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Developing Character and Purpose
in Adolescents and Teens

A new book by
Brad Fulton
2005 CLMS
Educator of the Year

Watch for the upcoming book,
Noble Quotes for Noble Hearts
and DVD,
The Seven Noble Tasks
© 2013 by Brad Fulton and TTT Press

www.tttpress.com
The Seven Noble Tasks

T

he Seven Noble Tasks is a project designed to instill strength of character
in adolescents. During the year, the eighth grade students at Mistletoe
Elementary are given the opportunity to complete seven tasks th at
challenge them physically, emotionally, and mentally. In conquering these
obstacles, the students are better equipped to face the challenges they will
encounter as they enter adulthood.

“I will never forget this moment.” – Alexis
v Overcoming Obstacles
v The Hero Biography

T

v An Act of Service
v To Be An American
v Finding My Purpose

v Reaching a Goal
v Uniquely You

he success our students find in completing these tasks has helped build
community, diminished behavioral issues, increased academic success,
and allowed us to connect with our students in a powerful, personal, and
successful way. We have over 95% attendance at our parent conferences, a
higher than average graduation rate, and outstanding state test scores.
So many of the youth wander aimlessly through adolescence. They don’t see
their inherent value, their incredible potential, or their intrinsic purpose. Our
goal is to show that their lives have meaning and worth. We want to connect
people to purpose.
Contact us for information regarding a keynote address or a workshop:
Brad Fulton
Amanda Deedon
brad@tttpress.com
adeedon@eesd.net
(530) 547-4687
bulldog8.weebly.com
Mistletoe Elementary School, 1225 Mistletoe Lane, Redding, CA 96002 (530) 224-4160
Facebook: TeacherToTeacher Press
Twitter: @tttpress
YouTube: /watchtttpress

Other web resources:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wV2r42l6sQo .......... Lt. Brian Brennan’s video
http://thebutterflycircus.com/short-film/ ..................... The Butterfly Circus movie
www.tttpress.com ................ math and science videos, books, and free resources
© 2013 by Brad Fulton and TTT Press

www.tttpress.com
The Seven Noble Tasks

The Seven Noble Tasks
Brad Fulton and Amanda Deedon
Anecdotes from former students:
Facebook message from a former student who was repeatedly suspended in 7th grade and
had Ds and Fs.
Student:

Even though I miss the 8th grade year you guys taught me something.
There is more in life than getting in trouble all the time, and you actually
helped me grow up and get the best grades ever. Thanks.

Mr. Fulton:

You are so very welcome. Once a Bulldog, always a Bulldog!

Student:

Yes, I will always have that Bulldog spirit and carry the 7 Noble Tasks
with me wherever I go. I’ve learned so much! Like climbing Cinder Cone;
it looked impossible, but once you got to the top, it was worth it. That’s
just like life; in the end it will all be worth it. I never thought I’d be where
I am today if it wasn’t for you and Ms. Deedon and Mrs. Armellino
pushing me to do my best always. Being on stage, saying my quote, and
accepting that diploma – everything that I worked so hard for – was so
worth it. No matter how much I wanted to quit, you guys told me never to
quit, and thanks. Now I know never to give up, because in the end, it’s
worth it.

Facebook message from a former student who continued to wear his bracelet during the
9th grade. He posted a picture of his wrist without the bracelet.
Student:

It’s the first time it has come off since the beginning of eighth grade.
Finally took them off because they were getting worn and I didn’t want
them to break completely. I just wanted you to know because those
challenges actually did give me motivation all year, and they did leave an
impression. Thank you and Ms. Deedon.

Mr. Fulton:

The bracelet is only a symbol. Your character is inside you, and once you
accomplish a task, it can never be undone.

Student:

I was really affected by those tasks. When I completed that year, I felt so
privileged to even be a part of it.

