Protected By Blackberry Security

Protected By Blackberry SecurityThree men parked down on the road in front of our property a couple nights ago. They had bolt cutters and a plan to break into our shop. What they didn’t have was respect for brambles.

The first man hit the property line at a jog. He made it four steps. The canes took him like a cat takes a mouse — not quick, but certain. One barb in the jeans, then another in the jacket, then three in the scalp. He yelled. That was mistake one. Sound carries in a holler.

The second man tried to go around. Blackberries don’t “around.” They’d swallowed the old deer path in ’09. He pushed in with his forearm and came back with his sleeve in ribbons and blood running down to his elbow. The thorns are recurved, built to keep prey from backing out. Every time he pulled, they bit deeper.

The third was smarter. He had a machete. He swung once, twice. The canes sprang back. Blackberry is whippy, green wood. Cut one, three more slap you in the face. He got ten feet in and realized he couldn’t see the road anymore. Couldn’t see his feet. Couldn’t see anything but thorns and the dark. That’s when the yellowjackets came up from a nest he’d stepped on. They didn’t care who was trespassing.

Now, I didn’t call the sheriff until sunrise mind you and we all slept just fine. The dogs didn’t even bark — they knew the briars were working.

The Sheriff found them at 6:40 AM, picking their way out to the road looking like they’d lost a fight with fifty cats. One had to cut his own boot off to get his ankle free. The bolt cutters were still in the thicket somewhere. Nobody was going back for them.

The Sheriff walked the edge with me, looked at the scratches on those men, looked at the wall of green and purple.

“You do this on purpose?” the Sheriff asked as

he popped a berry in his mouth. July-sweet, still warm from the night.

“No sir,” I said. “I just quit mowing. The mountain did the rest.”

I offered the Sheriff a hatful to take to the station. He took it. Evidence, he said.

Folks in town started saying those folks up on Big Dog Reserve had the best security system in Smyth County. No wires, no batteries, no subscription. Just pays you back in cobbler.

And if you ask me about it, I’ll tell you the same thing my Dad said: “A fence tells a man he’s not wanted. A blackberry patch convinces him.”

That’s security.

Denny Fitch and Flight 232

Denny Fitch and Flight 232

July 19, 1989. United Airlines Flight 232. 37,000 feet over Iowa. 3:16 p.m.

The explosion arrives without any warning.

Deep in the tail section, the fan disk of the center engine – a spinning titanium component that has been quietly cracking from the inside for 18 years, undetected through every maintenance inspection – suddenly shatters. It fires fragments of metal through the rear of the aircraft like shrapnel, shredding the hydraulic lines that run through the tail.

All 3 of them. Simultaneously.

On a modern jet, hydraulic fluid is everything. It powers the ailerons that bank the wings. The elevators that control pitch. The rudder that steers the nose. The flaps that slow the plane for landing. The brakes. Without it, none of these systems function at all.

United Flight 232 is a wide-body jet carrying 285 passengers and 11 crew members – 296 people in total – at cruising altitude over Iowa, and it now has no steering, no lift control, and no brakes.

In the entire history of commercial aviation, this had never happened. No training manual covered it. No simulator had ever modeled it, because no engineer had believed all 3 independent hydraulic systems – specifically designed as backups for each other – could fail at once.

Captain Al Haynes and his crew are completely, utterly on their own.

Here’s what makes it worse,

The plane will not fly straight. Without hydraulic control it drifts into a spiral. Haynes and First Officer Bill Records fight the yoke – the control wheel – with everything they have. But the yoke is connected to nothing. It moves freely in their hands, like a steering wheel on a car with a severed axle.

The only possible tool left is the thrust of the 2 surviving wing engines. Vary the power between them, and the plane responds – barely, sluggishly, dangerously. It is like trying to parallel park a freight train using only the engine.

In the first-class cabin, Denny Fitch hears the explosion and looks out his window. He watches the wing control surfaces. They are completely still. Not sluggish. Not damaged.

Still.

He has spent years as an off-duty United Airlines DC-10 flight instructor. He has never seen this specific situation – no one has – but he knows what motionless control surfaces at 37,000 feet mean. He stands up, walks to the cockpit door, and tells the crew, “I’m a DC-10 instructor. I think I can help you.”

Captain Haynes does not hesitate. “You’ve got the throttles,” he says.

3:29 p.m. Denny Fitch kneels on the floor between the 2 pilot seats.

