Flying High
The stage lights glowed softly as little Lucy walked to the center of the stage, her hands trembling around the microphone.
The judges smiled kindly, but they could already see tears in her eyes.
“Who inspired this performance?” one judge asked gently.
Lucy looked down for a moment before answering.
“My dad,” she whispered.
The room fell silent.
Lucy took a deep breath and smiled through her sadness.
“When I was little,” she said, “my dad used to push me on the swings at the park. He pushed me really fast so I could feel like I was flying.”
A few people in the audience wiped their eyes already.
“He’d laugh every time I screamed higher,” she continued. “And he always said, ‘Lucy, one day you’ll fly farther than anyone.’”
She paused, gripping the microphone tighter.
“But my dad isn’t here anymore.”
The theater became completely still.
Lucy looked up toward the ceiling lights as if searching for him somewhere beyond them.
“Sometimes,” she whispered, “I still close my eyes and pretend he’s pushing the swing.”
The judges’ eyes filled with tears.
Then the music began.
Lucy started to sing softly, her voice small but filled with heart. Every word carried the love she still held for her father — every note sounded like a memory floating through the air.
As she sang, the audience imagined a little girl soaring high on a swing while her father stood behind her, smiling proudly.
Lucy closed her eyes during the final chorus.
For a moment, she could almost hear him again:
“Higher, sweetheart. Don’t be afraid.”
When the song ended, the room stayed silent for two full seconds before the crowd erupted into applause.
One judge openly cried.
Another stood with a hand over their heart.
Lucy looked upward one last time and smiled through tears.
Because even though her father was gone…
he had already taught her how to fly.