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Friday, November 12, 2010

GW BUSH

Story by: Bruce Vincent
I've written the following narrative to chronicle the day of the award ceremony in DC.  I'm still working on a press release but the White House press corps has yet to provide a photo to go with it.  When the photo comes I'll ship it out.  When you get done reading this you'll understand the dilemma I face in telling this story beyond my circle of close friends.

Stepping into the Oval Office, each of us was introduced to the President and Mrs. Bush.  We shook hands and participated in small talk.  When the President was told that we were from Libby , Montana , I reminded him that Marc Racicot is our native son and the President offered his warm thoughts about Governor Racicot.
 
I have to tell you, I was blown away by two things upon entering the office.  First, the Oval Office sense of 'place' is unreal.  The President later shared a story of Russian President Putin entering the room prepared to tackle the President in a tough negotiation and upon entering, the atheist muttered his first words to the President and they were "Oh, my God."

I concurred. I could feel the history in my bones.  Second, the man that inhabits the office engaged me with a firm handshake and a look that can only be described as penetrating. Warm, alive, fully engaged, disarmingly penetrating. I was admittedly concerned about meeting the man. I think all of us have an inner hope that the most powerful man in our country is worthy of the responsibility and authority that we  bestow upon them through our vote.
 
I admit that part of me was afraid that I would be let down by the moment -- that the person and the place could not meet the lofty expectations of my fantasy world. This says nothing about my esteem for President Bush but just my practical realization that reality may not match my 'dream.'

Once inside the office, President Bush got right down to business and, standing in front of his desk, handed out the awards one at a time while posing for photos with the winners and Mrs. Bush. With the mission accomplished, the President and Mrs. Bush relaxed and initiated a lengthy, informal conversation about a number of things with our entire small group. He and the First Lady talked about such things as the rug in the office It is traditionally designed by the First Lady to make a statement about the President, and Mrs.Bush chose a brilliant yellow sunburst pattern to reflect 'hope.'  President Bush talked about the absolute need to believe that with hard work and faith in G
od there is every reason to start each day in the Oval Office with hope. He and the First Lady were asked about the impact of the Presidency on their marriage and, with an arm casually wrapped around Laura, he said that he thought te place may be hard on weak marriages but that it had the ability to make strong marriages even stronger and that he was blessed with a strong one.

After about 30 or 35 minutes, it was time to go. By then we were all relaxed and I felt as if I had just had an excellent visit with a friend. The President and First Lady made one more pass down the line of awardees, shaking hands and offering congratulations. When the President shook my hand I said, "Thank you Mr. President and G
od bless you and your family."  He was already in motion to the next person in line, but he stopped abruptly turned fully back to me, gave me a piercing look, renewed the vigor of his handshake and said, "Thank you -- and God bless you and yours as well."

On our way out of the office we were to leave by the glass doors on the west side of the office. I was the last person in the exit line. As I shook his hand one final time, President Bush said, "I'll be sure to tell Marc hello and give him your regards."

I then did something that surprised even me. I said to him, "Mr. President, I know you are a busy man and your time is precious. I also know you to be a man of strong faith and I have a favor to ask of you."

As he shook my hand he looked me in the eye and said, "Just name it" I told him that my step-Mom was at that moment in a hospital in  Kalispell , Montana , having a tumor removed from her skull and it would mean a great deal to me if he would consider adding her to his prayers that day. He grabbed me by the arm and took me back toward his desk as he said, "So that's it. I could tell that something is weighing heavy on your heart today. I could see it in your eyes.This explains it."

From the top drawer of his desk he retrieved a pen and a note card with his seal on it and asked, "How do you spell her name?" He then jotted a note to her while discussing the importance of family and the strength of prayer. When he handed me the card, he asked about the surgery and the prognosis. I told him we were hoping that it is not a recurrence of an earlier cancer and that, if it is, they can get it all with this surgery.

He said, "If it's okay with you, we'll take care of the prayer right now. Would you pray with me?" I told him yes and he turned to the staff that remained in the office and hand motioned the folks to step back or leave. He said, "Bruce and I would like some private time for a prayer."

As they left he turned back to me and took my hands in his. I was prepared to do a traditional prayer stance -- standing with each other with heads bowed. Instead, he reached for my head with his right hand and pulling gently forward, he placed my head on his shoulder.  With his left arm on my mid-back, he pulled me to him in a prayerful embrace.