There is no chair. No harness. No instrumentation designed for what he is about to attempt. He reaches forward and grips 1 thrust lever in each hand – left engine, right engine – and begins.

Advance the right throttle to arc left. Advance the left to arc right. Ease both back to descend. Push both forward to climb. But never too fast or too sharp, or the aircraft rolls into a spiral it cannot recover from.

The plane porpoises through the sky – rising and falling in long, nauseating waves, never fully stable – but slowly, impossibly, it begins pointing toward Iowa.

“I’ve got 296 lives in my hands, literally,” Fitch tells the crew.

For 44 minutes, he does not let go.

4:00 p.m. Sioux City Gateway Airport.

The DC-10 crosses the runway threshold at nearly 250 miles per hour – far above any safe landing speed. The right wing drops. It clips the ground. The aircraft cartwheels. The fuselage tears apart. The cockpit section snaps off like the tip of a broken pencil.

111 people are killed. 184 survive.

Here is what the aviation world discovered in the weeks and months that followed, investigators assembled full teams of experienced DC-10 crews in high-fidelity simulators and handed them the exact same scenario – total hydraulic failure at cruise altitude. They ran it again and again, with the best pilots they could find.

Not 1 crew got the aircraft to the runway.

Not 1.

What Haynes, Records, Second Officer Dudley Dvorak, and Denny Fitch achieved that afternoon – guiding a hydraulically dead wide-body jet to an airport at all, across 44 minutes and 87 miles of Iowa sky – has never been replicated under controlled conditions by anyone since.

The crash of Flight 232 changed aviation forever. It was the direct catalyst for Crew Resource Management training – the system now mandatory across every commercial airline in the world, requiring crews to communicate, challenge each other, and pool all available knowledge in a crisis, exactly as Fitch and Haynes did that afternoon. How many lives CRM has saved since 1989 cannot be counted.

Fitch spent the years after the crash as a speaker, telling the story not of his heroism but of what a crew can accomplish when it trusts itself completely. When he learned 111 people had not survived, he said, “That just about destroyed me. I would have given my life for any of them.”

Denny Fitch died of brain cancer on May 7, 2012. He was 69 years old. His 2nd wife Rosa – a United flight attendant who had been working in the cabin of Flight 232 while Fitch was on his knees at the throttles – was at his side.

He once said of the landing, “Nobody had a right to walk away from that.”

But he did walk away. And then he spent the rest of his life making sure the world understood what that day cost – and what it was worth.

Share this with someone who needs to be reminded that sometimes the most extraordinary thing a person can do is simply stand up, walk forward, and say, I think I can help.

Mel Brookes and Anne Bancroft – A Love Story

Mel Brookes

He was completely broke and screamed “I love you!” at a Broadway legend across a crowded room. She loaned him money for their first date. 41 years later, she called him the greatest decision she ever made.

New York City, 1961.

Anne Bancroft was Broadway royalty—fierce, elegant, untouchable. She was starring in The Miracle Worker, on her way to an Academy Award, the kind of woman who made an entire room go quiet when she walked in.

From the back of a television studio, a voice shattered the silence.

“ANNE BANCROFT, I LOVE YOU!”

She froze. Squinted into the darkness.

“Who said that?”

“MEL BROOKS!”

She burst out laughing—a real one, surprised out of her. “I have your album!”

And just like that, the most unlikely love story in Hollywood history had its opening line.

Nobody would have bet on them.

Anne was Shakespeare on stage—commanding, elegant, the kind of actress who intimidated leading men with her talent. Mel was pure chaos in human form—a broke comedy writer who filled every room with noise, laughter, and the kind of energy that made quiet people exhausted just watching him.

She was gravity. He was a firecracker. On paper, it made no sense.

Their first date was at a modest Chinese restaurant—the only place Mel’s salary could actually cover. Halfway through the meal, he leaned across the table and decided honesty was better than pretense.

“I need to tell you something. I’m completely broke”

Without a word, Anne quietly slipped a twenty-dollar bill under the table.

The check came to fourteen dollars.

Mel picked it up, handed the waiter the full twenty, and said without blinking:

“Keep the change”

Anne spun around the moment they stepped outside and slapped him on the arm.

“Don’t be such a big shot with MY money!”

Right there—on that ridiculous sidewalk in New York City—she knew.

This loud, broke, generous fool was different. He didn’t try to impress her with wealth he didn’t have or coolness he couldn’t fake. He was just himself—completely, shamelessly, gloriously himself. And he made her laugh in a way no Shakespearean monologue ever had.

