Passing It On

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Phyllis Rackman is still trying to deal with the arrival of her nephew Tommy into her life,
and wondering whether he truly is different from the men she learned to hate.
But a chance encounter on a playground makes her think ... and maybe hope.

Passing It On
A Tommy Browder Tale
by Randalynn

###

“Let the first impulse pass, wait for the second.” -- Baltasar Gracian

"Never act on impulse. Plan first. Think it through. Then act." -- Luc Saint-Cyr

###

As Phyllis Rackman drove through town, she wasn’t thinking about the news on the radio or how light the traffic was that Saturday. She was thinking about the same thing she had been thinking about for quite some time.

Her nephew Tommy.

He was a puzzle, and that scared her in ways she didn’t really want to think about. She had tried to hurt him, viciously and truly without cause, and he had turned it around and made her see that her own hatred of all things male had almost caused her to be as evil as she had always known men to be.

Phyllis had assumed Tommy was “just another man,” and tried to punish him for ... for the sins of others. But the boy turned the whole plan to humiliate him on its head, and showed her a love and compassion she still had trouble believing could come from anything with a Y chromosome.

Could she have been wrong all these years? She had started to think that everything she thought she knew might not be true, and it shook her to the core and left her wondering if she really knew anything at all.

Still, she did have good reason to hate, once, and pieces of the cause still haunted her. Tommy’s presence brought back shadows of things that were, and it was hard for her, having a man in the house. She still shivered a bit when he walked into the kitchen, even if all he did was smile and say good morning, or sit down in the living room and ask about her day. It wasn’t hatred, not with Tommy, not anymore. But there was fear, yes, just as irrational as the hatred she once felt for the boy, and Phyllis would curse herself that she still stiffened up whenever he came close enough to touch her.

Still, that story he told her about that boy Keller and his friends, and how he fought them in an alley to protect that girl? Why fight so well unless he liked it? Did he have a violent streak, like ... like the ones who hurt her, long ago?

She was supposed to meet Tommy in the park near the playground, to pick him up so they could grab some dinner and maybe see a movie.

‘Although what could the two of us possibly watch together that both of us would like?’ She shook her head at the thought, then she wondered why. After all, she still barely knew him, even after several weeks. Of course, after meeting him, Phyllis wondered if she even knew herself anymore.

As she pulled the car over to the curb, she saw Tommy sitting on a bench facing the playground full of kids. He was leaning forward, almost like a lifeguard at a beach, and she watched his head move back and forth.

‘What is he up to?’ she wondered as she got out of the car, locked it, and started moving towards him across the park. ‘This is an odd way for a sixteen-year-old boy to spend a summer afternoon. Isn’t it?’

As Phyllis grew closer to the playground, she saw a small blond boy watching a younger dark-haired girl playing with her doll by the sandbox. She was pretending to take care of it, rocking it and singing to it, and as she looked up at the boy with a smile, he suddenly lurched forward and pushed her back into the sand. She fell hard, her skirt flipping up and her doll flying off into the air. The tears started almost at once, and the boy laughed, turned, and started to run.

Tommy’s aunt felt a rush of anger.

‘Stupid boy! So cruel, even so young!’ Phyllis felt her hatred swell, and she started moving forward to teach the boy a lesson in what it really meant to hurt someone.

Then Tommy spoke, raising his voice just a little.

“Hey. Kid. Hold up.”

The boy stopped running and looked back. Phyllis stopped, too, just outside of Tommy’s line of sight.

“Who, me?” The boy said.

Tommy nodded. “Yeah, you. Come here a minute.”

“Why should I?”

“Because I asked you to.”

The boy squinted and frowned. “No, you told me to.”

Tommy grinned. “Yeah, I guess I did. Okay. Would you please come here a minute?”

“Why?”

The older boy looked at him. “What’s your name?”

“Kevin.”