© 2013 by Brad Fulton and TTT Press

www.tttpress.com
The Seven Noble Tasks

September 8
The First Noble
Task: The Climb

It’s the climbing that makes the man; getting to the top is an extra reward.
Robert Lipsyte, The Contender
“You will hate us at the bottom of the mountain,” we warned our students, “but you’ll
love us at the top. You will think you can’t do it. You’ll tell us it’s impossible. But you
can do it, and regardless of what your body or mind may be telling you, it is possible.
We know this because we’ve done it. And others who came before you have done it too.
You’ll ask us why we are making you do this, but once you get to the top, you’ll
understand.”
Cinder Cone is a tephra volcano rising abruptly 700 feet above the surrounding mountain
plateau. It is far from the highest climb in Lassen Volcanic National Park, but it is
clearly the steepest, the most daunting, and the most dispiriting climb. Devoid of trees
and other substantial plant life, it is one of the few places where you can see the complete
route during the ascent, and thus your progress during the climb is barely perceptible.
Cinder Cone looks like an anthill on steroids. Formed from a series of eruptions ending
in 1851, a double crater caps the 30-degree incline. If you dumped a pile of sand in your
yard, it would fan out to form this same angle of repose. It is the steepest slope that loose
debris can attain without collapse. A narrow trail spirals precipitously toward the top.
Tephra cone eruptions occur when loose bits of lava are spewed into the air and then fall
back, forming a cone of loose debris around the base. Unlike a Hawaiian volcano with its
gentle slopes and massive base, a tephra cone is diminutive but steep. And unlike a plug
dome volcano with its sheer cliffs, a tephra cone can be climbed—barely. You’d wish it
couldn’t. I have counted that it takes a thousand steps to reach the top, but for every two
steps you gain, you slide back one in the loose volcanic cinders, so you end up climbing
it twice.
To get there, the students rode seventy-five miles on winding roads that took them from
the Central Valley of northern California up to an elevation of 6,000 feet in the Cascade
© 2013 by Brad Fulton and TTT Press

www.tttpress.com
The Seven Noble Tasks
Range. Then it was six miles of dirt roads to the campground at Butte Lake. This part
was fun for the students, who saw it as an opportunity to get away from the classroom
and all of its lessons. Then they enjoyed a level hike through a shaded pine forest for a
mile before the trees parted and the volcano erupted into view in sheer desolation.
“You expect us to climb that?” they protested. You’re crazy!” Immediately, they began
to tell us they couldn’t do it. Others may have succeeded, but certainly they could not be
expected to make it. Some charged the trail with false bravado, only to slow to a crawl a
few feet into the climb. In fact, many did drop to their hands and knees pretty quickly
and crawled up the trail. They walked forward a few paces then bent at the waist with
their hands braced against their knees as they gasped for oxygen in the crisp alpine air.
They looked up but saw that the summit looked no closer than it did before. They glared
at us with looks that revealed their agony. A few more steps, and they paused to suck on
the water bottles they had brought. Their faces were already reddened and soaked with
perspiration. A few more steps, and they began to peel off the layers of sweatshirts they
had needed only a few moments before, yet still the summit was a distant and mocking
peak. More steps, more water; more steps, more perspiration. If discouragement had a
face, you could see it already, and they’d barely begun. If defeat has a face, it too was
beginning to show as they looked toward the top. And then they turned around.
Looking down the precipitous incline, they saw that they already had achieved such
height that they momentarily experienced vertigo. The friends behind them were
dwarfed on the plateau. The view swept away like that from an airplane window. With
renewed hope they turned back to look at the summit and were shocked to see that it still
seemed no closer. It was as if the base of the mountain were dropping away and yet the
peak was ascending at the same pace they were.
From the base, you would have to watch patiently to detect movement in the ascending
line of students. Each time we passed by students, we endured their complaints. “Why
are you making us do this?” Invariably, some turned backward to see if walking in
reverse was easier. It wasn’t. Their leg muscles were burning. We knew because ours
were burning too. Our calves and thighs felt rock-hard and ached as if they had been
pummeled. Our strength was robbed. We looked like tottering old folks taking mincing
steps up the trail.
Any hope of looking pretty vanished. The boys were dripping. The girls’ makeup was
smeared. Up ahead a lone and twisted pine stood like an abandoned climber frozen upon
the trail. I sat down nearby and grinned at the students as they passed. One by one the
students reached me and muttered oaths. “I can’t believe you! This is the worst day of
my life! You’re right: I do hate you!”
They didn’t know about the tree because they had never been there before. What they
saw as an isolated waypoint was really a goalpost. The tree marks a bend in the trail, and
as they turned past it the summit sprawled open before them.
Joining them at the top, you would think these were not the same students. They were
elated, energized, and empowered. Only their sweaty attire belied their enthusiasm.
“This is incredible!” they shouted, as they scanned the massive double crater and took in
the 360-degree view of the volcanic landscape. “Can we hike into the crater?” they
begged. These were the same students who didn’t want to take one more step one step
© 2013 by Brad Fulton and TTT Press

