Tonight I’ve been counting railroad cars • Clinking and grinding into the dark
• One of them passed with an open door • And I pictured myself jumping on
board • What is the chance of that •• Well I’ve always had this thing about trains •
A lonesome sound like a man in pain • Going somewhere they don’t lose track •
Some folks leave and they don’t look back • What is the chance of that
•• I have believed since I was a little bitty girl • That there were rules of cause
and effect • And they slowly shaped my world • But pain and hard times they
come and they go • Like some blindfolded angel somewhere saying • Eeny
Meeny Miny Moe • What is the chance of that ••
Why do I feel restless inside • Maybe I’m part of a wandering tribe • I want
to check my family tree • I think there’s a little nomad in me • What is the
chance of that •• Life is a thing you drink in deep • The journey is hard and the
journey’s sweet • Maybe I’ll search and maybe I’ll find • Things I wanted were
already mine • What is the chance of that
•• I have believed since I was a little bitty girl • That there were rules of cause
and effect • And they slowly shaped my world • But pain and hard times they
come and they go • Like some test of faith that purifies my • Weak belief
into something gold • What is the chance of that
Amy Grant and Wayne Kirkpatrick / Produced by Wayne Kirkpatrick // © 1997 Age to Age Music / Riverstone Music (Admin. by The Loving Company) (ASCAP) /
Warner – Tamerlane Publishing / Sell The Cow Music (BMI) // Drums: Chris McHugh / Bass: Jimmie Lee Sloas / Percussion:
Sam Bacco / Acoustic Guitar and Harmonica: Wayne Kirkpatrick / Electric Guitar: Gordon Kennedy and Kenny Greenberg /
Keyboards: Tim Laur / Background Vocals: Chris Rodriguez, Michael Mellett, Micah Wilshire / Engineered and Mixed by Dan
Marnien at The Village, Santa Monica, California
Behind the Song:“I wrote this song in 1996. I was asking a lot of questions about truth and reality in those last couple of years
of my first marriage. With so much uncertainty in my life, music was a safe place to explore the landscape. A lot
has changed since then. ...I still like trains.” - Amy Grant