He started to pray softly. I started to cry. He continued his prayer for Loretta and for G
od's perfect will to be done. I cried some more. My body shook a bit as I cried and he just held tighter. He closed by asking God's blessing on Loretta and the family during the coming months. I stepped away from our embrace, wiped my eyes, swiped at the tears I'd left on his shoulder, and looked into the eyes of our president. I thanked him as best I could and told him that me and my family would continue praying for him and his.

As I write this account down and reflect upon what it means, I have to tell you that all I really know is that his simple act left me humbled and believing. I so hoped that the man I thought him to be was the man that he is. I know that our nation needs a man such as this in the Oval Office. George W. Bush is the real deal. I've read Internet stories about the President praying with troops in hospitals and other such uplifting accounts. Each time I read them I hoped them to be true and not an Internet perpetuated myth This one, I know to be true. I was there. He is real. He has a pile of incredible stuff on his plate each day -- and yet he is tuned in so well to the here and now that he 'sensed' something heavy on my heart. He took time out of his life to care, to share, and to seek God's blessing for my family in a simple man-to-man, father-to-father, son-to-son, husband-to-husband, Christian- to-Christian prayerful embrace. He's not what I had hoped he would be. He is, in fact, so very, very much more.

20 comments:

Anonymous said...

alot better than the clown we have now but still a rino and increased government way beyond what was or is needed!

Anonymous said...

A true patriot !

Anonymous said...

9:41 understand who creates spending, his greatest sin is not vetoing everything from congress that hit his desk. at least bush didn't hate his own country like obama does

Anonymous said...

Ha ha, the man runs the country into the ground yet conservatives still laud him because he has an "R" in front of his name. Just as they tout Reagan as a fiscal conservative despite the huge deficits he produced.

Anonymous said...

10:26 You are a pinhead.

Anonymous said...

10:26 You just proved why there should be an I.Q. test before your allowed to vote ! It was the Democrats government regulation and spending that did us in...OWN IT !

Anonymous said...

We so need that today, but as we believers know we are full filling the last days.

Anonymous said...

pinworm is more like it.

Anonymous said...

Why is it that everything has to end up with a response filled with hate. This story was not about politics or political parties. It was about a man's experiance with our then President and the fact that the President in the instance was sincere and took the time to reflect with him. It was a way of thanking the President and saying something good! Its easy to complain and tell people how they have wronged or offended us but rarely do we compliment the good. I challange everyone to just find one person who has helped you or someone else and THANK them. It will even make you feel better and if done enough could make this place a better world. No I am no bleeding heart just someone who would like a better/safer place to live.

Anonymous said...

11:26 Thank you.

Anonymous said...

First of all, let me say that I hope your stepmom is okay. Next, I did not approve of all of Pres Bush's policies, but the presidential duties and personal compassion and humility are two separate issues. He accorded you the respect and concern you deserved; AND he acted like a real man. Unlike some of the other commentators to your story (the real pinworms!) he understood your families situation.

Anonymous said...

10:51, yes it was always those evil Democrats. Rep. have controlled the whitehouse for 20 of the last 30 years and atleast 1 branch of congress for 18/28 years yet we got to where we are at today all because of the democrats. Keep on drinkin whatever Rush is handing you.

Anonymous said...

Mr. George W. Bush should be tried as a war criminal based on his own admissions that have come to light recently.
As far as who got us in the debt we're in - it isn't all Obama, a good chunk of that came from and continues to stem from Bush's presidency and if you don't know that you've obviously been under a rock for a long time!
Everyone who doesn't vote is who needs to OWN it (to paraphrase from a previous commenter).
Some of you want to sit back and complain while some of you are probably the very ones who haven't voted in years!
If you didn't vote (and we all know you'd never admit it)- SHUT UP!

Anonymous said...

Perhaps GW would have made a better pastor than a president.

Anonymous said...

Please stop the political bashing. It is over and is not really part of this story. You cheapen the story with your unkind remarks.

Anonymous said...

I have met Bruce Vincent and heard him speak on a couple of occasions. Born into a logging family, he has always been an eloquent speaker for not only the forest industry, but rural communities as well. I'm not sure if he coined the phrase, but he always said "The world is run by those that show up" It was a pleasure to read this post Joe !

8wt

Anonymous said...

Sadaam is dead no longer killing innocent men or women. Weapons of mass destruction or not. You people are really stupid if you think He was going to take us right to them.

Anonymous said...

3:53 you live in fantasy land !

Anonymous said...

4:04 W has been successful in every thing he has done no doubt he would have made a good pastor if he was called.

Anonymous said...

trying to resurrect his image? I know you conservatives want to go back to needless wars and borrowing from China, and crashing the economy by selling away America to the highest bidder, but let's not start rewriting history.

George W. Bush was the worst President in American history.