Mel never left her side again.

On August 5, 1964, they married at New York City Hall. No cameras. No fanfare. No Hollywood spectacle. Just two kids from immigrant families—a Jewish boy from Brooklyn and an Italian girl from the Bronx—standing in front of a judge and choosing each other.

What made their marriage legendary wasn’t just love. It was the kind of respect that doesn’t ask for credit.

When Mel produced The Elephant Man in 1980—a haunting drama in which Anne gave one of the most quietly devastating performances of her career—he deliberately removed his own name from all the marketing materials.

He didn’t want audiences walking in expecting a Mel Brooks comedy. He wanted her work to breathe on its own, to be seen clearly, without his shadow falling across it.

That’s who he was to her. Not just a husband. Her most devoted champion.

When people asked Anne what she saw in this whirlwind of a man, her answer stopped every conversation cold:

“I get excited when I hear his key in the door. It’s like—Ooh! The party’s about to start!”

After decades of marriage. After the novelty had long worn off. After they’d seen each other at their worst and their best. The sound of his key in the door still made her light up.

That’s not infatuation. That’s choosing someone every single day.

In 1983, they finally starred together in To Be or Not to Be. Mel would later call it his favorite film he ever made—not for the reviews or box office, but because it meant spending every single day on set beside her.

For the film’s opening number, Anne had the idea to sing “Sweet Georgia Brown” entirely in Polish. She learned it first, then drilled Mel every morning until he could perform it flawlessly beside her. Watching them dance and sing together on screen, you don’t see acting. You see pure joy. Two people absolutely delighted to exist in the same world.

Their son, Max Brooks, grew up watching all of it. He later wrote World War Z. Years afterward, he reflected:

“I didn’t realize how unusual my parents were until I was older. Most people aren’t that animated. Most people aren’t that funny. Most people aren’t that alive.”

For forty-one years, they were inseparable.

Then came 2005.

Anne was diagnosed with aggressive uterine cancer. True to who she’d always been, she faced it privately—no headlines, no cameras, no public performance of suffering. Mel stayed beside her every single day. Their love became armor. It was the only kind either of them had ever needed.

On June 6, 2005, Anne Bancroft passed away at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York. She was seventy-three years old.

The silence that followed was, by Mel’s own words, unbearable.

But grief didn’t hollow him out. Slowly, with the help of his family and his oldest friend Carl Reiner, Mel found his footing again—not to move on, but to move forward. To honor her by refusing to disappear.

“You can’t indulge in misery” he said. “It doesn’t make the pain go away. You find something in you—the grit, the courage—to keep going”

Today, Mel Brooks is ninety-eight years old, turning ninety-nine this June.

He still talks about Anne with the same light in his eyes as that afternoon in 1961 when a broke comedian shouted across a studio and told a Broadway legend he loved her.

He has spent the years since her passing making sure the world never forgets her genius—championing her films, speaking her name at every opportunity, keeping her alive the only way love knows how.

Because here’s what forty-one years and one twenty-dollar bill can teach you:

The greatest love stories aren’t built on perfection. They’re built on honesty at a dinner table. On laughter in a dark room. On a person whose key in the door makes the whole house feel different.

They’re built on the courage to shout first—and the grace to laugh back.

They’re built on respecting your partner’s work enough to step out of the spotlight. On finding someone who makes you feel more alive than you’ve ever been. On choosing each other every single day, even when—especially when—it’s not easy.

Mel Brooks and Anne Bancroft.

He screamed. She laughed. And for forty-one years, the party never stopped.

Some love stories don’t end. They just change the room they live in.

One Simple Question

Anne Hathaway

In 2006, The Devil Wears Prada became one of the most quoted comedies of its generation.

Sharp enough to make people laugh. Real enough to make them think. Nearly two decades later, when a sequel was announced with Meryl Streep, Anne Hathaway, Emily Blunt, and Stanley Tucci all returning, the world paid immediate attention.

Filming began. And during one fashion scene, Hathaway noticed something.

Beautiful models were on set. Most of them were, in her own words, “more traditionally model-sized.”

She understood what that phrase had cost women in the fashion industry for decades. She had grown up in Hollywood. She had watched a culture built around one narrow physical ideal and seen the damage it left behind — not just in magazines, but in real people’s lives, real people’s relationships with their own bodies.

So she did something simple.

She walked over to the producers and asked a question.

“Don’t you think the scene would be stronger if we had a more inclusive approach to sizing?”