“Because I want to ask you something, Kevin, and it’s easier to talk if you’re over here instead of over there.” The boy hesitated, and Tommy shook his head. “What, you think I’m gonna beat you up or something?”

He nodded.

Tommy laughed. “Dude, you’re like six years old! I’m ten years older than you. And yeah, if I was a jerk, I could squash you like a bug. But I’m not a jerk. I’m just me.” He held out a hand. “Tommy Browder.” The boy looked at the hand, but stayed where he was. Tommy let it fall.

“Besides, I don’t even know you, Kev. So why would I want to hurt you?”

Kevin took a few steps closer. “If you don’t want to beat me up ... what do you want?”

“I just want to talk, that’s all.”

“About what?”

“What you did to that girl just now.”

The boy squinted at him. “She your sister?”

“No, I don’t know her. Neither did you. But you pushed her anyway.” The boy considered this for a moment, and turned to go. Tommy sighed. “Come on, man. I just want to know why you did it, that’s all.”

He turned and walked back towards Tommy, stopping a short distance away.

“I pushed her ‘cause she’s a girl.”

“So?”

Kevin fidgeted for a moment. “What?”

“So why is that a problem?”

“’Cause she’s a GIRL.”

“So’re half the people on the planet, Kev. You gonna go around pushing them all?”

That stumped him for a while, but then he gave Tommy a puzzled look and shook his head.

“Good to know.” The older boy smiled, gave Kevin another second or two, then spoke again. “So why did you push her?”

Kevin scrunched up his face and said, very slowly, “Because ... she’s ... a ... girl.”

“And how does that make it okay to push her and make her cry?”

“Huh?”

“Not a hard question, Kevin. Why is it okay to push a girl and make her cry?”

“’Cause she’s different.”

“How?”

He tilted his head and thought for a minute. “She likes different stuff than me. Girl stuff, clothes and babies and ponies and junk.”

“How do you know that?”

“Because ... she’s ... a ... girl.”

Tommy sighed. “So? Maybe she likes boy stuff, too. You don’t know. You never asked.” They looked at each other. “Anyway, why should that make you push her?”

“Huh?”

“I mean, why should you care what she likes or doesn’t like?”

Kevin stood there staring at him, confused. Tommy sighed again.

“Okay, turn around. Is that your brother over there?”

“Yeah.”

“He looks like you. Does he like the same things you do?”

“Sometimes. I hate broccoli, and he likes it. And he likes shows about animals, and I don’t.”

“So. You gonna go push him?”

Kevin shook his head. Tommy nodded. “But he likes different things than you, right?”

The boy thought a bit. “Yeah,” he said, a little slowly.

“So why not go push him? Make him cry?”

“Are you telling me to?” Kevin pushed his jaw out and narrowed his eyes. “’Cause I won’t.”

“Nope. Not telling you to do anything. I’m just asking you to think about it. Look, you pushed a girl you didn’t know because you thought she liked different things than you. But you know your brother likes different things than you, and you still won’t push him and make him cry. Does that make sense to you?”

After a minute, Kevin shook his head again.

“So maybe why you pushed her wasn’t because she likes different things.” Tommy scrunched up his face the way Kevin had a minute before and said, “Maybe it’s ... ‘cause ... ‘she’s ... a ...girl.”

Kevin shook his head. “That’s stupid. Why would I do that?”

“I dunno, man. You’re the one who did it. But girls are different, aren’t they?”

The other boy looked down. After a few seconds, he nodded.

“They scare you a little, too, don’t they? Because they’re not like you.”

Kevin looked up and his face turned angry. “I'm not scared of girls!”

Tommy shrugged. “Well, I am, sometimes.”

“You are?” Kevin looked stunned. “Why?”

“Because they're different. Sometimes I don't know what they're thinking, or how they feel, and I don't want to say or do something stupid that’ll make 'em mad at me.”

“Why?”

“Because I like 'em.”

Kevin scrunched up his face. “WHY?”

