
Manners

Opinions and Facts

Because You Think Of Them

Julia Roberts and Denzel Washington

At the AFI Life Achievement Award ceremony honoring Denzel Washington in 2019, Julia Roberts surprised the audience by reading a recommendation letter written about him decades earlier by one of his acting teachers. The letter described Washington as a dedicated young actor with remarkable focus and integrity. Roberts used the moment to remind the audience that the qualities admired in him today were already visible long before Hollywood knew his name.
The audience quickly realized that the tribute was not just about celebrating a successful career. The letter revealed a portrait of a young man still searching for opportunity yet already carrying the discipline that would define him. According to the teacher who wrote it, Washington stood out because of the seriousness he brought into every rehearsal and class. While other students sometimes chased attention, he focused on learning the craft.
Roberts read the words slowly, allowing the room to absorb them. The letter described Washington as thoughtful, determined, and quietly confident. It praised his willingness to work harder than expected and his respect for fellow actors. Those early observations felt striking because they mirrored the reputation Washington would later earn across Hollywood.
Many people in the audience had worked with him over the years and knew those descriptions were accurate. Washington built his career not only through powerful performances but through consistency and preparation. Directors often describe him as an actor who arrives fully prepared and ready to collaborate. Crew members frequently recall his kindness and calm presence on set.
Julia Roberts knew that side of him well. The two stars worked together in ”The Pelican Brief” (1993), a political thriller that became one of the decade’s most successful suspense films. Roberts played a determined law student uncovering a dangerous conspiracy while Washington portrayed the investigative journalist who helps her reveal the truth. Their performances created a strong partnership that audiences still remember.
During the tribute Roberts spoke with warmth about their experience working together. She described Washington as someone who leads quietly through example rather than through loud gestures. His professionalism shaped the atmosphere on set and helped everyone focus on telling the story well. Roberts explained that his presence often made younger actors feel more confident because they knew they were working alongside someone who valued the craft deeply.
The recommendation letter made that idea even more powerful. It showed that Washington’s integrity did not develop after success. It was present from the beginning. The teacher described a student who listened carefully to direction and treated every exercise as if it mattered. That level of commitment often separates actors who simply pursue fame from those who build lasting careers.
As Roberts continued reading, laughter and applause occasionally moved through the audience. Some lines described Washington’s seriousness with gentle humor. His teacher had written that he approached acting with the focus of someone who believed every rehearsal was a step toward something meaningful. Those words felt prophetic now that his career included decades of memorable performances.
Over the years Washington has become known for roles that carry emotional weight and moral complexity. Films such as ”Glory” (1989), ”Malcolm X” (1992), and ”Training Day” (2001) demonstrated his range and intensity. Yet colleagues often say that his greatest strength is the respect he brings into every collaboration.
The AFI Life Achievement Award celebrates artists whose work shapes the history of American cinema. Washington’s influence reaches far beyond individual films. Many younger actors credit him for showing that discipline, patience, and self respect can guide a long career. His example has quietly encouraged others to approach the craft with the same seriousness.
Roberts understood that message and wanted the audience to hear it clearly. By sharing a letter written long before fame arrived, she reminded everyone that character often begins in unseen moments. Teachers, classmates, and early mentors sometimes recognize greatness before the world does.
When Roberts finished reading, the room filled with applause. Washington smiled with a mixture of humility and gratitude. The moment felt personal rather than ceremonial. It connected the celebrated actor on stage with the determined student described in the letter.
A few simple words written years earlier still echoed in that room. Talent may open doors. Character decides how far the journey continues.
Sherpa Built Paths

In the summer of 2000, a Norwegian farmer and conservationist named Geirr Vetti had a problem. Norway’s most celebrated mountain paths were being loved to death.
The country’s dramatic landscape of fjords, peaks, and waterfalls had become a magnet for hikers, and the trails connecting them could not keep up. Soil was eroding. Rocks were loosening.
In some places the paths had become genuinely dangerous, and the standard Norwegian approach to trail maintenance, which relied on local labor and conventional tools, was too slow and too expensive to fix the damage at the scale it was happening.
Vetti had watched a documentary about Mount Everest and noticed something. The Sherpa people of the Solukhumbu district in Nepal had spent a thousand years building stone stairways through some of the most severe terrain on earth.
Their technique required no heavy machinery, no imported materials, and no roads. It needed only hands, simple tools, an understanding of how rock fractures under pressure, and the ability to carry stones heavier than a person up a near-vertical slope. Vetti made contact with a group from Nepal. Four Sherpas arrived in Norway that first summer.
The results were immediate and obvious. The Sherpas worked at a pace and with a precision that Norwegian trail crews had not seen before. They read the landscape to find local stone, shaped it by hand, and set each piece so it locked against its neighbors and shed water naturally.
The paths they built did not require cement. They did not require maintenance crews returning every season to repair erosion damage. They lasted because the technique itself was designed to last, refined over centuries in conditions far harsher than anything Norway’s mountains could offer.
Four workers became a steady flow. Sherpas came every summer, spending seven months to a year in Norway before returning home. Over time they worked across more than two hundred locations, building stairways up to the Pulpit Rock, across the Lofoten archipelago, along the Hardanger fjord, and dozens of trails in between.
Robin Williams