www.tttpress.com
The Seven Noble Tasks
ago. But off they ran. Their muscles were renewed and invigorated, and all thoughts of
exhaustion were forgotten. A new energy born of triumph propelled them, for
accomplishment propels all of us.
*

*

*

Psychologists once told educators that if we worked on students’ self-esteem, everything
would be okay. If students had high self-esteem, they would not be a behavioral
problem. They would work hard; they would learn more; they would be happier. Then
we were told to put our chairs in a circle with one student in the middle. We took turns
telling the student how special he or she was. We said we liked the student, and that he or
she was unique and wonderful. Then we put the chairs back into rows and began our
geography lesson, and the center of attention would resume the manufacture and launch
of spit wads.
It sounded so logical—how could such a system fail?
Our self-esteem is a
The truth was, we later discovered, that the diagnosis
measure of our perception
about self-esteem was true for the most part, but the cure
of our accomplishments.
was wrong. Our self-esteem does indeed govern many of
How others feel about it is
our actions. But we don’t get it from others. We gain it
distantly secondary.
in a very specific way: our self-esteem is a measure of
our perception of our accomplishments. How others feel
about it is distantly secondary. Those significant voices in our lives, such as parents and
respected peers, will have some influence on how we feel about ourselves but only as
reinforcements and confirmations of our own beliefs. The problem with our approach
was that the person who needed the self-esteem boost was accomplishing nothing as we
layered warm fuzzies upon the person. If we want our students, or anyone else for that
matter, to achieve their potential, we must ensure they have a good self-image. And if we
want them to have a good self-mage, we must guide them to achieve greatness. That
sounds like circular reasoning, but it’s not. By facing mountainous goals that are beyond
us, by assaulting those obstacles and overcoming them, the view we have of ourselves
changes as surely as the view of a distant landscape below.
So often as parents we want to help our children avoid failure, frustration, and pain. It
seems to be our parental duty. To some degree it is, but if it is overplayed, we deny our
children the opportunity to conquer, to achieve, and to solve problems. If they don’t get
this exercise in the minor confrontations of childhood, they will soon be adults with
character that is too atrophied to overcome the inevitable and more significant struggles
of life. Children in our relatively affluent society naturally are more susceptible to this.
Allowing them the opportunity to face problems within safe limits is one of the greatest
gifts we can give children. Expressing our belief that they are up to the task is another
equally valuable gift. In this garden of nurturing care, the self-image of the child will
grow step by step.
*

