A great pinewood derby story.  You can go to the site or read below. <A 
HREF="http://www.tcastle.com/dontcry.html">Don't Let Me Cry, greeting card 
story</A> 
 James

"Don't let me cry" 

 My son Gilbert was eight years old and had been in Cub Scouts only a short 
time. During one of his meetings he was handed a sheet of paper, a block of 
wood and four tires and told to return home and give all to "dad". 
That was not an easy task for Gilbert to do. Dad was not receptive to doing 
things with his son. But Gilbert tried. Dad read the paper and scoffed at the 
idea of making a pine wood derby car with his young, eager son. The block of 
wood remained untouched as the weeks passed. 

Finally, Mom stepped in to see if I could figure this all out. The project 
began. Having no carpentry skills, I decided it would be best if I simply 
read the directions and let Gilbert do the work. And he did. I read aloud the 
measurements, the rules of what we could do and what we couldn't do. 

Within days his block of wood was turning into a pinewood derby car. A little 
lopsided, but looking great (at least through the eyes of Mom). Gilbert had 
not seen any of the other kids cars and was feeling pretty proud of his "Blue 
Lightning," the pride that comes with knowing you did something on your own. 

Then the big night came. With his blue pinewood derby in his hand and pride 
in his heart we headed to the big race. Once there my little one's pride 
turned to humility. Gilbert's car was obviously the only car made entirely on 
his own. All the other cars were a father-son partnership, with cool paint 
jobs and sleek body styles made for speed. 

A few of the boys giggled as they looked at Gilbert's, lopsided, wobbly, 
unattractive vehicle. To add to the humility Gilbert was the only boy without 
a man at his side. A couple of the boys who were from single parent homes at 
least had an uncle or grandfather by their side, Gilbert had "Mom." 

As the race began it was done in elimination fashion. You kept racing as long 
as you were the winner. One by one the cars raced down the finely sanded 
ramp. Finally it was between Gilbert and the sleekest, fastest looking car 
there. As the last race was about to begin, my wide eyed, shy eight year old 
ask if they could stop the race for a minute, because he wanted to pray. The 
race stopped. 

Gilbert hit his knees clutching his funny looking block of wood between his 
hands. With a wrinkled brow he set to converse with his Father. He prayed in 
earnest for a very long minute and a half. Then he stood, smile on his face 
and announced, 'Okay, I am ready." 

As the crowd cheered, a boy named Tommy stood with his father as their car 
sped down the ramp. Gilbert stood with his Father within his heart and 
watched his block of wood wobble down the ramp with surprisingly great speed 
and rushed over the finish line a fraction of a second before Tommy's car. 

Gilbert leaped into the air with a loud "Thank you" as the crowd roared in 
approval. The Scout Master came up to Gilbert with microphone in hand and 
asked the obvious question, "So you prayed to win, huh, Gilbert?" To which my 
young son answered, "Oh, no sir. That wouldn't be fair to ask God to help you 
beat someone else. I just asked Him to make it so I don't cry when I lose." 

Children seem to have a wisdom far beyond us. Gilbert didn't ask God to win 
the race, he didn't ask God to fix the out come, Gilbert asked God to give 
him strength in the outcome. When Gilbert first saw the other cars he didn't 
cry out to God, "No fair, they had a fathers help". 

No, he went to his Father for strength. Perhaps we spend too much of our 
prayer time asking God to rig the race, to make us number one, or too much 
time asking God to remove us from the struggle, when we should be seeking 
God's strength to get through the struggle. He didn't pray to win, thus hurt 
someone else, he prayed that God supply the grace to lose with dignity. 
Gilbert, by his stopping the race to speak to his Father also showed the 
crowd that he wasn't there without a "dad", but His Father was most 
definitely there with him. Yes, Gilbert walked away a winner that night, with 
his Father at his side.


~Author unknown~


_______
 To unsubscribe, send "unsubscribe rangernet" to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 "Eat the hay & spit out the sticks! - A#1's mule"     RTKB&G4JC!
 http://rangernet.org    Autoresponder: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to