I recently found a letter I wrote in reaction to Senna's death to my friend in New Zealand, who was a personal friend of the late Bruce McLaren and friend of the McLaren International F1 team. In the letter I shared about what Senna meant to me. Reading it now, after 16 years, brought me back there. I wanted to share a portion of it with you. Below the excerpt is a scanned image of a copy of a letter my friend received from McLaren International, which is dated only 4 days after the tragedy.
Senna's impact on my life began one afternoon during the 1987 season when I happened to find a Grand Prix on TV. I had not seen one since 1978, when Mario Andretti was in F1. Jackie Stewart was covering the race; and he predicted that "this young Brazilian" would be World Champion within two years. Strangely, I did not see very much of that first championship season of 1988, so I vowed not to miss another of Senna's races. From that point on, I was an intense Senna fan.
It was through his driving that I remembered how much I wanted to be a race driver. (I was still newly married at the time and racing had been on the back burner for a couple of years.) I tried to emulate the Senna method that I had read about in books and magazines. I saw a lot of Senna in myself -- especially his natural talent. I can remember before my "formal training," doing things in a car that were taught to me later in racing schools. I was, and still am, inspired by him to make my driving the very best it can be. This tragedy has also helped me face my own fears about race driving. I used to hide them by telling myself to never be afraid, but I now know that my fears are normal.
Before Senna's death, I never understood how people could feel so much grief for a person they never knew personally. Now I know -- I feel as though I lost a friend. Senna's life helped set my life in motion; his death is guiding my future.
McLaren International letter signed by Ron Dennis.
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