*

*

And step by step, they climbed Cinder Cone. We told them we knew they could do it,
not because they were warm and fuzzy, but because we had already walked those same
steps.
© 2013 by Brad Fulton and TTT Press

www.tttpress.com
The Seven Noble Tasks
Nearly all the students had made it by now. We were missing only a handful. Most
years, some of them give up and never make the summit. Other years we get 100 percent
attendance at the top. We were ready to hike down, when I heard some students
cheering. A boy from our special education class was inching up the trail in mincing
steps. Two students from a Christian school who were also climbing the cone flanked
him. Starting later than we had, they picked up the straggler and encouraged his every
step. He too made it to the top and was elated by his accomplishment.
We gathered the students, unfurled our school flag, and took our class picture.
Now came the fun part. We released the students for the hike down to the lake, where we
would enjoy our well-earned lunch. Some sprinted down the trail with reckless abandon.
Their strides vaulted them down the trail with such uncontrolled speed that they wouldn’t
be able to slow down and stop until they reached the level ground at the bottom.
I followed in the rear, guiding our special education student down the trail with the help
of one of our parent volunteers. Then we saw him, our last missing student, paused
halfway up the mountain. Again the students congratulated him on how far he got. He
was a popular student but physically out of shape, and he was clearly exhausted. “Are
you going to finish the climb?” a friend asked him.
“I don’t think so. I’m pretty tired. I’ll probably turn back with you.”
“I’ll go up with you,” she offered.
“So will I,” another friend joined in.
The student looked toward the distant summit while battling doubt. “I’ll go with you
too,” I added.
He hesitated. “I don’t know if I can do it,” he drawled. “I’m not feeling good.”
“I know you can do it,” I encouraged. “I know what you are going through, but you are
over halfway there. We will take it one step at a time, and we’ll walk with you all the
way.”
He trudged a few more minutes up the mountain and paused again. “I don’t think I can
do it,” he warned.
Knowing that he was a grade-motivated student, I explained, “You are nearly 80 percent
of the way there. That’s a B-. Let’s go for the A+.” He took a few more steps and then
doubled over, heaved, and collapsed. After losing every drop of his breakfast, he got up,
cleaned up, and finished the ascent with his friends and me walking alongside.
The Cherokee have a word for this. It is “currahee”. It means, “We stand alone . . .
together.”

For more information, contact Brad Fulton at:
brad@tttpress.com

(530) 547-4687

www.tttpress.com

P.O. Box 233, Millville CA 96062

© 2013 by Brad Fulton and TTT Press

www.tttpress.com

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The Seven Noble Tasks- Developing Character and Purpose in Adolescents and Teens

