
Winnie the Pooh is a fictional teddy bear created by English author A.A. Milne.
The main character — sometimes called simply Pooh or Edward Bear — is a good-natured, yellow-furred, honey-loving bear who lives in the forest surrounding the Hundred Acre Wood.
His companions are Eeyore, a gloomy gray donkey; Piglet, a timid pig; Owl, a pontificating bird; the meddlesome Rabbit; and Kanga, an energetic kangaroo whose inquisitive baby, Roo, lives in her pouch.
Pooh, a self-described “Bear of Very Little Brain,” gets himself into all kinds of sticky situations.
At one point Piglet inquires of Pooh, “How do you spell love?” Pooh responds, “You don’t spell it, you feel it.”
And might I add, “You do it,” which is what we are celebrating these weeks of Easter — love as a verb.
American author Frederick Buechner writes: “If by some magic you could eliminate the pain you are caused by the pain of someone you love, I for one cannot imagine working such magic because the pain is so much a part of the love that the love would be vastly diminished, unrecognizable, without it.”
“To suffer in love for another’s suffering is to live life not only at its fullest but at its holiest.”
- The passage was originally published in “Now and Then,” published by HarperCollins in 1991.



