We were driving through the city when he lowered the window and casually tossed a wrapper onto the road. It was a small movement—almost automatic. I didn’t react immediately. I had seen this scene too many times to be startled by it.
After a few seconds, I asked gently, “Would you do the same if this were the floor of your living room?”
He looked at me, slightly confused. “Of course not,” came the quick reply. “This is the road.”
“And whose home is this road?” I asked.
There was a pause. The question wasn’t expected.
“This is our home too,” I added. “The streets, the corners, the spaces between buildings—this is where our lives unfold. Just as we don’t like filth inside our houses, these streets also deserve that same respect.”
He sighed and said what I had heard countless times before, “But what difference does it make if I don’t throw it? Look around—everything is already dirty. One wrapper from me won’t change anything.”
I nodded slowly. “That’s exactly the sentence that has built this mess—one wrapper won’t change anything. But have you ever thought of it this way: if you don’t throw it, one person’s share of this filth disappears?”
He remained silent.
“My not throwing it may not clean the entire city,” I continued, “but it will ensure that I didn’t contribute to this dirt. And sometimes, that is where real change begins.”
We drove past a drain overflowing with garbage—plastic bags, cups, leftover food. A stray cat stood at the edge, hesitating to cross. I pointed toward it. “Every piece of trash here came from someone who thought their single act didn’t matter,” I said. “But nothing here arrived alone.”
He shifted uncomfortably.
“In our homes,” I went on, “we teach children not to litter. We scold them if they drop things on the floor. We say, ‘This is our house—keep it clean.’ But the moment they step outside, we silently teach them a different lesson: This place doesn’t belong to us.”
He finally said, “So you think my stopping will really make a difference?”
“Yes,” I said. “Not immediately. Not dramatically. But meaningfully.”
I shared a small story. Once, in another city, I had seen an elderly man walking with a stick. Every few steps, he would stop, bend down with effort, and pick up a bottle or wrapper from the roadside. Someone once asked him why he bothered when others kept throwing trash right back.
His answer was simple, “I am not responsible for the city. I am responsible for myself.”
That sentence had stayed with me.
“When you decide not to throw trash,” I told him, “you are making one powerful declaration: I will not be part of the problem. And that is not a small thing.”
He looked out of the window again, as if seeing the streets differently now.
“Imagine,” I continued, “if this thought entered our homes, our schools, our offices—‘I will not contribute to the dirt.’ Not just physical dirt, but moral dirt, social dirt, relational dirt.”
The other person raised an eyebrow. “What do you mean?”
“In families,” I explained, “when we choose not to add to arguments, when we refuse to spread bitterness, we are keeping our inner environment clean. In society, when we refuse to lie, cheat, or exploit, we are keeping the collective space clean. The same rule applies everywhere: My contribution matters—even if I stand alone.”
He grew thoughtful. “I never saw it that way,” came the quiet reply.
“If we all waited for the entire nation to change first,” I said, “nothing would ever change. But when an individual says, ‘My hands will remain clean, regardless of what others do,’ that individual becomes a silent force.”
I paused and added softly, “And God does not ask us to clean the whole world. He asks us to purify our own intent and our own actions.”
He slowly picked up another wrapper from inside the car and held it rather than throwing it away.
“Maybe,” the voice said, almost to itself, “my not throwing it won’t clean the city… but at least this dirt won’t be because of me.”
I smiled. “And that is enough to begin.”
As we drove on, nothing about the city had changed. The streets were still dusty. The drains were still clogged. But something small had shifted inside the car—a quiet decision had been made. And I knew: when enough people start saying, ‘My contribution will be clean, not filthy,’ the outside world, sooner or later, is forced to follow the inside.


Excellent article sir.
Good one ” MY CONTRIBUTIONS MATTER…. even if I stand alone”