MEMPHIS, TN - He had started in on his second loop, halfway through the cross-country course, and Seth Goldstein liked the way the race was unfolding. — A group of kids ran just in front of him. Many more had fallen behind.
"I was feeling good," said Goldstein, 17. "That's when everything happened in front of me."
One of the kids in the pack dropped to the ground.
The others raced onward toward the finish line. Goldstein did something altogether different.
He stopped.
He stopped racing. He went to the kid who had fallen, who by this time was in severe distress.
"His lips were turning blue and his eyes were rolled back in his head," said Goldstein. "I was terrified. But then I thought to myself, freaking out isn't going to help any here."
What lessons do our kids learn through sports? It's hard not to wonder at times.
Winning is the main thing. Steroid users seem to hit a lot of home runs. If you're a gifted athlete, you'll get more chances than you deserve.
Sportsmanship is so last century. The flashiest athletes get the richest sneaker deals. If you want a headline, you've got to crush the other guy.
Those are the real lessons, aren't they? If we're being honest with ourselves? So consider this story a reminder of what it's supposed to be about.
Goldstein is a senior at Cooper Yeshiva High School, a small, Orthodox Jewish school in East Memphis.
He stopped. That was the first thing.
"I'm a lifeguard," he said, as if that explains it all. "It was obvious he needed help."
"He had bitten his tongue and was bleeding pretty bad," said Goldstein. "I feared he was going to choke on his blood. I rolled him on his side so he wouldn't asphyxiate."
In the midst of this, a woman named Jessica Chandler ran up. She's the mother of another Germantown runner and had known the fallen runner for years.
At this point, the victim was shaking, his body seizing again and again.
"This is normal," said Goldstein. "I've seen this before."
Note: Goldstein had actually never seen this before. But he didn't see the point in panicking. He was calm, reassuring everyone involved.
"He was awesome," said Chandler. "He was so competent and kind. When the boy started to come out of it he just kept saying, 'You're going to be OK. We're here. We're with you. You're going to be OK.' "
Before long, an ambulance arrived. The real EMTs took over. Whereupon, Goldstein posed a question to the group.
"Can I finish the race?" he said.
Only then did Chandler realize that Goldstein was another competitor.
"The EMTs looked at me kind of funny," Goldstein said. "They're like, 'You're racing? Well, sure, go ahead. I guess you can finish the race.' "
So that's what Goldstein did. All the other runners were long since done.
Goldstein's teammates had been wondering where he was.
They joined him for the last part of the race.
"It's an example of exactly the values we're trying to instill in our kids," said Gil Perl, the dean of the Cooper Yeshiva School.
"We have the concept, from the Talmud, that if you want God to have mercy on you, you have to have mercy on others."
The fallen runner turned out to be fine, by the way. He had suffered a seizure because of the heat. Goldstein finished in 32 minutes and change.
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