  • 1. Developing Character and Purpose in Adolescents and Teens A new book by Brad Fulton 2005 CLMS Educator of the Year Watch for the upcoming book, Noble Quotes for Noble Hearts and DVD, The Seven Noble Tasks © 2013 by Brad Fulton and TTT Press www.tttpress.com
  • 2. The Seven Noble Tasks T he Seven Noble Tasks is a project designed to instill strength of character in adolescents. During the year, the eighth grade students at Mistletoe Elementary are given the opportunity to complete seven tasks th at challenge them physically, emotionally, and mentally. In conquering these obstacles, the students are better equipped to face the challenges they will encounter as they enter adulthood. “I will never forget this moment.” – Alexis v Overcoming Obstacles v The Hero Biography T v An Act of Service v To Be An American v Finding My Purpose v Reaching a Goal v Uniquely You he success our students find in completing these tasks has helped build community, diminished behavioral issues, increased academic success, and allowed us to connect with our students in a powerful, personal, and successful way. We have over 95% attendance at our parent conferences, a higher than average graduation rate, and outstanding state test scores. So many of the youth wander aimlessly through adolescence. They don’t see their inherent value, their incredible potential, or their intrinsic purpose. Our goal is to show that their lives have meaning and worth. We want to connect people to purpose. Contact us for information regarding a keynote address or a workshop: Brad Fulton Amanda Deedon brad@tttpress.com adeedon@eesd.net (530) 547-4687 bulldog8.weebly.com Mistletoe Elementary School, 1225 Mistletoe Lane, Redding, CA 96002 (530) 224-4160 Facebook: TeacherToTeacher Press Twitter: @tttpress YouTube: /watchtttpress Other web resources: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wV2r42l6sQo .......... Lt. Brian Brennan’s video http://thebutterflycircus.com/short-film/ ..................... The Butterfly Circus movie www.tttpress.com ................ math and science videos, books, and free resources © 2013 by Brad Fulton and TTT Press www.tttpress.com
  • 3. The Seven Noble Tasks The Seven Noble Tasks Brad Fulton and Amanda Deedon Anecdotes from former students: Facebook message from a former student who was repeatedly suspended in 7th grade and had Ds and Fs. Student: Even though I miss the 8th grade year you guys taught me something. There is more in life than getting in trouble all the time, and you actually helped me grow up and get the best grades ever. Thanks. Mr. Fulton: You are so very welcome. Once a Bulldog, always a Bulldog! Student: Yes, I will always have that Bulldog spirit and carry the 7 Noble Tasks with me wherever I go. I’ve learned so much! Like climbing Cinder Cone; it looked impossible, but once you got to the top, it was worth it. That’s just like life; in the end it will all be worth it. I never thought I’d be where I am today if it wasn’t for you and Ms. Deedon and Mrs. Armellino pushing me to do my best always. Being on stage, saying my quote, and accepting that diploma – everything that I worked so hard for – was so worth it. No matter how much I wanted to quit, you guys told me never to quit, and thanks. Now I know never to give up, because in the end, it’s worth it. Facebook message from a former student who continued to wear his bracelet during the 9th grade. He posted a picture of his wrist without the bracelet. Student: It’s the first time it has come off since the beginning of eighth grade. Finally took them off because they were getting worn and I didn’t want them to break completely. I just wanted you to know because those challenges actually did give me motivation all year, and they did leave an impression. Thank you and Ms. Deedon. Mr. Fulton: The bracelet is only a symbol. Your character is inside you, and once you accomplish a task, it can never be undone. Student: I was really affected by those tasks. When I completed that year, I felt so privileged to even be a part of it. © 2013 by Brad Fulton and TTT Press www.tttpress.com
  • 4. The Seven Noble Tasks September 8 The First Noble Task: The Climb It’s the climbing that makes the man; getting to the top is an extra reward. Robert Lipsyte, The Contender “You will hate us at the bottom of the mountain,” we warned our students, “but you’ll love us at the top. You will think you can’t do it. You’ll tell us it’s impossible. But you can do it, and regardless of what your body or mind may be telling you, it is possible. We know this because we’ve done it. And others who came before you have done it too. You’ll ask us why we are making you do this, but once you get to the top, you’ll understand.” Cinder Cone is a tephra volcano rising abruptly 700 feet above the surrounding mountain plateau. It is far from the highest climb in Lassen Volcanic National Park, but it is clearly the steepest, the most daunting, and the most dispiriting climb. Devoid of trees and other substantial plant life, it is one of the few places where you can see the complete route during the ascent, and thus your progress during the climb is barely perceptible. Cinder Cone looks like an anthill on steroids. Formed from a series of eruptions ending in 1851, a double crater caps the 