Editor’s note: Another good one from the Internet. J
EXHIBITOR'S PRAYER
Dear Protector of Dogs and Fools,
When that intelligent, hardworking, honest judge finally
sees what I see in this dog I've worked so hard and long with, help me
to accept my win with grace and dignity. And, when that blind, clueless
idiot – I mean, judge – somehow fails to see what a fine job we've
done (well, at least better than the so-and-so he placed ahead of us!),
help me to accept my defeat with some of that same grace and dignity.
Lord, you alone know how I've sweated blood over this
dog, the hours I've spent getting her ready (and, Lord, are any of them
ever ready?). You (and probably only you!) understand why I've spent
good money on this animal – money I could have spent on lots of other
things, things that just might have afforded me a little more pleasure
and a lot less frustration.
Lord, tolerate my disappointment when I lose, and help
me keep it all in perspective. Help me remember that when some dog show
judge gives me the gate, it's not as if St. Peter just gave me those
pearly ones.
Lord, clear my eyes and help me see *before* I open my
big mouth, that the so-and-so with the cow-hocked, pony-gaited dink
walking out of the ring ahead of me is actually a fellow exhibitor who
has also worked hard, maybe even sweated blood over *his* dog too, and
probably deserves to enjoy this moment to its fullest while it lasts.
Lord, you know there are some times – but not nearly
as often as I tend to suppose – when such ugly things as Politics,
Prejudice, and Unethical Practices may cause my dog to get beaten
unfairly…sometimes. Help me, then, to remember that several wrongs
won't ever make a right, and that none of those wrongs gives me an
excuse to act like an idiot.
You know I'm a competitor, Lord; I make no bones about
that. I love to win and I hate to get beat. There are few things more
abhorrent to me, Lord, than placing sixth out of six. If I didn't love
to compete, I'd stay home and knit afghans. But then, there are probably
afghan shows, and people who hire professional knitters with high-tech
knitting machines, and most likely there are afghan show judges who
raise sheep whose wool goes into some of the winningest afghans, and
there I'd be – still frustrated, still getting beat, and without a dog
to share half the blame.
This year, Lord, help me to have a little more faith in
my fellow dog folks, and for Heaven's sake, help me win, or lose, with a
little class.
AMEN.