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Fwd: horse related



I thought this was appropriate for ridecamp as we debate the issues that come
before us.  Let us not forget the "whys" in our lives..

Dare to Dream
Life! What a precious gift from God. What a blessing to be alive in a
wonderful, vibrant world of unlimited possibilities. Then, adversity strikes,
and this "gift" feels more like a curse. "Why? Why me?" we ask. Yet we never
get an answer, or do we? After contracting Hodgkin's disease at age seven and
being given six months to live, I triumphed over the odds. Call it luck, hope,
faith or courage, there are thousands of survivors! Winners like us know the
answer - "Why not us? We can handle it!" I'm not dying of cancer. I'm living
with cancer. God doesn't make junk, regardless of what comes our way, and I
don't have to be afraid anymore. 

In my sophomore year of high school, the class was scheduled to run the mile.
I will always remember that day because due to the swelling and scars from
surgery on my leg, for two solid years I had not worn shorts. I was afraid of
the teasing. So, for two years I lived in fear. Yet that day, it didn't
matter. I was ready - shorts, heart and mind. I no sooner got to the starting
line before I heard the loud whispers. "Gross!" "How fat!" "How ugly!" I
blocked it out. 

Then the coach yelled, "Ready. Set. Go!" I jetted out of there like an
airplane, faster than anyone for the first 20 feet. I didn't know much about
pacing then, but it was okay because I was determined to finish first. As we
came around the first of four laps, there were students all over the track. By
the end of the second lap, many of the students had already quit. They had
given up and were on the ground gasping for air. As I started the third lap,
only a few of my classmates were left on the track, and I began limping. By
the time I hit the fourth lap, I was alone. Then it hit me. I realized that
nobody had given up. Instead, everyone had already finished. As I ran that
last lap, I cried. I realized that every boy and girl in my class had beat me,
and 12 minutes, 42 seconds after starting, I crossed the finish line. I fell
to the ground and shed oceans. I was so embarrassed. 

Suddenly my coach ran up to me and picked me up, yelling, "You did it. Manuel!
Manuel, you finished, son. You finished!" He looked me straight in the eye
waving a piece of paper in his hand. It was my goal for the day, which I had
forgotten. I had given it to him before class. He read it aloud to everyone.
It simply said, "I Manuel Diotte, will finish the mile run tomorrow, come what
may. No pain or frustration will stop me. For I am more than capable of
finishing, and with God as my strength, I will finish." Signed, Manuel Diotte
- with a little smiling face inside the D, as I always sign my name. My heart
lifted. My tears went away, and I had a smile on my face as if I had eaten a
banana sideways. My classmates applauded and gave me my first standing
ovation. It was then I realized winning isn't always finishing first.
Sometimes winning is just finishing.

---- Begin included message ----
Dare to Dream
Life! What a precious gift from God. What a blessing to be alive in a
wonderful, vibrant world of unlimited possibilities. Then, adversity strikes,
and this "gift" feels more like a curse. "Why? Why me?" we ask. Yet we never
get an answer, or do we? After contracting Hodgkin's disease at age seven and
being given six months to live, I triumphed over the odds. Call it luck, hope,
faith or courage, there are thousands of survivors! Winners like us know the
answer - "Why not us? We can handle it!" I'm not dying of cancer. I'm living
with cancer. God doesn't make junk, regardless of what comes our way, and I
don't have to be afraid anymore.

In my sophomore year of high school, the class was scheduled to run the mile.
I will always remember that day because due to the swelling and scars from
surgery on my leg, for two solid years I had not worn shorts. I was afraid of
the teasing. So, for two years I lived in fear. Yet that day, it didn't
matter. I was ready - shorts, heart and mind. I no sooner got to the starting
line before I heard the loud whispers. "Gross!" "How fat!" "How ugly!" I
blocked it out.

Then the coach yelled, "Ready. Set. Go!" I jetted out of there like an
airplane, faster than anyone for the first 20 feet. I didn't know much about
pacing then, but it was okay because I was determined to finish first. As we
came around the first of four laps, there were students all over the track. By
the end of the second lap, many of the students had already quit. They had
given up and were on the ground gasping for air. As I started the third lap,
only a few of my classmates were left on the track, and I began limping. By
the time I hit the fourth lap, I was alone. Then it hit me. I realized that
nobody had given up. Instead, everyone had already finished. As I ran that
last lap, I cried. I realized that every boy and girl in my class had beat me,
and 12 minutes, 42 seconds after starting, I crossed the finish line. I fell
to the ground and shed oceans. I was so embarrassed.