30-degree incline. If you dumped a pile of sand in your yard, it would fan out to form this same angle of repose. It is the steepest slope that loose debris can attain without collapse. A narrow trail spirals precipitously toward the top. Tephra cone eruptions occur when loose bits of lava are spewed into the air and then fall back, forming a cone of loose debris around the base. Unlike a Hawaiian volcano with its gentle slopes and massive base, a tephra cone is diminutive but steep. And unlike a plug dome volcano with its sheer cliffs, a tephra cone can be climbed—barely. You’d wish it couldn’t. I have counted that it takes a thousand steps to reach the top, but for every two steps you gain, you slide back one in the loose volcanic cinders, so you end up climbing it twice. To get there, the students rode seventy-five miles on winding roads that took them from the Central Valley of northern California up to an elevation of 6,000 feet in the Cascade © 2013 by Brad Fulton and TTT Press www.tttpress.com
  • 5. The Seven Noble Tasks Range. Then it was six miles of dirt roads to the campground at Butte Lake. This part was fun for the students, who saw it as an opportunity to get away from the classroom and all of its lessons. Then they enjoyed a level hike through a shaded pine forest for a mile before the trees parted and the volcano erupted into view in sheer desolation. “You expect us to climb that?” they protested. You’re crazy!” Immediately, they began to tell us they couldn’t do it. Others may have succeeded, but certainly they could not be expected to make it. Some charged the trail with false bravado, only to slow to a crawl a few feet into the climb. In fact, many did drop to their hands and knees pretty quickly and crawled up the trail. They walked forward a few paces then bent at the waist with their hands braced against their knees as they gasped for oxygen in the crisp alpine air. They looked up but saw that the summit looked no closer than it did before. They glared at us with looks that revealed their agony. A few more steps, and they paused to suck on the water bottles they had brought. Their faces were already reddened and soaked with perspiration. A few more steps, and they began to peel off the layers of sweatshirts they had needed only a few moments before, yet still the summit was a distant and mocking peak. More steps, more water; more steps, more perspiration. If discouragement had a face, you could see it already, and they’d barely begun. If defeat has a face, it too was beginning to show as they looked toward the top. And then they turned around. Looking down the precipitous incline, they saw that they already had achieved such height that they momentarily experienced vertigo. The friends behind them were dwarfed on the plateau. The view swept away like that from an airplane window. With renewed hope they turned back to look at the summit and were shocked to see that it still seemed no closer. It was as if the base of the mountain were dropping away and yet the peak was ascending at the same pace they were. From the base, you would have to watch patiently to detect movement in the ascending line of students. Each time we passed by students, we endured their complaints. “Why are you making us do this?” Invariably, some turned backward to see if walking in reverse was easier. It wasn’t. Their leg muscles were burning. We knew because ours were burning too. Our calves and thighs felt rock-hard and ached as if they had been pummeled. Our strength was robbed. We looked like tottering old folks taking mincing steps up the trail. Any hope of looking pretty vanished. The boys were dripping. The girls’ makeup was smeared. Up ahead a lone and twisted pine stood like an abandoned climber frozen upon the trail. I sat down nearby and grinned at the students as they passed. One by one the students reached me and muttered oaths. “I can’t believe you! This is the worst day of my life! You’re right: I do hate you!” They didn’t know about the tree because they had never been there before. What they saw as an isolated waypoint was really a goalpost. The tree marks a bend in the trail, and as they turned past it the summit sprawled open before them. Joining them at the top, you would think these were not the same students. They were elated, energized, and empowered. Only their sweaty attire belied their enthusiasm. “This is incredible!” they shouted, as they scanned the massive double crater and took in the 360-degree view of the volcanic landscape. “Can we hike into the crater?” they begged. These were the same students who didn’t want to take one more step one step © 2013 by Brad Fulton and TTT Press www.tttpress.com