While studying at Juilliard in the early 1970s, Robin Williams quietly began doing something his classmates would only understand years later.
Some of them were struggling to survive.
Theater training at The Juilliard School demanded complete focus, but many students were living close to the edge financially. Rent in New York was rising, part-time jobs were scarce, and some actors were skipping meals just to stay enrolled.
Williams noticed.
Rather than offering sympathy, he acted quietly. Several classmates later discovered that when someone faced eviction or fell behind on rent, an anonymous payment would suddenly appear. At the time, no one knew where the help came from.
Only years later did former students compare stories and realize the same person had helped many of them.
Robin Williams had been paying their rent.
He never attached his name to the assistance and never mentioned it publicly. To him, money functioned as a practical tool. If financial pressure threatened someone’s ability to focus on acting, removing that pressure felt like the obvious solution.
Protect the creative space.
Let the work continue.
Even during those early years, Williams was already studying people with extraordinary attention. He carried small notebooks filled with observations about voices, rhythms of speech, accents, and unusual phrasing.
Taxi drivers.
Cashiers.
Airport workers.
Strangers in elevators.
These everyday encounters became part of his creative process. He listened carefully to cadence, pauses, and the musical quality of how people spoke. Many of the voices that later appeared in his performances were built from these observations.
Comedy, for Williams, wasn’t random chaos.
It was careful listening.
His reputation for generosity followed him into film sets as his career expanded through movies like “Dead Poets Society“ (1989) and “Good Will Hunting“ (1997). Crew members occasionally found themselves in financial trouble when productions stalled or funding delays interrupted payroll.
On several occasions, Williams quietly stepped in.
Instead of allowing workers to wait weeks for wages, he covered the payments himself so grips, electricians, and assistants could support their families. For many on set, the situation resolved so quickly they didn’t initially know what had happened.
Work simply continued.
Studios also learned that working with Williams required unusual preparation. His improvisational style meant scripts rarely stayed fixed during filming. Productions sometimes hired staff whose sole job was to track his ad-libs and new lines so editors could maintain continuity.
Unpredictability became part of the workflow.
Yet despite his fame, Williams treated people on set without hierarchy. Background actors often remembered him as the only leading star who consistently introduced himself, asked their names, and spoke with them between takes.
Conversation replaced distance.
That same instinct appeared during hospital visits. Williams frequently visited children’s hospitals, but instead of focusing attention on himself, he wrote handwritten notes thanking nurses and caregivers for their patience and dedication.
The messages were simple.
Personal.
And meant for the people who rarely received recognition.
Across decades of work, these quiet actions revealed a pattern. Robin Williams moved through environments with intense awareness of others — noticing stress, listening to voices, and stepping in where help was needed.
Not for applause.
But because, to him, kindness was simply another form of presence.
Cyrus Cylinder- The First Human Rights Chapter

In 539 BC, the most powerful city in the world didn’t fall to a bloody massacre. It fell to a man who believed that hearts were won through mercy rather than iron.
Kingdoms in the ancient world were usually built on the ashes of those they conquered. To be defeated meant to be enslaved, but King Cyrus of Persia had a different vision for his new empire.
When he entered the gates of Babylon, he found a city filled with displaced people and silenced faiths. The previous rulers had dragged thousands into exile and shattered their temples.
But Cyrus refused to follow the old ways of destruction. He sat down and dictated a message that would be carved onto a simple clay cylinder, changing the course of history forever.
He declared that every person under his rule had the right to live in peace. He promised that no one would be terrorized or forced into subjection under his watch.
But his most shocking move was yet to come. He didn’t just allow people to stay; he ordered that they be sent home to their own lands with resources to rebuild.
He saw their grief. He saw their longing. He saw their humanity.
Among those freed were the Jewish people, who had been held in Babylonian captivity for seventy years. Because of this one man’s decree, they were finally allowed to go home and rebuild their temple in Jerusalem.
This simple clay object, now known as the Cyrus Cylinder, is often called the first charter of human rights in history. It proved that a leader could be powerful without being a tyrant.
Today, this artifact sits in the British Museum as a quiet reminder of a king who chose tolerance over terror. His legacy reminds us that true greatness is measured by what we protect, not what we destroy.
He changed the world by setting people free.
The impact of this decree was so profound that it is mentioned in the Old Testament, where Cyrus is described as a shepherd chosen to bring the people home.
When the cylinder was rediscovered in the ruins of Babylon in 1879, archaeologists realized they weren’t just looking at political propaganda. They were looking at the official record of a humanitarian revolution that happened 2,500 years ago.
Cyrus didn’t just talk about tolerance; he funded the reconstruction of holy sites for multiple different religions out of his own royal treasury.
He believed that a stable empire was one where every citizen felt respected in their own traditions. It is a lesson in governance that many modern leaders could still learn from today.
Sources: British Museum Records / National Archives
Kincsem