She didn’t demand. She didn’t lecture. She didn’t frame it as a moral failing or a public statement. She asked, quietly and without agenda, whether a different approach might actually serve the scene better.

The producers, by her account, were immediately and genuinely troubled that they hadn’t thought of it themselves. They had been moving at the pace that film productions move — locked into rhythm, going with the flow, not stopping to examine what the flow was carrying.

But once they saw it, they acted.

Within an hour, models with a wider range of body types had been brought to set. The scene was filmed with everyone present.

A small, human moment. Noticed by one person. Acted on quickly. Folded quietly into the finished film.

That should have been the end of it.

Then Meryl Streep mentioned it in a Harper’s Bazaar cover story.

Streep recalled seeing the models on set and assuming the industry had already moved past this. She noted that Hathaway had gone directly to the producers to make sure the models in the scene wouldn’t be, in Streep’s words, “so skeletal.”

Social media picked up the story. And then it did what social media reliably does.

Posts began circulating claiming that Hathaway had gotten thin models fired. The narrative spread fast, because it fit a story people already carried in their heads — powerful actresses overriding other women’s livelihoods, Hollywood inserting itself destructively into the fashion world, one woman’s moment of virtue costing others their jobs.

None of it was true.

Hathaway went on Good Morning America and addressed it without drama, without anger, and without naming anyone who had spread the rumor.

“I do want to mention there’s a little misinformation getting out there right now that people were fired because of the size inclusivity, and that just didn’t happen. Nobody lost their jobs. In fact, it created more jobs. It was just about making sure that so many different body types saw themselves in a moment in the script.”

One clear statement. Then she moved on.

“It all begins with the question, right?”

Eight words. Summarizing the entire thing.

That is the part of this story that disappears in the noise of the controversy.

Not the rumor. Not the correction. But those eight words and what they actually point to.

A question. Asked simply and without agenda. By someone who noticed something and chose to say so rather than stay quiet in an industry where silence is frequently the safest career move.

Real change doesn’t always arrive as a speech or a campaign or a carefully worded statement released through a publicist.

Sometimes it arrives as a question asked on a busy production day, by someone willing to ask it, to producers who needed only to hear it before making it happen themselves.

And when the world tried to rewrite that quiet kindness into something ugly, the response wasn’t louder noise.

It was the truth. Stated once. Clearly.

That is what quiet courage actually looks like.

Alex de Mianur Astonishes the Global Elite — Not Because of His Achievements on the Court, but Because of a Meaningful Life Purpose

Alex_de_Mianur

Australian tennis star Alex de Mianur — a young phenomenon known for his extraordinary talent and growing influence — has just surprised some of the world’s most powerful and wealthy individuals. Not because of a legendary match. Not because of another Grand Slam trophy. Instead, it was due to a bold decision that could change the lives of countless people.

At a lavish red-carpet gala in Los Angeles at the end of April, attended by Hollywood stars, tech billionaires, legendary athletes, and influential international figures, Alex de Mianur took the stage to receive the “Global Impact Award.”

Many expected him to speak about his rise to the top of tennis, the pressure of fame, or his greatest sporting victories. But what the audience received instead was silence… followed by a message that made everyone reflect deeply.Alex de Mianur was not seeking applause. He was not trying to turn his speech into a flashy media moment. He stood calmly under the stage lights and slowly said:

“Tonight we celebrate success and victory. But out there, there are still many people struggling every day just to survive. There are families without enough food. There are children who must give up their dreams because of life’s hardships. And there are people silently enduring suffering that no one sees.”

The entire room fell into complete silence.

“This is not a political issue,” he continued. “This is a matter of responsibility. If we have the chance to change something but choose indifference instead, then what does true success really mean?”

Then came the moment that left everyone stunned.

Under the bright stage lights, Alex de Mianur announced that he would dedicate a large portion of his future income and prize money — potentially amounting to hundreds of millions of dollars — to long-term humanitarian projects.

The programs will focus on supporting vulnerable children, building free sports academies for low-income youth, providing mental health support for teenagers, and assisting families going through economic crises.

“I have received far more than I ever dreamed of from life,” Alex de Mianur shared. “But there are still far too many people struggling just to get through each day. Kindness means nothing if it is not paired with real action.”

There was no immediate cheering. Only a deep silence filled with emotion enveloped the room.

Those accustomed to luxury and fame were confronted with a simple truth: the true value of success does not lie in money or recognition, but in how many people you help overcome hardship.

