Make a Comeback

It was of the most amazing World Series in my lifetime.  I just watched in awe as the St. Louis Cardinals celebrated what a couple of months ago seemed like an unlikely championship.  Even Lazarus would admire how they came back from the dead in Game Six.

That game was one of the most unbelievable comebacks in the history of baseball.  The Cardinals were one strike away from elimination several times — and just kept battling back. David Freese finally ended it with his walk-off homer in the 11th.  The Cardinals did not quit. Something in their hearts made them overcome the odds.

They just wanted it more than the Rangers (who were a great team as well).  And will have the ring to prove it.  Desire. Heart.  Whatever you want to call it, it’s the “it” factor that makes people great.  It is the spark that divides equal teams.

We are like the Cardinals; we’re one strike from elimination.  That strike may be a job reduction. It may be a pay cut. It may be a medical emergency. We can give up and strike out or really focus so we can hit the next pitch out of the park.  Hard work, attitude, focus, planning.  Those are all tools to improve your swing.

We have to do what it takes to stay in the game. It has to be in our heart.  I look at the mess our country is in and I honestly believe this is our time to make a comeback. Let’s regain that “it” factor that made us great. It’s time to get it back. The game’s on the line. Let’s swing for the bleachers.

Let’s make our comeback.

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Daily Blog — Oct. 30, 2011

Right now, thousands of runners are running through the streets of Washington, D.C. as part of the Marine Corps Marathon. Last year that was me.  This year I’m fat and out of shape. The difference a year makes.

They question is, what will the next year bring.  My goal? To be  back on the streets of Washington running that marathon.

Make positive change happen. And that’s what I’m going to do.

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Sunday Free-For-All

Good morning. What’s up?

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Mississippi Delta Stories

A few stories that I’ve written that are set in the magical land we know as the Mississippi Delta.

The Storm: A story set in the Delta about the amazing power of forgiveness.

The Unanswered Prayer: A man of faith loses it and then regains it in a strange place.

Fairy Godmother Poker Night & The Magic Within: A weekly card game reveals what true magic is all about.

The Harvest: A farmer grows an amazing crop.

Miracle at the Panther Burn International Airport: The story of a grandfather, father and son told through flight.

The Bet: Good and Evil make a wager in a flooded Tunica casino.

The Two Travelers: Two mysterious strangers plant a crop in a fertile land.

Up in the Delta Sky: A crop duster pilot reveals why he takes to the sky.

The Notch: A man’s journey home during the Great Flood of 2011.

The Flood: A man watches history rise at his feet.


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Smoky Mountain Stories

Here are the stories I’ve written that are set in the Great Smoky Mountain National Park:

A Smoky Mountain Lesson: A man learns an important lesson from his grandfather.

The Ghost of the Smokies: A true ghost story I made up.

Smoky Mountain Sunrise: A man takes a hike on the path of life.

Abrams Falls: Making memories in the Great Smoky Mountains.

Going Home: A Smoky Mountain Tale: A father takes his son “home.”

The Final D-Day: A Heroes last forgotten but glorious battle.

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Daily Blog Oct. 29

We lean another ladder against the wrong wall
And climb high to the highest rung, to shake fists at the sky
From Nickel Creek’s song  Reason Why

Leaning your ladder against the wall. How many of us have done that?  We work hard, climb to the top rung and find out we’ve been working for something we really don’t want. It’s a sobering thought.  I’ve been blessed to have climbed some pretty awesome ladders. But sometimes in life you find out that the ladder isn’t that great after all.  Sometimes you just have to find a new ladder to climb.

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The Ghost of Smokies

In the backcountry of the Great Smoky Mountain National Park is an old wooden cabin. Some say it’s haunted. Some say it’s possessed. Hikers have reported strange sounds and sightings near it for years. Animals won’t go near it. And Park Rangers have logged equipment failures as they have passed by it.  No one remembers whose cabin it is — there is no record of it in the Park Service’s files.  Unlike most structures in the park, it was not removed when the Park was formed.  For some reason it just sits there, never decaying.

The cabin was owned by Oliver M. Sydney, trapper, hunter and storyteller. He was a tall, thin man who possessed the deepest, most piercing eyes of anyone in East Tennessee. He roamed the mountainside, trapping for fur and killing for meat.  He built a small, one bedroom Chestnut-log home on his claim in the shadow of Mount LeConte.  The timber barons never messed with him.  They called him “The Devil,” because of his legendary meanness. He just lived his life in peace trapping and hunting until that fateful day in October 31, 1935. That’s the day when the man from the U.S. Government knocked on his door with an eviction notice.

The man from the U.S. Government left with a gunshot wound to the leg.

No one was takin’ his land, Oliver swore. He’d stay on that land forever.

He might have been permitted to stay, but the U.S. Government is kind of funny about people who shoot their agents.  The don’t like it. So the next day, several more agents hiked up the knoll and surrounded old man’s cabin.  He promptly sent them diving behind trees and into ditches with a barrage of gunfire.  The Siege of LeConte had begun.

