Bob Butler lost
his legs in a 1965 land mine explosion in Vietnam . He returned home a war
hero. Twenty years later, he proved once again that heroism comes from the
heart.
“I had to
get there”, he says. “It didn’t matter how much it hurt”. When Butler arrived at the pool there was a
three-year-old girl named Stephanie Hanes lying at the bottom. She had been
born without arms and had fallen in the water and couldn’t swim. Her mother
stood over her baby screaming frantically. Butler dove to the bottom of the pool and
brought little Stephanie up to the deck. Her face was blue, she had no pulse
and was not breathing.
As Butler continued with his
CPR, he calmly reassured her. Don’t worry, he said. “I was her arms to get out
of the pool. It’ll be okay. I am now her lungs. Together we can make it”.
Seconds
later the little girl coughed, regained consciousness, and began to cry. As
they hugged and rejoiced together the mother asked Butler how he knew it would be okay. The
truth is, “I didn’t know”, he told her. “But when my legs were blown off in the
war, I was all alone in a field. No one was there to help except a little
Vietnamese girl. As she struggled to drag me into her village, she whispered in
broken English, ‘It okay. You can live. I be your legs. Together we make it’.”
Her kind words brought hope to my soul and I wanted to do the same for
Stephanie.
There are
simply those times when we cannot stand alone. There are those times when we
need someone to be our legs, our arms, our friend.
Source:
http://academictips.org/blogs/arms-and-legs-for-others/
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