Alex de Mianur ended his speech with a message that brought the entire room to its feet in applause:

“Legacy is not measured by the number of titles you win. It is measured by the number of lives you can change for the better.“

Quote of the Day

“The first and last thing required of genius is love of truth.” – Goethe, Writer (1749 – 1832)

Rock Bottom and How To Help Someone Bounce Off It!

Sock Full Of Quarters

He paid for $3.87 in gas with a sock full of quarters and I knew something was very wrong.

The coins hit the counter in a white athletic sock with a gray Nike swoosh.

It was 2:15 AM. I work the graveyard shift at the Shell station off Exit 47.

Most of my customers at this hour are truckers, third-shift nurses, or people making bad decisions they’ll regret in the morning.

But this guy didn’t fit any category.

He was maybe sixty. Wearing slacks and a button-down shirt that used to be nice but looked like he’d slept in it. His glasses were crooked.

“Pump four,” he said. His voice shook.

I looked at the sock on the counter.

“You paying with that?”

“Yes. Is that a problem?”

People pay weird ways sometimes. I’ve taken crumpled fives from sports bras. I’ve taken change counted out in pennies. I don’t judge.

“No problem,” I said. “Just gonna take me a minute to count it.”

I dumped the sock out. Quarters rolled everywhere. Some fell on the floor.

He dropped to his knees immediately, scrambling to pick them up.

“I’m sorry,” he said. “I’m so sorry.”

“It’s fine, man. It’s just quarters.”

But he was nearly crying, grabbing coins off the dirty tile floor like they were diamonds.

I came around the counter and helped him.

We picked up the quarters together in silence.

When we stood back up, I counted what was on the counter.

$3.87 exactly.

“Pump four?” I confirmed.

“Yes, please.”

I activated the pump.

He walked out. I watched through the window.

He didn’t drive a beater. He drove a newer Lexus sedan.

That caught my attention.

Nice car. Sock full of quarters. Slept-in dress clothes at 2:00 AM.

Something was off.

He pumped exactly $3.87 worth of gas and drove away.

I went back to restocking the cigarette rack behind the counter.

Twenty minutes later, he came back.

Parked at the same pump. Walked in.

“Pump four again?” I asked.

“Yes. Please.” He put another sock on the counter. Different sock. Black dress sock this time.

More quarters.

“You okay, man?” I asked while counting.

“I’m fine.”

He wasn’t fine.

I counted the quarters. Another $3.87.

“You’re buying gas four dollars at a time?”

He nodded.

“Why not just fill the tank?“

“Because I don’t have enough for that.”

I looked at his car again through the window. Had to be worth forty grand.

“You could sell that car,” I said gently. “Get something cheaper. Use the difference for gas money.”

He laughed. It wasn’t a happy sound.

“I can’t sell it. It’s a lease. And I’m four payments behind. They’re coming to repo it on Monday.”

He leaned against the counter.

“I lost my job six weeks ago. Engineering firm. They eliminated my whole department. Thirty-two years. Gone.”

I didn’t say anything.

“My wife left me two weeks after that. Said she didn’t sign up to be married to a failure. She took her car. Took half the bank account. I’ve been living in the Lexus for the past nine days.”

“Where are you driving to?” I asked.

“Nowhere. I just drive around. If I keep moving, I don’t have to think.”

He looked at me.

“These quarters are from my coin collection. I’ve been rolling them and breaking them open for gas money. This was my last roll.”

I processed the payment. Activated pump four.

He walked back out.

Pumped his $3.87.

But he didn’t leave.

He sat in the driver’s seat with the door open, head in his hands.

I have a rule. I don’t get involved. People’s problems are their problems.

But I kept watching him through the window.

After five minutes, he was still sitting there.

I made a decision I probably shouldn’t have made.

I walked outside.

“Hey,” I called.

He looked up.

“When’s the last time you ate?“

He thought about it. “Tuesday, maybe. I had a burger. Or was that Monday?”

Today was Thursday.

“Come inside,” I said.

“Why?”

“Because I’m making you a sandwich.”

“I don’t have any money.”

“I didn’t ask if you had money. I said come inside.”

He followed me in.

I went to the back. We sell sandwiches here. Pre-made ones in plastic wrap. They’re not great, but they’re food.

I grabbed a turkey club and a bag of chips. Poured him a large coffee.

Brought it all out front.

“Sit,“ I said, pointing to the plastic chairs by the window.

He sat.