Tommy grinned. “Because they're different.”

The six-year-old froze. “You like 'em because they're different?”

“Yeah, I do.” Tommy thought for a moment. “Okay, you saw Star Wars, right?”

“Duh.” Kevin rolled his eyes. “Everybody saw Star Wars.”

“Did you like it?” The younger boy nodded.

“There were a lot of aliens in those movies, right?” Kevin nodded again and smiled. Tommy smiled back. “Tell me something. Do you think it would have been as good if everybody in it was human? No jawas or sandpeople? And Chewbacca was just some bald guy who looked like your uncle, instead of being a Wookie?”

Kevin shook his head. “No! That would really suck.”

Tommy looked left and right, then looked back at Kevin. “I’m gonna let you in on a secret, Kev. Girls are people, but there also sorta like aliens ‘cause we don’t always think the same. It makes things interesting, like in the movie. But the thing is, they're friendly aliens. They're different, but they're nice.”

“Nice? Girls?”

“Yeah,” Tommy said. “That’s why I like ‘em.”

The younger boy looked skeptical, and Tommy thought for a minute. “Kev, do you like your Mom?”

Kevin smiled. “Yeah. She bakes cookies and makes pizza for dinner sometimes, and lets us stay up past bedtime if we're really good. She tucks us in and takes care of us when we're sick. She … she loves us. A lot.”

Tommy leaned forward. “Kev, your Mom's a girl, too. Only she's grown-up, so she's a woman.”

Kevin rolled his eyes again. “I knew that, Tommy. I'm not dumb.”

“Never said you were.” The six-year-old nodded. “But you know your Mom is a girl, and she's not scary. She's nice, and she loves you, right?”

Another nod.

“But you still pushed that little girl down and made her cry? Just because she was a girl?”

The younger boy froze, stunned.

Tommy let him think hard for a minute, then said gently, “How would you feel if someone did that to your Mom, man?”

Kevin looked down, and his voice became very small. “I'd be sad,” he replied. “And mad. I'd be real mad.”

“Who are you mad at now, Kevin?”

“Me. I'm stupid.”

Tommy shook his head. “No, you're not. You just didn't think first. You pushed that girl because you were scared of her, 'cause you thought girls were different and scary. But if you stopped and thought about it for a minute, like you did just now, you woulda figured out that you like girls, too, just like you like your mom, because they're different. Not scary, just different. And sometimes nice, like your mom. And you never woulda done what you did. See?”

Kevin wouldn't look up. “No, I'm dumb.”

“You're not dumb, Kev.” The boy shook his head, and Tommy sighed. “Look, you figured it out yourself just now, because you took a few minutes to think. All you have to do now is remember to think first the next time you want to do something stupid, 'kay? Then you'll know if what you want to do is the right thing to do, and you'll do what's right. Right?”

After a minute, the six-year-old looked up and nodded, his face red. Tommy smiled.

“So, you pushed her down and made her cry. Think about it. What's the right thing to do now?”

“Say I'm sorry?”

Tommy shrugged and stood up. “Sounds good to me. She's over there with her Mom. Go make her feel better, man. Might make you feel better, too.”

Kevin gave him a look. “You think?”

The older boy grinned. “All the time, Kev. All the time.”

The boy turned around and ran across the playground, and Tommy watched him go. He ran over to the sandbox and picked up the doll, then walked over to her and held it out. Tommy saw his lips move, and a few seconds later, the little girl took the doll and then wrapped Kevin in a big hug that the boy endured with a sheepish smile. Finally, the girl ran back to the sandbox, her hurt all but forgotten.

Kevin turned back to Tommy, smiled and waved, and ran over to where his brother was climbing on the jungle gym.

The little girl’s mother was too shocked to speak, but she looked over at Tommy and wondered what the teenager had said to make the boy apologize. Tommy smiled and waved, and she raised her fingers in a small, tentative wave of her own.

