Monday, September 2, 2019
Helping the Little Children Essay -- Personal Narrative Essays
      Helping the Little Children     Ã       I feel the pounding footsteps under my feet and the  intense air rush past me as I run, squirming to keep my posture. I struggle to  stay glued to the beast's side. If I miss one crucial step, it may mean tragedy  for this innocent little disabled boy. I stay close to Dakota's ribs as we move  into the turn. Relieved, I gasp for the warm mountain air as we slow to a walk.  With my arms still extended above my head, I smile at the partially toothless  grin.     Ã       As I drive my topless jeep, rounding bend after bend, I  find myself staring at the lightly snow-capped mountains in the distance. I run  my hands through my windblown hair and notice nature's brilliant autumn colored  aspen patterns whiz past me.      Ã       Just over the ridge, I casually pull into Chris Turpin's  leaf covered driveway. To my left, stands a squatty farm house that has dirty  tan siding with dark brown trim, topped with a new forest green metal roof. The  few windows the house displays are abnormally small and are always dark. The  simple wood siding, though patched with dust and cob webs, has a neat, serene  air to it. A branch-covered lawn, which looks as though it has not been mowed in  weeks, makes a narrow ring around the house. To my right, stands a pole barn  with no solid sides, rising far above the many tarnished orange corrals  surrounding it. The barn is just old enough to have collected a nice assortment  of ragged bird nests in its rafters, but the wood is not yet discolored. The  barn encloses a small rectangular arena, which has one corner rounded off by an  old log. In the spare corner is an ancient water faucet and invincible weeds.  Extending from the east side of the barn are large corrals...              ...e highest  mountain when he grows up. Even though he hurts whenever he moves now, he has  such an incredible desire to reach this goal and make his dreams come true. I  believe he will someday fulfill his dream, and it will be a result of the magic  that happens at this very place. It is just a quaint farm house with a rickety  barn and a handful of hospitable souls all put together to create something  incredible.     Ã       However, this place is not just a place for disabled  children's dreams to come true, it is a place for my dreams to come true as  well. This is a place I feel I am needed and truly inspired to reach my highest  goals. It was here I discovered my gift of helping disabled children, and it was  here that I learned to slow down for the turns in my life and enjoy the ride.  Someday I will create my own TER Program; that is my dream.     Ã       Ã                        
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