
It was supposed to be a night of celebration — John Foster’s birthday show at the Grand Ole Opry. But when he stepped onto that historic stage, there was no smile on his face. Just tears.
And they weren’t for himself.

They were for Richard “Dick” Eastland, the 70-year-old camp director from Texas who gave his life saving others — and for the families torn apart by the historic floods that have devastated the Lone Star State.
A Song for a Man Who Chose Others First

As the crowd quieted, Foster stood still under the spotlight and addressed the room:
“Tonight isn’t about me. It’s about a man who showed us what real courage looks like.”
He then launched into a haunting, stripped-down version of George Jones’ classic “He Stopped Loving Her Today” — a song about devotion beyond the grave — and dedicated it to Dick Eastland’s family, who were in the audience, quietly weeping.
The crowd listened in stunned silence, many wiping away tears.
The Hero of Camp Mystic

On July 4th, while families were lighting fireworks, disaster struck Camp Mystic in Kerr County, Texas. A sudden flash flood roared through the all-girls Christian camp, snapping trees, collapsing cabins, and leaving hundreds in peril.
But one man ran toward the danger.
Richard “Mr. Dick” Eastland, beloved director of the camp for decades, didn’t hesitate. With no life jacket, no radio, no plan — just instinct and heart — he waded into the rising waters.
He rescued at least nine young girls, one by one, guiding them through chest-high currents, lifting them from windows, dragging them to safety. Then, just as he turned to go back for more, the final wave came — massive, violent, and unforgiving.
When it passed, Dick was gone.
A Life Remembered With Music and Tears
John Foster chose “He Stopped Loving Her Today” not for its romance, but for its truth.
“Dick didn’t stop loving those girls. Not even when the water took him,” Foster said. “He loved them right to the end — and beyond.”
After the song, the Opry audience gave a standing ovation, not just for Foster, but for the hero from Texas who never came back.