Phyllis took a step forward, still working on what she’d seen.

“That was ... interesting,” she said, and Tommy’s head turned at the sound of her voice.

“Hey, Aunt Phyllis!” The teen threw her a smile before looking back at Kevin. “No, I was just ... payin’ it forward, I guess.”

“Paying it forward?”

“Yeah, sort of,” he replied, a little embarrassed. “When I was little, around Kevin’s age, my Dad taught me to think first before I did something, He wanted me to learn to figure out what the right thing to do was and then do it, not just go with the first thing that made me feel good.”

Almost to himself, he added, “I think that’s why Keller is such a jerk. He never learned to think about what he does. When he was just a kid, he hurt someone for fun and liked it. So that’s what he does. That’s who he is, now. And probably who he’ll always be.”

Tommy went quiet for a bit. When he spoke again, he sounded sad. “Every time I mix it up with Keller -- every time I stop him from hurtin’ somebody -- I think back to what Dad taught me. And I wonder, if someone taught Keller to think when he was Kevin’s age, maybe he wouldn’t be the way he is. And maybe I wouldn’t have to spend so much of my time gettin’ in his way, or thinking about who he’s hurtin’ when I’m not there to stop him.”

His eyes drifted back to the playground. “So I come to places like this looking for kids like Kevin, so I can pass on what my Dad taught me, and teach ‘em to think first. That way, they can choose the kind of people they want to be, before it’s too late. Maybe someday, somebody else down the line won’t have to keep worrying about who Kevin is hurtin’ today, once Keller’s just a bad memory.”

They stood and watched the playground for a time.

“You don’t have to protect the world from the Kellers, you know,” Phyllis said, thinking back to her own ghosts. “There are so many like him out there, after all. It’s a big job.”

“If I don’t, who will?” Tommy thought for a moment and shook his head. “No, I stepped up way back in the fourth grade and kicked his butt when he needed it, ‘cause that’s what I knew was right. Now I guess I’m stuck with him.”

After a few seconds, he turned to his aunt. “Of course, on the bright side, he’s also stuck with me. So like the Jamaicans say, ‘it’s all good.’”

He grinned and she found herself smiling back. They turned together and started walking back to the car.

“I’m thinking you’ve met your share of Kellers, too.” Tommy spoke softly, keeping his tone conversational. Phyllis froze for a second, and the teenager did his best to ignore it as they both continued on. “And I’m thinking they can do a lot worse than beat on you, when you’re a woman. That’s why you did what you did when I came to stay, I guess. That’s why you’re still a little afraid of me. I can see it in your eyes sometimes.”

They reached the street, and he stopped on the passenger side.

“Maybe I shouldn’t have said anything,” Tommy said, turning around, his head lowered. “And you don’t have to tell me what happened, not if you don’t want to. Not my business. And it’s history, away, even if you can’t let it go yet. So maybe I shouldn’t even bring it up.”

He looked up, and she could see the determination in his eyes. “But I just want you to know ... no matter what ... that the past really is history. You’re safe now. You got me. I’m here, and I got your back. And nobody’s gonna hurt you again, not if I can help it. Okay?”

For a moment, it was quiet. Phyllis looked at him for a long time, but Tommy couldn’t read the expression on her face. It almost looked like she was torn, trying to decide ... something. He saw the beginnings of tears, and wondered if he’d gone too far.

Then she reached up and touched his face, gently and without hesitation. It was his turn to freeze, and when Phyllis saw that, she smiled and let her hand drop.

“Thank you,” she whispered, and his eyes widened. “That means a lot.”

Tommy looked away, suddenly embarrassed.

“Yeah, well, the way I see it, I’m already worrying about everybody in town younger than Keller,” he said to her reflection in the car window, then turned back to her with that grin she’d come to know so well since he came to visit. “Might as well add my aunt to the list, especially since she’s buying me dinner. Pizza at the Fountains?”