Four days passed and the agents held their ground. So did Oliver.  As the world went on its merry way, time stood still in the Great Smoky Mountains.  There are few things more stubborn than a mountain man.  Oliver M. Sydney was going nowhere.

Or so he thought.

Fred Whitehorse, a tracker from the Cherokee reservation in North Carolina, was brought in to sneak up to the cabin to smoke him out.  Fred crawled behind it and then climbed on the roof.  Oliver, tired from being awake for so long, did not notice that his chimney had been covered. His cabin quickly filled with smoke.

Oliver came out with guns blazing.  But there was only one of him. And a dozen U.S. agents.  Oliver M. Sydney was buried where he fell.  The Government, not wanting bad P.R., swept the incident under the rug. Reports were burned and careers were threatened. No one was to hear about the mountain man’s death.

So to this day, when you walk by the old cabin in the woods you might see Oliver M. Sydney’s ghost on the front porch and hear his cries. Or if you are a Park Ranger, you might have your radio or phone die.  Because the old mountain man was right about one thing — he will stay on his land forever.

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The Unanswered Prayer

There was a brown stripe on the white wall of the Riverside First Baptist Church.  It was the same church where the people had prayed for the town to be spared from the great flood of 2011. The brown stripe –the high-water mark — was proof that sometimes prayers go unanswered.

Carpets, hymnals and ruined Bibles lay in a ruined heap by the street.  Sheetrock was stripped and the sanctuary smelled like Clorox. It was a war on mold and this was the main battlefield.  The pastor rolled up his sleeves and scrubbed. And scrubbed some more.

It was the Lord’s work — To clean up the Lord’s work.

During the flood (when  most of town was completely submerged), Pastor Raymond D. Jones read a sermon based on this scripture from Genesis:

And I will establish my covenant with you; neither shall all flesh be cut off any more by the waters of a flood; neither shall there any more be a aflood to bdestroy the earth.

There was a loud amen and a standing ovation from the town. That was then.

Now it was time to clean up.  When the water receded, it left a coat of smelly muck and water moccasins over much of the town. Citizens were toiling over piles of ruined carpet and destroyed memories. It was hot work. It was dirty work. And the good pastor had never felt more alone.

Isaiah 41:10 So do not fear, for I am with you; do not be dismayed, for I am your God. I will strengthen you and help you; I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.

Sometimes even the most Godly men forget that.

The hot June sun broiled the soaked church.  Sweat poured through his work shirt and mud stained his pants.  He squeegeed the water out of the sanctuary and onto the front drive and into the gravel parking lot.  A four-foot water moccasin hissed at him in the corner.  The pastor thought of the first serpent as he chopped its head off with a hoe.

He turned around, walked back into the sanctuary and came up to the altar. He dropped to his knees and prayed.

Peter 5:7 Give all your worries and cares to God, for he cares about you.

“Why did you forsake us?”

Silence.

The preacher threw the hoe down in disgust.  He had had enough.

Hebrews 11:1 Faith is the confidence that what we hope for will actually happen; it gives us assurance about things we cannot see.

The pastor was defeated.  Fatigue had tested his faith and it had cracked.  He sat down, in the muck and buried his head in his hands.  He had never felt more human in his life.

And then he heard a vehicle pull into the gravel lot.  And then he heard another.  And another.  Fifteen church vans pulled into the church’s parking lot with names on them as diverse as Missionary United Methodist Church,  St. Christopher’s Episcopal Church, St. James’ Catholic Church,  Broadway Presbyterian Church, First Bible Church, Am Yisrael Synagogue, First Street Baptist and others.  Men and women carried tools. Men and women carried food. Cars filled in behind them. His own church members had stolen away from their own homes to help repair the church.  The pastor watched the crowd coming in to rebuild his church, looked up to the sky and said, “thank you.”

Matthew 21:22 And whatever you ask in prayer, you will receive, if you have faith.

And as the crowd worked on his church that hot Mississippi afternoon, Pastor Raymond D. Jones learned the magic of unanswered prayers.  And he never doubted his Boss again.

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Saturday Free-For-All

Good morning! Hope you have a great day!

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Daily Blog — October 28

Tired

Ever been so tired that you just wanted to stop and sit down?  I have. In fact, I felt that way this morning.

This time last year I ran the Marine Corps Marathon in Washington, D.C. It was 26.2 grueling miles through the historic streets of Arlington, Georgetown, Crystal City and Washington D.C.  I was tired then.  In fact, I was so tired (and cramping) at mile 20, that I wanted to stop and sit down.  I wanted to quit.

But I didn’t.  I kept moving.

Why? Because I knew that the finish line was in sight. My goal was almost in hand. And that kept me going.  As Winston Churchill said, “If you’re going through hell, keep going.”

If I had not had a goal, I would’ve been more likely to quit. My brain would not have known when it could rest.  Hopelessness would have set in and I would have given up.  That’s why having set goals (and set rest periods!) is so important.

Right now I am tired and would like to quit. But I won’t. Because the glorious finish line is in sight.

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