He ate that sandwich like he was afraid someone would take it away. Didn’t even taste it. Just consumed it.

When he finished, he stared at the empty wrapper.

“Thank you,” he whispered.

“You can’t keep living in your car.”

“I don’t have a choice.”

“Yeah, you do. Where’s your family?”

“My parents are dead. My wife’s gone. I don’t have kids.”

“Friends?”

“I had work friends. But when you lose your job, you find out real quick who your actual friends are.”

I thought about that.

I’ve been working this shift for three years. I’m twenty-six. I dropped out of community college because I couldn’t afford it. This job pays $16.50 an hour.

I’m nobody’s hero. I’m barely keeping my own life together.

But I looked at this man, eating gas station food at 2:45 in the morning because a stranger showed him basic kindness, and I couldn’t walk away.

“There’s a day labor place on Route 9,” I said. “Opens at 5:00 AM. They pay cash at the end of each shift. Construction cleanup, moving jobs, warehouse stuff.”

“I’m sixty-one years old.”

“They don’t care. They need bodies. You show up, you work, you get paid.”

He looked at the floor. “I was a senior engineer. I had an office with a window.”

“And now you’re living in a leased car you can’t afford, breaking open coin rolls for gas money. So what’s your plan? Drive until the car gets repossessed and then sleep on the street?”

That came out harsher than I meant.

He flinched.

“I’m sorry,” I said. “But you need money. This is how you get it. It’s not forever. It’s just until you figure out the next thing.”

He was quiet for a long time.

“Where’s the address?“ he finally asked.

I wrote it down on a receipt. Added the phone number.

“Tell them Danny sent you. I know the guy who runs the dispatch. His name’s Carlos. He’s fair.”

He took the receipt. Folded it carefully. Put it in his shirt pocket.

“Why are you helping me?” he asked.

“Because nobody else is.”

He stood up. Shook my hand.

“Thank you, Danny.”

“Good luck.”

He walked out to his Lexus. Sat there for another minute.

Then he drove away.

I figured that was the last time I’d see him.

I was wrong.

Three weeks later, I was working the same shift.

A car pulled up to pump four at 2:30 AM.

Not the Lexus. A beat-up Toyota Corolla.

The driver got out. Walked inside.

It was him.

But he looked different. Clean-shaven. Haircut. Wearing work boots and jeans.

“Danny?”

“Hey,” I said. “You’re alive.”

“I am.“ He smiled. Actual smile. “I went to that day labor place. Carlos put me on a crew that same morning. Demo work. Tearing out old drywall.”

“How’d it go?”

“I made eighty-five dollars that first day. Cash. I bought food. I slept in the car that night feeling like maybe I could survive this.”

He leaned on the counter.

“I worked every day for two weeks. Saved up six hundred dollars. Carlos liked me. Said I showed up on time and didn’t complain. He offered me a permanent spot on his renovation crew.”

“That’s great.”

“I gave the Lexus back to the dealer last week. Bought this Corolla for twelve hundred cash. It’s ugly, but it’s mine. No payments.”

“Where are you living?”

“I rented a room in a house with four other guys. Three hundred a month. Shared bathroom. It’s not the suburb I used to live in, but it’s got a roof and a bed.”

He pulled out his wallet. Took out two twenties.

“This is for the sandwich. And the coffee. And the advice.”

“I can’t take that.”

“You can. You will.”

He put the money on the counter.

“I’m going to be okay, Danny. Because you saw me when I was invisible. You treated me like I mattered when I didn’t think I did anymore.”

I took the money. Not because I needed it. But because I could tell he needed to give it.

“Fill the tank?” I asked.

“Yeah,” he said. “Fill it up.”

I activated pump four.

He walked outside and filled his Corolla all the way to the top.

$42.

No socks full of quarters.

Just a card that worked.

When he drove away, I put the two twenties in my pocket.

Later that night, when my shift ended, I used it to buy groceries for my neighbor. She’s seventy-three and lives alone. Her social security doesn’t stretch far.

Because that’s what you do with kindness.

You pass it on.

We think rock bottom looks like addiction or crime or dramatic collapse.

But sometimes, rock bottom is a man in a Lexus paying for gas with coins from a sock.

It’s quiet. It’s hidden. It’s people drowning in plain sight.

And all it takes is one person to throw them a rope.

You don’t need money. You don’t need resources.

You just need to see them.

And maybe make them a sandwich.

Marcel LeBrun

Marcel LeBrun

In 2011, He Sold His Tech Company for $326 Million. Then He Went Home and Started Watching.

