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It’s for you

It’s for you

Sipping my coffee… ever have a 4/5-year-old hand you the phone sayin it’s for you, don’t care how big and bad you are, you best answer it.

The call came in:

He hadn’t smiled in days, terrified of his upcoming 12-hour surgery. Then, two Navy SEALs walked into his room.

10-year-old Cody had been in the hospital for weeks, his body broken from a terrible car accident. To save his spine, doctors had to put him in a “halo brace,” a metal ring bolted to a vest to keep him still. It was painful, scary, and he hadn’t smiled in days.

He was facing another, even more dangerous 12-hour surgery. The night before, his Child Life Specialist, a woman whose job it was to help him cope, asked him what his one biggest wish was. “I want to meet a real soldier,” he whispered. “A real hero.”

That specialist had a brother. He was a Navy SEAL.

The next morning, the call went out. A SEAL team was in the middle of a 48-hour urban training exercise just miles away. When they heard the request, the team leader didn’t hesitate. “We’re going.”

Two operators, still in full combat gear — faces covered in camo paint, night-vision goggles flipped up — walked into the pediatric ward. The hospital went silent.

They entered Cody’s room. He’d been crying, but his eyes went wide.

“Hey, Cody,” the first SEAL said, his voice gentle. “We heard we had a real fighter in here.”

“You’re… you’re real,” Cody whispered, his eyes locked on their gear.

“We sure are,” the second SEAL said, smiling. “And we heard *you* were going into a tough fight today. We wanted to give you this.” He unclipped a patch from his vest. “This is our team patch.

We only give it to the toughest guys we know. And you? You’re tougher than any of us.”

For 10 minutes, Cody wasn’t a sick kid. He was a new recruit, being visited by his brothers-in-arms.

With all the negative waves hitting US everyday, some good for balance one could say