She laughed and shook her head, and the moment was broken. “That’s the third time this week.”

“But it’s the first at the Fountains, and they got the best pizza in town,” he said, popping the car door and climbing inside. “That’s what Tony DeFranco says. One of his sisters owns the place.”

Phyllis looked down at the boy and smiled. “Okay, The Fountains it is.”

“Great!” he replied, the grin becoming a smile. She shut his door and walked around to the driver’s side. When she had gotten in and buckled, Tommy spoke again.

“Just don’t let her know who I am, okay? She finds out I’m the one who saved Josie, she’ll go bankrupt trying to feed me for free ... forever.”

“I may go bankrupt trying to feed you for the summer.” Phyllis turned the key and started the car. “But it’s okay, your secret’s safe with me.”

“Thanks!”

She signaled and pulled away from the curb.

“No problem,” she replied with a small smile, looking away so Tommy couldn’t see. “I guess, in a way ... I've got your back, too.”

She felt him turn to look at her, and then look away.

“Good to know,” he said, and she could hear the smile in his voice.

###

“It is easier to build strong children than to repair broken men.” -- Frederick Douglass

© 2009. Posted by the author.

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Comments

I like your stories.

But this one goes beyond just nice. Tommy is one remarkable guy, and you should give yourself a pat somewhere (trying it on your own back could hurt) for coming up with him. So just imagine me patting you on the back here, okay?

Thank you! I like your stories, too!

I've liked them for quite some time, actually, and I'm happy I got the chance to tell you!

I'm also glad you like Tommy. He's pretty special to me, and I look forward to many more Tommy tales to come. *smile*

(By the way, the back patting has commenced *grin*)

Randa

She could hear the smile in his voice.

Andrea Lena's picture

...this series gets better and better. Your quote of Frederick Douglass is so true...as I said elsewhere, your character shows a lot of character. Thanks for this story!

She was born for all the wrong reasons but grew up for all the right ones.
Possa Dio riccamente vi benedica, tutto il mio amore, Andrea

  

To be alive is to be vulnerable. Madeleine L'Engle
Love, Andrea Lena

excellent second step

It looks as though some progress is underway, both for Kevin and for Aunt Phyllis. I'm enjoying it so far. Keep the changes coming.

thoughtless

kristina l s's picture

Hey you walk about in any group of people you see distraction or impatience or simple thoughtlessness, people in their own little zone largely oblivious to those around them. Add a pinch of lousy day, difference or whatever and things can get... testy. Sometimes worse. Empathy's a funny word innit and even if we know it anyone that thinks they aren't thoughtless or stupid at times is kidding themselves, just gotta try though don't cha.

Was a little unsure about these, I mean Tommy is just a little too good to be true, but then he is sorta cool at the same time, so it's all good as they say, Jamaican or otherwise. Nice Randa.

Kristina

The thing about Tommy ...

... is that he's not actually trying to be good. He's just being Tommy. *grin* Thank the goddess he's so good at it, too.

Randa

the mensch is back!

laika's picture

I hope young Kevin really learned something today, and might even pass this on, but a single conversation like this might not have as much effect as we'd like on his six year old brain, his life overall, with peer pressure + such. Still it would be awesome if it did. But Tommy's gentle wisdom has certainly DID have an effect on Aunt Phyllis. You seem to have left this open for further revelations about her, and for her character to go thru...

And sometimes a single conversation like this CAN have an impact. I was about twelve when a woman stopped me and two of my friends to ask us a riddle. It was the one about the doctor, where a boy and his father are in a car crash, the dad is killed, and when the kid is wheeled into surgery the doctor says: "I Can't operate on this patient, he is my son." And the riddle is, who is the doctor in relation to the boy?

The answer is a no brainer nowadays, but this was around 1966, and we were stumped, until the stranger told us the doctor was his Mom. Three little lightbulbs went on over our heads, such an obvious answer, amazing to us that we hadn't thought of it. I remember my friend Jeff calling out to the departing woman: "Right on, lady!"