Suddenly my coach ran up to me and picked me up, yelling, "You did it. Manuel!
Manuel, you finished, son. You finished!" He looked me straight in the eye
waving a piece of paper in his hand. It was my goal for the day, which I had
forgotten. I had given it to him before class. He read it aloud to everyone.
It simply said, "I Manuel Diotte, will finish the mile run tomorrow, come what
may. No pain or frustration will stop me. For I am more than capable of
finishing, and with God as my strength, I will finish." Signed, Manuel Diotte
- with a little smiling face inside the D, as I always sign my name. My heart
lifted. My tears went away, and I had a smile on my face as if I had eaten a
banana sideways. My classmates applauded and gave me my first standing
ovation. It was then I realized winning isn't always finishing first.
Sometimes winning is just finishing.


--------------------
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD W3 HTML//EN">
<HTML>
<HEAD>

<META content=text/html;charset=iso-8859-1 http-equiv=Content-Type>
<META content='"MSHTML 4.72.3110.7"' name=GENERATOR>
</HEAD>
<BODY bgColor=#ffffff>
<DIV><B>
<H3 align=center><FONT color=#800000>Dare to Dream</FONT></H3></B>
<P>Life! What a precious gift from God. What a blessing to be alive in a
wonderful, vibrant world of unlimited possibilities. Then, adversity strikes,
and this &quot;gift&quot; feels more like a curse. &quot;Why? Why me?&quot; we
ask. Yet we never get an answer, or do we? After contracting Hodgkin's disease
at age seven and being given six months to live, I triumphed over the odds.
Call
it luck, hope, faith or courage, there are thousands of survivors! Winners
like
us know the answer - &quot;Why not us? We can handle it!&quot; I'm not dying
of
cancer. I'm living with cancer. God doesn't make junk, regardless of what
comes
our way, and I don't have to be afraid anymore. </P>
<P>In my sophomore year of high school, the class was scheduled to run the
mile.
I will always remember that day because due to the swelling and scars from
surgery on my leg, for two solid years I had not worn shorts. I was afraid of
the teasing. So, for two years I lived in fear. Yet that day, it didn't
matter.
I was ready - shorts, heart and mind. I no sooner got to the starting line
before I heard the loud whispers. &quot;Gross!&quot; &quot;How fat!&quot;
&quot;How ugly!&quot; I blocked it out. </P>
<P>Then the coach yelled, &quot;Ready. Set. Go!&quot; I jetted out of there
like
an airplane, faster than anyone for the first 20 feet. I didn't know much
about
pacing then, but it was okay because I was determined to finish first. As we
came around the first of four laps, there were students all over the track. By
the end of the second lap, many of the students had already quit. They had
given
up and were on the ground gasping for air. As I started the third lap, only a
few of my classmates were left on the track, and I began limping. By the time
I
hit the fourth lap, I was alone. Then it hit me. I realized that nobody had
given up. Instead, everyone had already finished. As I ran that last lap, I
cried. I realized that every boy and girl in my class had beat me, and 12
minutes, 42 seconds after starting, I crossed the finish line. I fell to the
ground and shed oceans. I was so embarrassed. </P>
<P>Suddenly my coach ran up to me and picked me up, yelling, &quot;You did it.
Manuel! Manuel, you finished, son. You finished!&quot; He looked me straight
in
the eye waving a piece of paper in his hand. It was my goal for the day, which
I
had forgotten. I had given it to him before class. He read it aloud to
everyone.
It simply said, &quot;I Manuel Diotte, will finish the mile run tomorrow, come
what may. No pain or frustration will stop me. For I am more than capable of
finishing, and with God as my strength, I will finish.&quot; Signed, Manuel
Diotte - with a little smiling face inside the D, as I always sign my name. My
heart lifted. My tears went away, and I had a smile on my face as if I had
eaten
a banana sideways. My classmates applauded and gave me my first standing
ovation. It was then I realized winning isn't always finishing first.
Sometimes
winning is just finishing.</P></DIV></BODY></HTML>

---- End included message ----


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