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INDIANAPOLIS COLTS
COACH DUNGY'S HEART
SPREADING HIS MESSAGE
By John Oehser - Colts.com
Dungy Makes Super Bowl Stop to Speak at Athletes in Action Breakfast.
DETROIT, Mich. - They were there for breakfast, and they were there to
cheer New York Jets running back Curtis Martin. And it was Martin who
received the Athletes in Action Bart Starr Award Saturday morning, but
the hundreds who gathered in fourth-floor ballroom at the Marriott
Renaissance in Detroit, Mich., on the morning before Super Bowl XL were
clearly touched by the featured speaker. That speaker was Colts Head
Coach Tony Dungy. Two hours into the breakfast, emcee Brent Jones
introduced Dungy, who was welcomed with a lengthy standing ovation.
Dungy thanked the crowd, shared an anecdote about Martin, then told the
crowd he was going to speak for about 15 minutes.
"It's great to be here," Dungy told the crowd, then adding with a laugh,
"I just wish I wasn't here in this capacity so many times of being just
that close to being in the game and just being an invited speaker. "My
goal is to have our team here one day and have a couple of tables with
all of our guys here. Because we have a special group of young men, a
great group of Christian guys. It'd be wonderful to have them here so
you could see
their hearts and what they're all about. "It hasn't quite happened yet,
but we're still hoping one day it will."
He told them he was going to talk about lessons he had learned from his
three sons. The crowd fell silent. Then Dungy spoke. And although this
was a breakfast - and although at many such events speakers speak over
the clinking of glasses and murmurs from semi-interested listeners - for
most of the 15 minutes the room was silent except for Dungy's voice. He
spoke of his middle son, Eric, who he said shares his competitiveness
and who is focused on sports "to where it's almost a problem."
He spoke of his youngest son, Jordan, who has a rare congenital
condition which causes him not to feel pain. "He feels things, but he
doesn't get the sensation of pain," Dungy said. The lessons learned from
Jordan, Tony Dungy said, are many. "That sounds like it's good at the
beginning, but I promise you it's not," Dungy said. "We've learned a lot
about pain in the last five years we've had Jordan. We've learned some
hurts are really
necessary for kids. Pain is necessary for kids to find out the
difference between what's good and what's harmful." Jordan, Dungy said,
loves cookies. "Cookies are good," Dungy said, "but in Jordan's mind, if
they're good out on the plate, they're even better in the oven. He will
go right in the oven when my wife's not looking, reach in, take the rack
out, take the pan out, burn his hands and eat the cookies and burn his
tongue and never feel it. He doesn't know that's bad for him." Jordan,
Dungy said, "has no fear of anything, so we constantly have to watch
him."
The lesson learned, Dungy said, is simple. "You get the question all the
time, 'Why does the Lord allow pain in your life? Why do bad things
happen to good people? If God is a God of love, why does he allow these
hurtful things to happen?' Dungy said.
"We've learned that a lot of times because of that
pain, that little temporary pain, you learn what's harmful. You learn to
fear the right things. "Pain sometimes lets us know we have a condition
that needs to be healed. Pain inside sometimes lets us know that
spiritually we're not quite right and we need to be healed and that God
will send that healing agent right to the spot. "Sometimes, pain is the
only way that will turn us as kids back to the Father."
Finally, he spoke of James. James Dungy, Tony Dungy's oldest son, died
three days before Christmas. As he did while delivering James' eulogy in
December, Dungy on Saturday spoke of him eloquently and steadily,
speaking of lessons learned and of the
positives taken from experience. "It was tough, and it was very, very
painful, but as painful as it was, there were some good things that came
out of it," Dungy said. Dungy spoke at the funeral of regretting not
hugging James the last time he saw him, on Thanksgiving of last year. "I
met a guy the next day after the funeral," Dungy said. "He said, 'I was
there. I heard you talking. I took off work today. I called my son. I
told him I was taking him to the movies. We're going to spend some time
and go to dinner.' That was a real, real blessing to me."
Dungy said he has gotten many letters since James' death relaying
similar messages. "People heard what I said and said, 'Hey, you brought
me a little closer to
my son,' or, 'You brought me a little closer to my daughter,' Dungy
said. "That is a tremendous blessing." Dungy also said some of James'
organs were donated through donors programs. "We got a letter back two
weeks ago that two people had received
his corneas, and now they can see,'' Dungy said. "That's been a
tremendous blessing." Dungy also said he received a letter from a girl
from the family's church in Tampa. She had known James for many years,
Dungy said. She went to the funeral because she knew James. "When I saw
what happened at funeral, and your family and the celebration and how it
was handled, that was the first time I realized there had to be a God,"
Dungy said the girl wrote. "I accepted Christ into my life and my life's
been
different since that day."
Added Dungy, "That was an awesome blessing, so all of those things kind
of made me realize what God's love is all about."
Dungy also said he was asked often how he was able to return to the
Colts so quickly after James' death. James died on December 22, and
Dungy returned to the team one week later. Dungy said the answer was
simple.
"People asked me, 'How did you recover so quickly?"''
Dungy said. "I'm not totally recovered. I don't know that I ever will
be. It's still very, very painful, but I was able to come back because
of something one of my good Christian friends said to me after the
funeral. "He said, 'You know James accepted Christ
into his heart, so you know he's in heaven, right?' I said, 'Right, I
know that.' He said, 'So, with all you know about heaven, if you had the
power to bring him back now, would you?' When I thought about it, I
said, 'No, I wouldn't. I would not want him back with what
I know about heaven.' "That's what helped me through the grieving
process.
Because of Christ's spirit in me, I had that confidence that James is
there, at peace with the Lord, and I have the peace of mind in the midst
of something that's very, very painful. "That's my prayer today, that
everyone in this room would know the same thing."
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