It certainly was eye-opening in a big and permanent way for me. And maybe for my friends too, I dunno; but it does show sometimes a kid having a single short conversation with a stranger can have a positive effect...
~~~hugs, Laika

I Agree with Laika

I once wrote a newspaper column on how a positive remark from an older boy when I was in the first grade shaped my entire athletic career. We were tossing a football around and he said I had great hands -- meaning I was pretty good at catching the ball. From that moment on I knew I could catch anything thrown to me and almost always did. Contrast that with my high school coach who said in front of the whole team, "You've got 9.9 hands -- too bad you've got 15.5 feet." His time was in reference to the hundred-yard dash. I had broken my leg as a freshman and hadn't regained my full speed. . .never did. He was like most coaches of that era, all negative. He didn't call a play for a pass to be thrown to me all season. In college I made the intramural all-star team as an end. I learned that being fast wasn't all that necessary if you could catch everything thrown to you.

I learned from my high school football coach, and others, how not to be a coach. Over the years I coached dozens of youth sports teams -- tennis, volleyball, soccer, football, and basketball. I applied positive reinforcement techniques I learned in bahavioral psychology in college. I can tell you hundreds of stories of how they worked not only as a coach but as a referee and in business. I'll pick one. I was coaching a sixth grade basketball team and had called a time out. I looked at one of the boys and said. "You know what. You look like a natural three-point shooter. The next time down I want you to make a three for us." I didn't say anything more about it or set up a play -- I just let it go at that. To my knowledge the boy hadn't made a three for us all season. The first time he touched the ball he threw it up from beyond the three-point line and it went in. I just nodded. When he brought the ball down the next time he asked what play to call. I told him to shoot again. he did and made another three. He became an excellent shot and later played varsity ball in high school.

A few years ago one of my sons decided to coach soccer. He was home from college for the summer. The club gave him two teams that hadn't had much success. One of them lost every game the prior year and the other had won only a couple of games. They gave him two teams because he had been our school's first all-state soccer player. Under his coaching they both qualified for the state tournament through their season record and regional tournament play. As it turned out they played their first game at state at the same time so he asked me to fill in for him. I had watched the boys play several games so I knew most of their names and quickly learned the others. During the game I shouted constant encouragement to the players and they eventually won 1-0 to what appeared to be a superior group of players. Afterward one of the twelve-year old boys said, "You coach just like your son."

Obviously my son was paying it forward. That was a very proud moment for me.

Tommy may sound too good to be true to some, but to me he sounds like someone who has learned the power of positive reinforcement. That small boy might forget everything Tommy told him, but he will never forget how that little girl's smile made him feel. He also won't easily forget how Tommy made him feel. It's not often a 16-year old talks to a 6-year old like an equal.

Thank God I've met a few Tommys. Thank God Randalynn has the wisdom and writing ability to introduce one more to us.

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)

Coaching and life...

Andrea Lena's picture

...when my son was playing recreational soccer when he was just beginning to enjoy the sport, he had a terrific coach, an object of ridicule by many of the other coaches who vilified her for her status as the only woman coaching in the league. She was also the most successful, which might have been the true reason for her vilification. Miss Sherri coached by example, encouragement and kindness. She took her 9-year-olds to a tournament for older kids and got them into the semi's, merely by being supportive and instructing instead of tearing down. It was the most enjoyable time our family had together with Joe's participation...Tommy may be larger than life, but we if we can accept so many of the more fanciful things folks write about, certainly we should consider accepting that there are kids just like Tommy who live and breathe and "pay it forward" every day. Thanks again Randa, for a great story!

She was born for all the wrong reasons but grew up for all the right ones.
Possa Dio riccamente vi benedica, tutto il mio amore, Andrea

  

