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Site Home » Self Enhancement » Inspiration
 

The Red Ribbon

 
Author: Staci Stallings

Everyone wants a blue ribbon. Blue. First place. The best. Even kindergarteners want that blue ribbon. In sports, I was never a blue-ribbon person. In a race I was always last. In baseball I was as likely to get hit on the head as to drop the ball. In basketball I was fine as long as there werent nine other players on the court with me. Where I got my horrible sports ability, I dont know, but I got it. And I got it early.

During the spring of my kindergarten year, our class had a fieldtrip to a park in a town about 20 miles away. Making that drive now is no big deal, but when youre six and youve lived in a town of 300 all your life, going to a town of a couple thousand is a very big deal. Nonetheless, looking back now, I dont remember much of that day. Im sure we ate our little sack lunches, played on the swings, slid down the slidetypical six-year-old stuff. Then it was time for the races.

However, these were no ordinary races. Some parent had come up with the idea to have the picnic kind of races, like pass the potato under your neck and hold an egg on a spoon while you run to the other side. I dont remember too much about these, but there was one race that will forever be lodged in my memorythe three-legged race.

The parents decided not to use potato sacks for this particular race. Instead, they tied our feet together. One lucky little boy got me for a partner. Now what you have to know about this little boy is that he was the second most athletic boy in our class. Im sure he knew he was in trouble the second they laced his foot to mine. As for me, I was mortified. This guy was a winner. He almost always won, and I knew that, with me, he didnt have a chance.

However, apparently he didnt realize that as deeply as I did at the time. He laced his arm with mine, the gun sounded, and we were off to the other side. Couples were falling and stumbling all around us, but we stayed on our feet and made it to the other side. Unbelievably when we turned around and headed back for home, we were in the lead! Only one other couple even had a chance, and they were a good several yards behind us.

Then only feet from the finish line, disaster struck. I tripped and fell. We were close enough that my partner could have easily dragged me across the finish line and won. He could have, but he didnt. Instead, he stopped, reached down, and helped me upjust as the other couple crossed the finish line.

I still remember that moment, and I still have that little red ribbon. When we graduated 13 years later, I stood on that stage and gave the Valedictory address to that same group of students, none of whom even remembered that moment anymore. So, I told them about that little boy who had made a split-second decision that helping a friend up was more important than winning a blue ribbon. In my speech I told them that I wouldnt tell which of the guys sitting there on that stage was the little boy although he was up there with me. I wouldnt tell because in truth at one time or another all of them had been that little boyhelping me up when I fell, taking time out from their pursuit of their own goals to help a fellow person in need.

And I told them why Ive kept that ribbon. You see to me, that ribbon is a reminder that you dont have to be a winner in the eyes of the world to be a winner to those closest to you. The world may judge you a failure or a success, but those closest to you will know the truth. Thats important to remember as we travel through this life.

You may not have a red ribbon to prove it, but I sincerely hope you have at least a few friends who remember you for taking time out from your pursuit of that blue ribbon to help them. Im thinking those will be the ones that really countI know its the one that counted the most to me.

Author Bio:

Staci Stallings

Life continues on to the next level for Staci Stallings who now has two titles in print: "The Long Way Home" and "Eternity." Staci's entry level in life began in a small West Texas town of Nazareth where three things were paramount: God, family, and education. Finally, before she left Nazareth, Staci learned a solid appreciation for the gift of a good education. True to her word, she attended Texas Tech University and graduated Magna Cum Laude with a B.A. in Journalism along with minors in Secretarial Business and Education.

Then came another turning point in Staci?s life?the arrival of her first child. Staci traded in Shakespeare and Dickens for Winnie the Pooh and Dr. Seuss. As a stay-at-home mom of first one then two daughters and now a son, Staci?s path led her back to one of her first loves?writing. With dreams coming true all around her, Staci invites you to share in her journey with ?The Long Way Home" and "Eternity."

After achieving her first goal of completing a novel, Staci Stallings now has two books called ?The Long Way Home? and ?Eternity?. Then came another turning point in Staci?s life?the arrival of her first daughter, followed by another and then a son. Her path now leads back to her first love?writing.

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