Myles Eckert “pays it forward” to Lt. Col. Frank Dailey
This story is, at once, uplifting and sad . . . .
Steve Hartman reports for CBS News, Feb. 28, 2014:
At the Ohio Air National Guard base near Toledo, Lt. Col. Frank Dailey still can’t believe the honor recently bestowed upon him. ”It’s incredible being recognized in such a manner,” he says.
It happened at a Cracker Barrel, of all places. As the security camera shows, Dailey entered the restaurant on Feb. 7 for an early lunch. At about the same time, 8-year-old Myles Eckert came in with his family.
Myles was very excited. He’d just found a $20 bill in the parking lot. He’d started thinking of what he could spend it on. ”I kind of wanted to get a video game, but then I decided not to,” Myles says.
He changed his mind when he saw the guy in uniform. ”Because he was a soldier, and soldiers remind me of my dad,” Myles explains.
And so, with his dad in mind, Myles wrapped the $20 in a note that read, “Dear Soldier — my dad was a soldier. He’s in heaven now. I found this 20 dollars in the parking lot when we got here. We like to pay it forward in my family. It’s your lucky day! Thank you for your service. Myles Eckert, a gold star kid.”
Army Sgt. Andy Eckert was killed in Iraq, just five weeks after Myles was born. All the kid has ever had are pictures and dog tags, other people’s memories and his own imagination. ”I imagine him as a really nice person and somebody that would be really fun,” Myles says.
The dad he imagines must also love a good story. Because after lunch that day, Myles asked his mom, Tiffany, to make one more stop.
“He wanted to go see his dad,” Tiffany says. “And he wanted to go by himself that day.”
She took a photo from the car. Follow the footsteps and you’ll see Myles standing there behind the flag, presumably telling his dad all about it. And whether heaven heard him or not, his good deed continues to impress here on earth.
Little Myles is standing behind the American flag“I look at it every day,” Dailey says of the note Myles gave him.
It turns out Myles gave him a bigger gift than $20.
“A lifetime direction, for sure,” Dailey says.
Dailey says he’s already given away that $20 and plans to do much more. He also hopes that little green Post-It will inspire other people across the country to give — to give as sincerely and dutifully as that father and son.
Army Reserve Sgt. Gary “Andy” EckertErica Blade reports for The (Toledo) Blade, May 17, 2005, that (Myles’ dad) Sgt. Gary “Andy” Eckert was the first member of the U.S. Army Reserve’s 983rd Engineer Battalion in Monclova Township killed in action since World War II. He was only 24 years old.
It was his second tour overseas, the first one ended after he sustained injuries for which he received the Purple Heart.
Sgt. Eckert left a wife, Tiffany, a 2-year-old daughter, and a newborn son, Myles.
At Eckert’s funeral service at the Calvary Assembly of God Church, Brig. Gen. Michael Beasley, commander of the Army’s 88th Regional Readiness Command, said: ”Andy didn’t have to go back to war. He came back a Purple Heart recipient. He wanted to go back to serve our nation, with our soldiers. He served after the birth of [his daughter] Marlee Freedom. He served knowing [his son] Miles Manning was on the way. He was a wonderful soldier and a brilliant patriot. He was someone who taught us a whole lot about wearing a uniform, about being a father, about being a husband, and about being an American.”
Here’s the CBS video on Myles’ “paying forward”:
Would you believe that on the video’s YouTube site, 236 people gave the video a thumbs down?
H/t The Blaze and FOTM’s Wild Bill Alaska
~Eowyn