Last week, the basketball team at St. Mary’s Home for Boys had their final game of the season. They lost. It was a tough season for them. They played the same team each week throughout the season. Another group of young men who have faced challenges in their lives. Each week they played their hearts out. And often, but not always, they came up short.
But after this final game … they came up big.
Earlier in the week the St. Mary’s boys decided they should give something to the other team after the game. A gesture of sportsmanship. A thank you. And the boy I mentor made the decision to give up one of his prized possessions. A limited edition basketball that the Portland Trail Blazers had given to him on Christmas day. They gave it to him as he stood, alongside other boys from St. Mary’s, on the court before the Blazers tipped off against his favorite team … the Denver Nuggets. He loved that basketball. Partly because very few people had one … but mostly because it was passed to him from the hands of someone he considers to be a role model.
And so he had all his teammates sign it. And when the game ended, they passed it on to the other team.
He doesn’t know the saying, “the scent of a rose lingers on the hand that gives it” … and he may not realize that the act of kindness, not the basketball, was the true gift. But he does observe the acts of others … people he admires … role models. And he follows their examples. His kind gesture makes a case for the importance of role models. A case for those in the public eye to set a good example. Our youth are watching.

Linda – You have probably already thought of how we can get another Blazer basketball to this young man What a beautiful example he has demonstrated to US!
I googled “St. Mary’s” and stumbled opon this story
I remember it like it was yesterday. Me and the team playing out last game of the season for Coach Oneal
I don’t know if you remember me but I was a friend of Skylar. I was 14 and in Ford Cottage.
Finding this article has reminded me of how greatful I am for everything St. Mary’s has done for me. Even now. As I’m about to turn 17 I can acknowledge that if it wasn’t for St. Mary’s I don’t think I would have been able to make it through this last year and a half. I’m beyond greatful for everything you and your amazing father did for all us kids and he was a truly amazing man.
Seeing this post just shows me even more how genuine the support St. Mary’s and the mentors provide.
After coming from a broken home filled with grief and chaos I take this time to tell you how genuinely greatful I am for you and your family and everyone who has helped all of us through an incredible journey. As I look back on all the skills and genuine life lessons I was taught at St. Mary’s, I am forever greatful for all of the amazing people who took the time to impart not only into my life, but the lives of countless young men in their last chance at a normal life and to fair chance at this world.
Linda, the joy it gives me knowing what your time at St. Mary’s meant to you really humbles me. I can only hope you have the opportunity to be apart of the St. Mary’s boys lives for many years to come.
All of us guys success is solely a result of the amazing and caring people of the St. Mary’s staff, mentors, donors, and the entire community who continued to support us through some of the hardest times of our lives.
Thank you for sharing my teams story and for inspiring me to remember how far I’ve come in these past few years, and how much of a blessing St. Mary’s is to all of us.