Date: Tue, 21 Mar 2006 22:00:00 -0800 From: HeroicStories <heroicstories-admin@lyris.net> To: doc@freebsd.org Subject: HeroicStories #656: The Beach That Love Built Message-ID: <LYRIS-2074369-5637921-2006.03.21-22.50.01--doc#freebsd.org@wood.lyris.net>
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Reaching more than 38,500 subscribers in 118 countries, this is... ------------------------------------------------------------------------ HeroicStories #656: 21 March 2006 www.HeroicStories.com ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The Beach That Love Built Story Editor: by Russ Towne Joyce Schowalter California, USA In early 2004 our daughter nearly died. She spent a month in the hospital fighting for her life. Since then, Stephanie has had to deal with the disease as well as many side effects of chemotherapy, steroids and other harsh medications. She has met each challenge, disappointment and setback with courage and class. 18 months later, in October 2005, Stephanie dreamt of a party and bonfire at the beach for her 16th birthday, with friends, relatives, and her beloved dog Ginger. It took a while, but we finally found a good beach with the necessary attributes of allowing dogs and bonfires, plus easy access. Then a week before her party, Stephanie's disease flared up and 15 glorious months of remission ended. Our friend Ian called the night before the party at 9 p.m. and turned our plans upside down. The small beach we'd selected, and the surrounding beaches would host a 30,000-person event on party night -- effectively closing them all. It was a party disaster in the making. We had researched: no other nearby beach would work. Our daughter had her heart set on having her dog and a bonfire at the beach, but as usual she didn't complain. In her young life she's dealt with much worse things than a spoiled birthday party. This was just the final straw on a mountain of straws that broke the camel's back; she sat down and began to quietly cry. Stephanie quickly decided she'd rather have the party at our home so she could have her dog and a bonfire. We called the invitees with the changed plans. When people arrived at 3 p.m. they found small signs that read: "Welcome to Campbell Beach. Where Dogs and Bonfires are Welcome. Where the beach is small, the waves are so far away you must close your eyes to see them, but not so the love for Stephanie and her little dog, too. Happy Birthday Stephanie!" Laid out before them was the smallest, goofiest beach imaginable, built with love. At a moment's notice Ian and his wife Jayme had created a beach on our concrete driveway. They had arrived hours earlier with a car loaded down with 660 pounds of sand, palm trees, beach toys, fish netting, Tiki torches and much more. Our son Brian and his friend Eric had helped set everything up. The beach was built with so much love that it quickly became real to everyone there. The girls frolicked in the sand, enjoyed the bonfire, lit torches, had a barbecue, built their own huge ice cream sundaes, and much more. The birthday girl was lifted up and her face was planted into her cake despite her laughing protests, which started a hilarious cake fight. As the girls laughed and played on the "beach" around the bonfire with our funny little dog, I felt for a moment that all was right in the world. I'm so very grateful to our friends for making our daughter's birthday wish come true. ----------==========----------o----------==========---------- Let HeroicStories help you market your product, promote a cause you care about, or recognize your hero. See http://www.HeroicStories.com/ads.html for details. Thanks to our readers who help support HeroicStories. To add your name, see http://www.HeroicStories.com/fund.html ----------==========----------o----------==========---------- Our last story, "15 Miles Each Way" (#655) described a 30-mile ride given to a stranger by a store clerk, and that stranger's inspiration to help out someone else in their own time of need. (The full story is here: http://heroicstories.com/archives.html .) Ed in Oklahoma: "Being locked out of the car is something that happens to everyone that drives one, I suppose. What I liked about this story is that Linda shows us the next step past the person who rescued her, giving her a ride to get her keys. Linda shows us how this ride sparked her to assist someone else with a different need. If more of us would take that lesson from the kindnesses shown us, that would be great." Gretchen in New York echoes that comment: "The process described in this story was first illustrated for me in the wonderful movie 'Pay It Forward' a few years ago. It's a real inspiration. Warning: be prepared with plenty of tissues, it's a tearjerker." Last issue we referred people out to HeroicStories web page "Ripples of Inspiration": http://heroicstories.com/prison.html . Rick in Oregon sent a reply that was typical of those who liked that page: "I work long days finding errors in other people's software code. Some call me a 'paid hacker', but professionally I am a Quality Assurance Engineer working in software development. Hal's story of grey all around, no color, no sound, no music seemed like he was standing right next to me. Software development is a solitary endeavor when it gets past all the meetings, discussions and paperwork, down deep into writing the code. Then I come along and purposely try to destroy the programmers' creations to cries of 'You aren't supposed to do that'. Rick continues, "Thank you, Hal, for reminding me why I subscribe to HeroicStories. My email 'ding' goes off constantly, but the only time I stop everything and read the email is when I see it is from HeroicStories. I know a few minutes spent with the stories will brighten the walls, and fill the air with sounds and fragrances of people not in this blackened hole of CRT generated light. Thank you from someone who is not in prison for a crime, but we make our own walls of captivity -- mine just happens to consist of sixteen computers, four monitors, keyboards, mice and a dull glow off my beta fish." Joyce Schowalter, Publisher Co-Conspirators to Make the World a Better Place SUBSCRIPTIONS to HeroicStories are FREE. Just send a blank message to join-heroicstories@lyris.net or visit http://www.HeroicStories.com (to UNSUBSCRIBE, see the end of this message) COMMENTS about stories are always welcome -- please include your first name and location: Comments@HeroicStories.com TO SUBMIT A STORY, see our submission guidelines, tips and information at: http://www.HeroicStories.com/submit.html PUBLISHED BY HS & Son, Inc., PO Box 55213, Seattle, WA 98155, USA. HeroicStories is a trademark of HS & Son, Inc. Newspapers can get the stories as a regular feature column for FREE. For details, send your paper's editor to http://www.heroicstories.com/column.html Copyright 2006 http://www.HeroicStories.com -- All Rights Reserved. All broadcast, publication, or copying to the WWW, e-mail lists, or any other medium, online or not, is prohibited without prior written permission from HeroicStories. However, permission is granted to circulate this publication via manual forwarding by e-mail to friends providing that the text is forwarded IN ITS ENTIRETY, from the "Reaching more than" line on top through the end of this paragraph, and NO FEE is charged. We request that you forward no more than three copies to any one person -- after that, they should get their own subscription. -- Distribution sponsored by Lyris Technologies, Inc. <http://www.lyris.com> This copy sent to: [doc@freebsd.org] TO UNSUBSCRIBE: DO NOT reply to this message! Simply send any message mailto:leave-5637921-2074369W@wood.lyris.net This method works no matter what address you send from.
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