
MFreeZone: Rick Beneteau
The Ice Cream Comb Story
by
Rick Beneteau
She was three. Just released from a far-away
hospital after life threatening brain surgery, ready to take on the world again. I was
happy just to have her back. My little "Mr. Clean" (shaven head and hoop
earrings) and me driving along to our local mall. Hanging out with dad day.
I recall her words as if it were yesterday.
"Daddy, can I get a treat?"
As she was understandably spoiled (if there is
such a thing), I replied "ok honey, but just ONE".
Her eyes beamed like the Fourth of July in
anticipation of that something only she knew at the time.
We drove around to the new end of the mall on
the normal seek-and-destroy mission of capturing a parking place. After all, it was
Saturday. We landed a fair distance from our destination, and began walking hand-in-hand
towards the entrance, her pace gaining momentum with each tiny step. A few feet from the
doors she broke loose and ran hands-first into the thick wall of glass, trying with
everything she had to swing the big doors open. No luck. With a little assistance, she
'did it' and tried the very same thing at the second set of doors.
It was then that I asked her what she wanted
for her treat. Without hesitation, she matter-of-factly said "an ice-cream comb from
the ice-cream store". Ok, the goal was set and we were in the mall!
But hold on! What was this? At the end of what
was just an ordinary looking lane of retail chain outlets she spied something new- this
huge fountain, water shooting who knows how high into the air. The new goal line!
She ran, and I walked (don't ya just hate it
when parents let their kids run wild in public?), and we arrived at the spectacle at about
the same time. The turbulent noise was almost deafening.
"Daddy, can I make a wish, can I make a
wish?" she screamed as she jumped with the kind of pure joy we've all long since
forgotten.
"Sure honey, but that will be YOUR TREAT
you know" I explained (gotta be firm with these kind of things).
She agreed.
I fumbled around in my pocket and pulled out
what I think was a dime (big spender) and placed it in her outstretched hand. She cupped
it tightly, closed her eyes and grimaced, formulating her wish. I stared at that little
scrunched-up face and said my own kind of prayer of thanks, feeling so blessed to still
have this ball of energy in my life. And then like a shooting star, the coin was flung
into the foaming water and with it, her wish.
We happily continued our stroll into the
familiar section of the mall. An eerie silence ensued, which I was admittedly
uncomfortable with. When I just couldn't stand it anymore, I couldn't resist breaking it.
"Aren't you gonna tell daddy what you
wished for?"
She retorted "I wished I could get an
ice-cream comb".
I just about lost it right then and there.
Couldn't imagine what the shoppers thought of this lunatic laughing uncontrollably in the
middle of a crowded mall. And needless to say, she got her wish, and two treats.
Little did I know then that my beautiful
little girl would soon embark on a long road of seizures, surgeries, special schools,
medications and end up partially paralyzed on her right side. She never learned to ride a
bike.
Today, she is almost seventeen. She cannot use
her right hand and walks with a noticeable limp. But she has overcome what life seemed to
so cruelly inflict on her. She was teased a lot and always struggled in school, both
socially and academically. But each year she showed improvement. She is planning a career
in early childhood education. With one year still remaining in high school, her and I, one
night not too long ago mapped out all the courses she would need to take in community
college. It was her idea. She volunteers weekly at a local hospital, on the children's
floor. She baby-sits a neighbors children five days a week. On her own this year, she
stood outside in line for four hours on a cold Canadian January afternoon and enrolled
herself, with her own babysitting money, into two courses she felt she would need for
college.
You see, to her failure was never an option.
It would almost be redundant for me to explain
why I wanted to share this story with you. She IS my daughter and I carry all those
fatherly biases with me wherever I go. But these aside, she is a very exceptional person
and one that I admire and have learned a lot from.
It is my sincerest hope that her story will
have even a momentary positive impact on you as a human being, a parent or a spouse.
I'd like to leave you with a closing thought.
As human beings, we deserve all the treats, and the multitude of good things that life can
offer us. We all have wishes and dreams, AND the power to make them reality. Just simple
truths of the universe.
We can wish for, and get, that ice-cream comb.
Written by Rick Beneteau
(c) 1998 NetProfit 2020 Inc., Marietta, GA
Contact
Information |
Rick Beneteau is an internationally
recorded and released songwriter and is a partner in the Internet Marketing firm NetProfit
2020 Inc. He also provides copy writing and complete advertising services including
corporate music production via his Trademarket company at: http://www.thehallway.com/ECOMMTR.htm and
he is a for-hire freelance writer.
e-mail: [email protected] |
E&OE

|