Fredericton, New Brunswick. Population 65,000.

Not exactly where you’d expect a revolution to start.

Marcel LeBrun grew up here. Went to university here. Built a social media software company called Radian6 here, starting with a small team and a specific idea and the particular stubbornness of someone who does not know yet what is supposed to be impossible.

In May 2011, Salesforce acquired Radian6 for $326 million in cash and $50 million in stock. It was the largest venture-backed technology exit in Canadian history. Marcel was forty years old. He stayed on at Salesforce as a senior vice president for a few years, then left in 2015, returned to New Brunswick, and stood in the middle of the life he had built.

He looked at what was around him.

And then he really looked.

Tents on grassy patches in the city center. Families sleeping in their cars in parking lots, moving from one side of a lot to another before anyone noticed. People huddled in doorways as the Canadian winter arrived without compromise. A waitlist for subsidized housing in New Brunswick stretching to six thousand names.

Most people with the kind of money Marcel had made would have felt sad about that. Maybe written a check. Attended a gala. Funded a study. Filed it under problems bigger than one person and let the guilt settle into the background of an otherwise comfortable life.

Marcel looked at it the way a software engineer looks at a broken system.

This is a problem. Problems have solutions. What are we actually trying to build here?

He told Maclean’s magazine: “I won the parent lottery, the education lottery, the country lottery. It would be arrogant to say every piece of my success was earned, when so much of it was received.”

Then he got to work figuring out how to spend it.

For years, he and his wife Sheila — a retired occupational therapist who understood, in the specific and practical language of her profession, what people actually need to rebuild a functioning life — traveled. They visited nonprofits and social enterprises across Canada, the United States, and as far as Ghana, looking for models that worked. Not models that provided emergency relief. Models that created permanent transformation.

What Marcel kept finding, again and again, was the same gap.

Emergency relief, he observed, gets done reasonably well. The safety net catches people. But the support disappears the moment someone starts improving — which is precisely the moment it is most needed. The system, as designed, was accidentally optimised to keep people stuck.

He thought about that for a long time.

Then he came back to Fredericton and started staking out a piece of land.

He did it literally. He walked a 65-acre plot on Fredericton’s north side — land previously used for harvesting trees — with wooden stakes and a measuring tape, laying out the shape of a community he hadn’t built yet. He adjusted distances until they felt right. He stood in the middle of it and tried to imagine what 99 homes could do for 99 people who had nowhere to go.

A local church group donated an 8,000-square-foot warehouse space. Marcel converted it into a manufacturing facility — not for software, not for algorithms, but for homes. He staffed it with workers paid a living wage, and the factory began producing fully designed, architecturally built tiny homes at a rate of one every four days, at a cost of $55,000 each. When conventional construction was failing to deliver affordable housing at $200,000 a unit, Marcel was doing it for less than a quarter of the price.

He applied to the federal government for funding in July 2021. By the time the approval came through seventeen months later, he had already built thirty-five homes with his own money.

He didn’t wait for permission. He showed them what the idea looked like when it was already running.

The community is called 12 Neighbours.

Walk in off the gravel driveway and what you find is not what the address prepares you for. Ninety-nine small homes — painted in warm, distinct colours — lining quiet paths. Each one roughly 250 square feet. Small, yes. But private. Lockable. Solar-panelled. With a full kitchen, a bathroom, a small deck out front, and a door that belongs entirely to the person on the other side of it.

A community center anchors the village — housing Neighbourly Coffee, a café and teaching kitchen run by residents themselves, a silk-screen printing workshop, community gardens. Goal-setting programs. Mental health counseling. Addiction support. Not beds. Jobs. Not charity. Purpose.

Rent is set at 30 percent of whatever the resident earns. The maximum — including all utilities and internet — is $200 a month.

Marcel’s quote about the difference between philanthropy and what he was actually doing stayed with him through the whole build: “The word philanthropy is often interpreted as someone who gives money. But the Greek roots of the word mean to love humans. What I have discovered is that spending money is the easy thing. Spending yourself is the hard thing.”

He spent himself.

Randy Burtch had been sleeping in his 2004 Chevy Impala for about a year.

He had work — construction jobs, here and there — but pandemic-era rents in Fredericton had climbed far beyond what those jobs could cover. No kitchen. No shower. No address. No place that was his.

When he moved into 12 Neighbours, someone asked him what it meant to have a working kitchen again.

