Broken Wing

Some people are just doomed to be failures. That's the way some adults look at 
troubled kids. Maybe you've heard the saying, "A bird with a broken wing will 
never fly as high." I'm sure that T. J. Ware was made to feel that way almost 
every day in school.

By high school, T. J. was the most celebrated troublemaker in his town. 
Teachers literally cringed when they saw his name posted on their classroom 
lists for the next semester. He wasn't very talkative, didn't answer questions 
and got into a lot of fights. He had flunked almost every class by the time he 
entered his senior year, yet was being passed on each year to a higher grade 
level. Teachers didn't want to have him again the following year.

T. J. was moving on, but definitely not moving up. I met T. J. for the first 
time at a weekend leadership retreat. All the students at school had been 
invited to sign up for ACE training, a program designed to have students become 
more involved in their communities. T. J. was one of 405 students who signed 
up. When I showed up to lead their first retreat, the community leaders gave me 
this overview of the attending students: "We have a total spectrum represented 
today, from the student body president to T. J. Ware, the boy with the longest 
arrest record in the history of town."

Somehow, I knew I wasn't the first to hear about T. J.'s darker side as the 
first words of introduction.

At the start of the retreat, T. J. was literally standing outside the circle of 
students, against the back wall, with that "go ahead, impress me" look on his 
face. He didn't readily join the discussion groups. He didn't seem to have much 
to say, but slowly, the interactive games drew him in. The ice really melted 
when the groups started building a list of positive and negative things that 
had occurred at school that year. T. J. had some definite thoughts on those 
situations. The other students in T. J.'s group welcomed his comments. All of a 
sudden, T. J. felt like a part of the group, and before long, he was being 
treated like a leader. He was saying things that made a lot of sense, and 
everyone was listening. T. J. was a smart guy and he had some great ideas.

The next day, T. J. was very active in all the sessions. By the end of the 
retreat, he had joined the Homeless Project team. He knew something about 
poverty, hunger and hopelessness. The other students on the team were impressed 
with his passionate concern and ideas. They elected T. J. co-chairman of the 
team. The student council president would be taking his instruction from T. J. 
Ware.

When T. J. showed up at school on Monday morning, he arrived to a firestorm. A 
group of teachers were protesting to the school principal about his being 
elected co-chairman.

The very first community wide service project was to be a giant food drive, 
organized by the Homeless Project team. The teachers couldn't believe the 
principal would allow this crucial beginning to a prestigious, three-year 
action plan to stay in the incapable hands of T. J. Ware.

They reminded the principal, "He has an arrest record as long as your arm. 
He'll probably steal half the food." Mr. Coggshall reminded them that the 
purpose of the ACE program was to uncover any positive passion a student had 
and reinforce its practice until true change can take place. The teachers left 
the meeting shaking their heads in disgust, firmly convinced that failure was 
imminent.

Two weeks later, T. J. and his friends led a group of 70 students in a drive to 
collect food. They collected a school record: 2,854 cans of food in just two 
hours. It was enough to fill the empty shelves in two neighborhood centers, and 
the food took care of needy families in the area for 75 days. The local 
newspaper covered the event with a full-page article the next day. That 
newspaper story was posted on the main bulletin board at school, where everyone 
could see it.

T. J.'s picture was up there for doing something great, for leading a 
record-setting food drive. Everyday, he was reminded about what he did. He was 
being acknowledged as leadership material. T. J. started showing up at school 
everyday and answered questions from teachers for the first time. He led a 
second project, collecting 300 blankets and 1,000 pairs of shoes for the 
homeless shelter. The event he started now yields 9,000 cans of food in one 
day, taking care of 70 percent of the need for food for one year.

T. J. reminds us that a bird with a broken wing only needs mending. But once it 
has healed, it can fly higher than the rest. T. J. got a job. He became 
productive. He's flying quite nicely these days.

A single candle can illuminate an entire room. A true friend lights up 
an entire lifetime. Thanks for the bright lights of your friendship.
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