  • 6. The Seven Noble Tasks ago. But off they ran. Their muscles were renewed and invigorated, and all thoughts of exhaustion were forgotten. A new energy born of triumph propelled them, for accomplishment propels all of us. * * * Psychologists once told educators that if we worked on students’ self-esteem, everything would be okay. If students had high self-esteem, they would not be a behavioral problem. They would work hard; they would learn more; they would be happier. Then we were told to put our chairs in a circle with one student in the middle. We took turns telling the student how special he or she was. We said we liked the student, and that he or she was unique and wonderful. Then we put the chairs back into rows and began our geography lesson, and the center of attention would resume the manufacture and launch of spit wads. It sounded so logical—how could such a system fail? Our self-esteem is a The truth was, we later discovered, that the diagnosis measure of our perception about self-esteem was true for the most part, but the cure of our accomplishments. was wrong. Our self-esteem does indeed govern many of How others feel about it is our actions. But we don’t get it from others. We gain it distantly secondary. in a very specific way: our self-esteem is a measure of our perception of our accomplishments. How others feel about it is distantly secondary. Those significant voices in our lives, such as parents and respected peers, will have some influence on how we feel about ourselves but only as reinforcements and confirmations of our own beliefs. The problem with our approach was that the person who needed the self-esteem boost was accomplishing nothing as we layered warm fuzzies upon the person. If we want our students, or anyone else for that matter, to achieve their potential, we must ensure they have a good self-image. And if we want them to have a good self-mage, we must guide them to achieve greatness. That sounds like circular reasoning, but it’s not. By facing mountainous goals that are beyond us, by assaulting those obstacles and overcoming them, the view we have of ourselves changes as surely as the view of a distant landscape below. So often as parents we want to help our children avoid failure, frustration, and pain. It seems to be our parental duty. To some degree it is, but if it is overplayed, we deny our children the opportunity to conquer, to achieve, and to solve problems. If they don’t get this exercise in the minor confrontations of childhood, they will soon be adults with character that is too atrophied to overcome the inevitable and more significant struggles of life. Children in our relatively affluent society naturally are more susceptible to this. Allowing them the opportunity to face problems within safe limits is one of the greatest gifts we can give children. Expressing our belief that they are up to the task is another equally valuable gift. In this garden of nurturing care, the self-image of the child will grow step by step. * * * And step by step, they climbed Cinder Cone. We told them we knew they could do it, not because they were warm and fuzzy, but because we had already walked those same steps. © 2013 by Brad Fulton and TTT Press www.tttpress.com
  • 7. The Seven Noble Tasks Nearly all the students had made it by now. We were missing only a handful. Most years, some of them give up and never make the summit. Other years we get 100 percent attendance at the top. We were ready to hike down, when I heard some students cheering. A boy from our special education class was inching up the trail in mincing steps. Two students from a Christian school who were also climbing the cone flanked him. Starting later than we had, they picked up the straggler and encouraged his every step. He too made it to the top and was elated by his accomplishment. We gathered the students, unfurled our school flag, and took our class picture. Now came the fun part. We released the students for the hike down to the lake, where we would enjoy our well-earned lunch. Some sprinted down the trail with reckless abandon. Their strides vaulted them down the trail with such uncontrolled speed that they wouldn’t be able to slow down and stop until they reached the level ground at the bottom. I followed in the rear, guiding our special education student down the trail with the help of one of our parent volunteers. Then we saw him, our last missing student, paused halfway up the mountain. Again the students congratulated him on how far he got. He was a popular student but physically out of shape, and he was clearly exhausted. “Are you going to finish the climb?” a friend asked him. “I don’t think so. I’m pretty tired. I’ll probably turn back with you.” “I’ll go up with you,” she offered. “So will I,” another friend joined in. The student looked toward the distant summit while battling doubt. “I’ll go with you too,” I added. He hesitated. “I don’t know if I can do it,” he drawled. “I’m not feeling good.” “I know you can do it,” I encouraged. “I know what you are going through, but you are over halfway there. We will take it one step at a time, and we’ll walk with you all the way.” He trudged a few more minutes up the mountain and paused again. “I don’t think I can do it,” he warned. Knowing that he was a grade-motivated student, I explained, “You are nearly 80 percent of the way there. That’s a B-. Let’s go for the A+.” He took a few more steps and then doubled over, heaved, and collapsed. After losing every drop of his breakfast, he got up, cleaned up, and finished the ascent with his friends and me walking alongside. The Cherokee have a word for this. It is “currahee”. It means, “We stand alone . . . together.” For more information, contact Brad Fulton at: brad@tttpress.com (530) 547-4687 www.tttpress.com P.O. Box 233, Millville CA 96062 © 2013 by Brad Fulton and TTT Press www.tttpress.com