Blog: One
by Lapis

Facing His Fear

A story about a man who discovers autheticity and responsibility.

Date:   3/30/2006 5:55:54 AM   ( 18 y ) ... viewed 1412 times

Just a Typical Teenage Boy

Facing His Fear



The call was controversial-just as all really close calls in baseball
are. Full speed the runner slid home and thinking he had just scored a
game-altering run, he stood up only to face the words, "You're out!"

Now you know how it is when you've given your all to an effort and you
stand up, only to hear the ump say, "You're out!" Just running for home
when the play could be that close takes confidence and determination,
not to mention a certain amount of competitiveness that doesn't just
evaporate when you stand up. And it didn't with this teenager either.

Furious, he threw off his helmet and ran over to explain to the ump in
no uncertain terms why the call was wrong, why the ump needed glasses,
and why he was clearly home and nobody could miss that call so badly.
Before his temper really got out of hand, someone pulled him away, and
he walked to the bench-livid.

If this first spectacle was all you saw of the matter, don't fret-it
was all almost everyone saw. But now, as Paul Harvey would say, "The rest
of the story."

Long after the coaches, players, and fans had gone home, this typical
teenage boy realized the impact of his decisions at home plate. Like
most of us do when we are faced with the embarrassment of our actions, he
could very well have made the logical next choice and just let it
slide, reasoning: "Everybody does it." "The ump's probably heard that stuff
a million times."

However, in the silence of his heart, this young man knew that just
because everyone else does it, that doesn't make it all right. And so,
long after his buddies had gone home, he tracked that ump back up to the
school-not to vandalize his car and not to further harangue him. No,
this typical teenage boy tracked this man down so he could tell him
face-to-face: "I'm sorry, Sir. I was wrong."

It takes true courage to stand up in the face of those everyday
indiscretions we all make and say, "I was wrong. I'm sorry." What makes this
apology even more unique is that it wasn't meant for the world to hear,
it wasn't meant to make the apologizer look better in the eyes of
anyone else. It was meant simply as a way to stay true to his own heart.

In reality the story may well have ended there, and no one would have
been the wiser. However, on the way out of town, the ump saw the
superintendent and flagged him down to express his appreciation and surprise
at the boy's apology. But the ump wasn't the only one who was surprised.
The superintendent later talked to the coach to say how impressed he
was that the coach had sent the boy to apologize. Only problem: The coach
hadn't sent him and knew nothing about the apology until that very
moment.

A few days later the coach ran into the boy's father and remarked how
impressed he was that his parents had sent the boy to apologize. You
guessed it-they knew nothing about it either!

Our truest actions are those that come from the heart-not what someone
makes us do because it's the right thing. I know, however, that
although the parents didn't intervene on this occasion, they had intervened
enough times in the past for this boy to have the ultimate courage and
try to remedy a situation when it would have been easier to reason,
"He'll get over it."

The truth is at one time or another we have all been this boy-acting
out in rage, saying hurtful things, and feeling justified for doing so.
The real test comes later when we are presented with the choice to make
amends or to walk away thinking, "Ah, they'll get over it."

Maybe the "they'll" is a co-worker, a customer, a friend, a sibling, a
child, or a spouse. Whomever it is, don't pass up the opportunity to
get right with your own heart. Don't let them walk off the field and
drive out of town, thinking, "Oh, well. No big deal. They'll get over it."
The time for apology is now!

Courage is a matter of the heart. I wish that every person in the whole
world had the courage of this one typical teenager. If they did, just
imagine what "typical" might come to mean!


(And a last caveat: The whole world starts with YOU!)

http://www. yeartosuccess.com

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Comments (20 of 166):
Re: Critique of Ch… Espri… 15 y
Mayas- Phillip Wit… #7760… 17 y
So then... thomas 18 y
We think then life… kermi… 18 y
Add Lapis and stir daizy4 18 y
Re: Love is a verb… kermi… 18 y
Victims #62456 18 y
Great Advice #63338 18 y
Love is a verb..... daizy… 18 y
So Very True hopinso 18 y
thanks, that was t… Wrenn 18 y
nice post n/m Wrenn 18 y
tears in my eyes! … Wrenn 18 y
Nice Sunday Though… YourE… 18 y
I agree thanks n/m Wrenn 18 y
very nice, thank y… Wrenn 18 y
Everyone should wa… Wrenn 18 y
all signs of ´a hi… thoma… 18 y
Some Advice Please hopins… 18 y
This article is to… kermi… 18 y
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