Respect authority, yes — laws exist to protect us. But some people use their position to lift themselves higher, not to lift others. Not all of them. Some leaders genuinely serve. Others… they make the people serve them.”
Ishmael’s Answer
That’s when Ishmael, our prophetic janitor, glided in with his mop.

“People think they’re above others for many reasons,” he began. “Pride, fear, insecurity — even upbringing. Some were taught from childhood that status equals worth. Others hide their own sense of smallness by making others feel smaller. And there are those who genuinely believe their achievements or titles make them more valuable than the next person. But Christ showed us another way.”
He set the mop aside.
“Christ washed the feet of His disciples. An act of humility and service. Imagine — a Master washing His followers’ feet.”

John 13:16-17 — Truly, truly, I say to you, a servant is not greater than his master, nor a messenger greater than the one who sent him. If you know these things, blessed are you if you do them.
I leaned in. “Pete, you said the place was chaotic. They were in survival mode. Of course they’d put themselves first.”
Ishmael looked at me.
“Susan, imagine the building is on fire. What’s the first thing you’d grab?”
“Oishi Badoodle!” I said instantly.
He smiled.
“Okay. But imagine Oishi’s in the other room. As you rush to him, you hear a baby crying — Melinda’s son. You can’t save them both.”
The tears came before I could stop them. I hugged Oishi tight.

“I know your answer, Susan,” Ishmael said gently. “You’d give up what you love most to save a life.”
I sniffled. “Why did you have to make it a baby? Couldn’t it be a unicorn? Or Chad?” But deep down, I understood. God made us to help and protect one another — not to think we’re above anyone.
Closing
Right then, Yohanes stormed back in, panting and sweaty.
“After two hours, the customers and I reached an agreement.”
Pete patted his back. “Good job. You diffused it.”
That evening, Pete treated us to a park-side meal. Oishi was over the moon.
Oishi Narrating
When we got home, Susan went straight to the bedroom and knelt to pray.
“God, thank You for this beautiful life — for waking up each day safe and sound. Thank You for the kindness we’ve received. I pray for those who live day by day just trying to survive. Help us understand that we’re not above one another, but created to bless each other, inspire, and lift one another up. And God… please don’t ever make me choose between saving Oishi and saving a life. You know I’d do it, but with a heavy heart.”
Her voice broke. I understood why.

I know you’d pick the baby, Sus. And that’s okay. I get it. Life is precious. I’m happy, I’m content, and I hope you are too.
Good night. 🐾
And then… the snore. Classic Sus.
Still Rising. Still Barking. 🐾


