To be alive is to be vulnerable. Madeleine L'Engle
Love, Andrea Lena

Absolutely loved the way

Absolutely loved the way Tommy explained right from wrong to the six year old boy. He did it at a level the boy could understand and intergrate into his being. Each marvelous little story of Tommy has a moral of its own and is well worth reading and thinking about. Thanks for them, Randalynn. Merry Christmas to you and yours, and a wonderful New Year also. Hugs, Jan

Tommy's Dad

ALISON
'has taught him the values that my mother and father
taught our family----that a man does not attack a woman
under any circumstances.My father referred to men who
beat women as "gutless b-----ds",and I have taught my son and grandson the same.Thanks for another great story.
Merry Christmas and much love to you and yours.Alison

ALISON

Nice Sentiment, But Possibly Dangerous

RAMI

I enjoyed the story and agree that Tommy is really a great kid, and a true mench as someone described him. It would be great if that was how the world did work. But, I think that a 16 year old boy, hanging around a park alone and speaking one on one with a 6 year old, would attact undue attention from the adults with their kids or the park attendants, and have the police called to intervene.

I am not suggesting that that would be right, but I do think that would be the reaction. Perhaps, in the small town (as it seems in the story)where Tommy is well known, it could happen, but where I live in South Florida, the reaction would be different.

Sorry to bust the good feelings.
That being said the story was well written and enjoyable.

RAMI

RAMI

Tommy's town is small enough ...

... that even Phyllis's friend from the first story knew who he was. I think it's doubtful anyone in town is going to look at him as some sort of suspicious character. But I do understand that it is a possibility out in the real world. I just didn't want to have it interfere with the story at all -- i had Phyllis and Kevin to worry about as it was. *smile*

Randa

Some May Think Tommy Is Too Good To Be True

joannebarbarella's picture

But you write him so well and the dialogue is so natural. You put him into everyday situations and they ring true too.

There are Tommies out there, just not too many of them. The longing for Tommies is evident in the popularity of the super-heroes who go around righting wrongs and fighting evil-doers.

Your Tommy is better than them because he does it without the crutches of special powers or enormous wealth. When you see him again please give him a hug from me,

Joanne

Love these little

slices of life, Especially when they make you stop and think, Hope you plan on writing more about Tommy very soon

Kirri

Tommy

Something tells me tommy will be a great parent in future, good thing he was(and still is) there for these childrens, and his aunt.

Looking forward for another story with him.

Passing It On

Is a most wonderful story filled with a wisdom seldom seen.

    Stanman
May Your Light Forever Shine
    Stanman
May Your Light Forever Shine

Keller

I'm wondering. In a small town, where everyone knows everybody, and everything that happens, wouldn't a kid who kept committing assaults or who ran a gang find himself in front of a judge every now and again? Most states have secure facilities for junior offenders. They don't do a lot of good and often make kids into hardened repeat offenders, but they would take a kid like Keller off the street for a while.

You would think so, Pippa ...

... but in my experience, bullies tend to be left alone, merely because they're underage and dealing with them is a difficult proposition at best. Sometimes the only people who can handle them are other kids. Like Tommy. *grin*

Randa

There ARE people like that.

I loved this one, although it made me hewl, and use up nearly a box of tissues. I remembered a boy who came to my rescue when someone was picking on me, who spoke like that. So such people do exist, although alas they are pretty rare.

My hero grew up to become a Policeman. This was back in the days when Policmen were still going around on foot, and helping little lost girls and boys, and being nice to everyone. Unfortunately, nowdays they do tend to drive around in cars, and to gather in hundreds so that they can break down soeone's door in the night and ransack their house, or gather in lines with batons and helmets and goggles and shields, to break up a demo. But I'm still rememebering how it was BEFORE the public and the police decided to make war on each other. I'm rather old so my memories go back a long way...

Briar

Briar

"I've got your back"

Ah, yes, the seldom-seen art of THINKING before you do something. Wonderful

Dorothycolleen

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