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Story Archives
It was our normal Thursday morning business meeting at our
real-estate office. No big deal. Before the meeting we hung around the bagel
table, as usual, with our coffee. He stood aside, looking a little shy and
awkward and very young, a new face in a room full of extroverted salespeople.
An average looking guy, maybe 5 feet 8 inches. A clean-cut, sweet-faced kid. I
went over to chat with him. Maybe he was a new salesman?
He said he was just back from Kabul,
Afghanistan. A Marine. Our office (and a local school) had been supportive by
sending letters to him and other troops, which he had posted on the American
Embassy door in Kabul. He stood guard there for four months and was shot at
daily.
He had come to our office to thank us for our
support, for all the letters during those scary times. I couldn't believe my
ears. He wanted to thank us? We should be thanking him. But how? How can I
ever show him my appreciation?
At the end of the sales meeting, he stepped quietly
forward, no incredible hulk. As a matter of fact, he looked for all the world
15 years old to me. (The older I get, the younger they look.)
This young Marine, this clean-faced boy, had no
qualms stepping up to the plate and dodging bullets so that I might enjoy the
freedom to live my peaceful life in the land of the free. No matter the risk.
Suddenly the most stressful concerns of my life seemed as nothing, my
complacency flew right out the window with his every word. Somewhere, somehow,
he had taken the words honor, courage and commitment into his very soul and
laid his life on the line daily for me and us. A man of principle. He wants to
do it. Relishes it. And he came to thank us? For a few letters? I fought back
the tears as he spoke so briefly and softly.
He walked forward to our manager and placed a
properly folded American flag in his hands. It had flown over the Embassy. He
said thanks again. You could hear a pin drop. As I looked around I saw red
faces everywhere fighting back the tears.
In a heartbeat, my disillusionment with young people
today quickly vanished. In ordinary homes, in ordinary towns, kids like him
are growing up proud to be an American and willing to die for it. Wow. We'll
frame the flag and put it in the lobby. He only came to my office once, for
just a few minutes. But I realize I rubbed shoulders with greatness in the
flesh and in the twinkling of an eye my life is forever changed. His name is
Michael Mendez, a corporal in the USMC. We are a great nation. We know because
the makings of it walked into my office that day.
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