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Changing the Course
The Quiet Adventure
"Once a Scout-- always a Scout"
Making A Difference
"Even if you're on the right track, you'll get run over if you just sit there."
"Small deeds done are better than great deeds planned"
Challenge Me
"Training boy leaders to run their Troop is the Scoutmaster's most important job"
"Train Scouts to do a job, and then let them do it"
"Never do anything a boy can do"
"I have suggested Scouting as a good thing for Boys, because I began it myself when I was a Boy, and I know that if you want to enjoy life and get on, a great step towards it is to learn Scouting while you are young"
"A week of camp life is worth six months of theoretical teaching in the meeting room"
"Fun, fighting, and feeding! These are the three indispensable elements of the boy's world"
"There is no teaching to compare with example"
Quotes from Robert Baden-Powell Boy Scouting's First Scoutmaster
The Road Less Traveled
Robert Frost 1874-1963
"The Only Things We Keep Permanently Are Those We Give Away"
"Achievement Consists of Doing Useful Things That Most People Say Cannot Be Done"
Waite Phillips 1883-1964 Philmont Scout Ranch
Philmont Hymn Scout Vesper
What is Scout Spirit? "Your standing as a scout does not depend so much on the skills of your hands or the badges on your merit badge sash, as on the spirit in your heart, on what you are willing to do for others, on whether you are doing your very best to live the Scout Oath and Scout Law"
The Scout Law:
A Scout is Trustworthy Loyal Helpful Friendly Courteous Kind obedient Cheerful Thrifty Brave Clean and Reverent
A Leader's Prayer
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As the story is told, years ago at the Special Olympics competition in Spokane, Washington, contestants, all physically or mentally disabled, assembled at the starting line for the 100-yard dash.
At the gun, they all started out, not exactly in a dash, but with a relish to run the race to the finish and win. All, that is, except one little boy who stumbled on the asphalt, tumbled over a couple of times, and began to cry where he lay. Several runners heard the boy cry. One runner slowed down and looked back, and then another. In an amazing moment, all the runners turned around and went to the fallen boy. One, a girl with Down's syndrome, bent down and kissed the fallen runner and said, “This will make it better”. Then the small group rose and finished the race together.
Everyone in the stadium stood and cheered, and the cheering went on for several minutes.
A friend once asked why I would dedicate so much of my personal time and energy to the Scouting movement. The answer is found in this simple passage. Deep down, what matters most in this life, is not whether we win the race, but that we run it with dignity and humility, and recognize that sometimes what matters more is helping others to finish their own race -- even if that means we must slow down and change the course of our own race to do it.
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