He said: “If I want a shower, I can have one. If I want something to eat, I can cook it.”

That is what $55,000 buys. Not luxury. The specific, irreplaceable dignity of a door with a lock and a kitchen that is yours.

The first couple to move into the community had spent ten months living in a tent, taking sponge baths in the woods behind a lumber yard. They walked into their new home and closed the door behind them.

In early 2023, the provincial and federal governments added $13 million in funding. Not to launch an idea — to scale one that had already proven itself.

Marcel is not finished.

He has launched a second initiative — Neighbourly Homes — a rapidly deployable housing model designed to scale across the Maritimes. Other nonprofits are already ordering homes from his factory. A community for vulnerable youth is being planned in Ontario. A second 12 Neighbours community is taking shape in Miramichi, New Brunswick.

He still shows up on-site every day. He knows residents by name. He attends community events. He treats the whole thing the way he treated every startup he ever built: as a problem with barriers, none of them actually impossible, all of them worth solving if you are willing to stay long enough to solve them.

There are still thousands of people on the housing waitlist in New Brunswick.

There are 99 homes at 12 Neighbours, with more being built.

The math doesn’t balance yet.

But it is more balanced than it was three years ago. And Marcel LeBrun is still in the factory.

Because that is what happens when someone with resources, a specific idea, and the specific personality type that cannot live comfortably with an unsolved problem decides that homelessness is not too complicated.

It is just unsolved.

And he is not the kind of person who can leave it that way.

Patch Adams

Patch Adams

His name was Hunter Doherty Adams. The world came to know him as Patch.

He was born on May 28, 1945, in Washington, D.C. As a teenager, the darkness in his mind became so severe that he voluntarily committed himself for treatment. He was 18. He stayed for 2 weeks.

What happened in those 2 weeks changed the entire direction of his life.

He watches the other patients. He sees loneliness doing as much damage as any illness. He sees how 1 act of genuine human warmth can change the temperature of a room. He sees that nobody in the building is treating any of that.

He makes a decision. He will become a doctor – but not the kind who hides behind clinical distance. A different kind entirely.

He walks out and starts building the life that will prove his point.

1971. Northern Virginia.

Patch graduates from the Medical College of Virginia and moves immediately. He gathers 20 friends, including 3 fellow doctors, and opens a 6-bedroom house to anyone who needs medical care.

No receptionist. No billing department. No insurance forms. No payment of any kind.

The 6-bedroom home in Northern Virginia becomes a fully functioning communal hospital. Patch and his team live directly alongside their patients – cooking together, sharing meals, sharing space. The line between doctor and patient is deliberately and radically erased.

To keep it alive, Patch and another Gesundheit physician moonlight in hospital emergency rooms at night and donate their entire salaries back into the free clinic. Other friends take outside work and do the same.

Here’s what makes it worse, the medical establishment is not impressed.

Treating patients without billing violates every professional norm of the era. The idea that a doctor’s personality, humor, and emotional presence could be as therapeutic as a prescription is dismissed as unscientific and naive. Patch is written off. He is told that what he is doing is not real medicine and cannot last.

He tells them, “The most revolutionary act one can commit in our world is to be happy.”

Then he puts on a clown suit and keeps going.

1971–1983. 12 years. 15,000 patients. Zero bills.

More than 15,000 people receive care at the Gesundheit Institute, completely free. No payment. No malpractice insurance. No formal facilities at all.

Patch rides a unicycle. He juggles. He arrives at hospital bedsides in full clown regalia. He rolls down hills with disturbed patients. He deploys every instrument of human joy he can find – and then performs rigorous, genuine medicine alongside it.

He calls it his “pilot project.” A proof of concept, that a medical practice built on community, humor, and radical generosity can actually work.

In 1981, the Gesundheit Institute purchases 321 acres in Pocahontas County, West Virginia, using donated funds. The dream is a full-scale free hospital, open to anyone in the world.

The medical establishment is still skeptical. The 15,000 patients who received free care are not.

In 1998, Robin Williams portrays Patch Adams in a major Hollywood film that carries his story to audiences across the world.

Patch Adams keeps going. Still traveling. Still wearing the clown suit. Still preaching the conviction he formed alone in a psychiatric ward at age 18 – that a doctor who withholds joy, warmth, and genuine human presence from their patients is practicing medicine with only half the tools available.

He has never sent a bill.

Share this with someone who needs to be reminded that the most powerful medicine in the world is also the simplest, feeling like someone truly gives a damn about you.