They told him to take all the foals. Every last one. Then he pointed at the dusty chestnut filly in the corner and said, “Except that ugly one.” That decision would haunt him forever.
Born in 1874 at the legendary Tápiószentmárton Stud in Hungary, Kincsem arrived in the world without a single thing to recommend her. No gleaming coat. No impressive build. No buyers fighting over her bloodlines. She was awkward, overlooked, and left behind while flashier foals were led away to glory. What no one could see yet was that inside that unglamorous frame lived something so rare, so fierce, and so unstoppable that the entire continent of Europe would eventually bow before it.
Trainer Robert Hesp saw it first. From the moment Kincsem stepped onto the track, he knew. She had a stride that seemed to swallow the ground whole, an appetite for hard work that never dimmed, and an iron constitution that would make every rival look fragile by comparison. She made her debut as a two-year-old — running against older colts, horses who had no business being beaten by a filly — and she won. Then she won again. Then again.
They kept sending better horses. She kept winning.
Here is where the story gets almost impossible to believe.
At a time when long-distance travel across Europe was grueling, dangerous, and deeply stressful for racehorses, her owner Ern? Blaskovich sent Kincsem across the continent — Germany, France, England — to prove she wasn’t just a Hungarian curiosity but a genuine world-beater. Most horses crumble under that kind of pressure. New tracks, new rivals, new crowds, endless miles in transit. It breaks them.
Kincsem didn’t just survive it. She thrived.
She won the Austrian Derby. She won the Hungarian St. Leger. And then she traveled to England — where no Hungarian horse had ever dared dream of winning — to contest the Goodwood Cup, one of the most grueling distance races in the world. The British crowd watched. England’s finest stayers loaded into the gate. The field thundered down the track. And as they came into the final furlong, that dusty chestnut filly from Hungary came charging through them all, pulling away so cleanly it looked effortless.
She wasn’t just a Hungarian champion anymore. She was the queen of European racing.
But here’s the detail that makes Kincsem feel less like a racehorse and more like a legend come to life — she refused to travel without her cat.
A small, scrappy feline had wandered into her life when she was young, and from that day forward, they were inseparable. No cat in the stable? Kincsem wouldn’t eat. Her team learned quickly: wherever Kincsem went, the cat went too. Across borders, across countries, across an entire continent. The greatest racehorse alive would not take a single step without her companion by her side.
And she never lost.
By the time Kincsem ran her final race in Germany at age five, rival trainers were desperate. They had studied her. They had strategized. They sent their strongest horses and tried every tactic they could think of. It didn’t matter. As she had done fifty-three times before, Kincsem crossed the finish line first.
54 races. 54 wins. An undefeated streak that has never been matched in the history of thoroughbred racing — not before, and not since.
After retiring to stud, Kincsem passed her extraordinary speed and endurance to a new generation of champions. But no horse has ever come close to replicating what she did. Her name — Kincsem, meaning “My Treasure” in Hungarian — is still spoken with reverence more than a century later. Statues stand in her honor. Streets carry her name. And the record she set remains untouched, a monument to what is possible when the world makes the mistake of overlooking greatness.
Many racehorses have come and gone. Some have been fast. Some have been dominant. Some have even been legendary.
But only one was truly unbeatable.
Next time someone tells you they see nothing special in you — remember the filly they left behind.
James Barrie Left Peter Pan To Cure Kids

James Barrie was six years old when his brother David passed away.
David was thirteen his life was cut short in an ice-skating accident the day before his birthday. Their mother’s grief was immeasurable. But she found one small, devastating comfort in it: her boy would be thirteen forever now. He would never grow up. He would never leave her.
Young James spent his childhood trying to become the brother he couldn’t replace. He wore David’s clothes. Copied his mannerisms. Tried with everything he had to fill a space that could not be filled by anyone living.
The boy who wouldn’t grow up was born in that grief.
Barrie moved to London, became a playwright, and through a series of chance encounters in Kensington Gardens beginning in the late 1890s, befriended a family that would change everything – the five Llewelyn Davies boys, whose games and stories and wild imaginative energy handed him something he had been circling toward for years.
In 1904, he gave it a name: Peter Pan, or The Boy Who Wouldn’t Grow Up.
The play was an immediate phenomenon. The novel that followed became one of the most beloved books in the English language. The royalties made Barrie wealthy. He had no children of his own — his marriage ended in divorce — but he had become devoted guardian to the Llewelyn Davies boys after both their parents were lost at a young age, and he had a deep, lifelong tenderness for children, particularly those who were vulnerable.
In 1929, he made a decision he told almost nobody about.
He donated all rights to Peter Pan — the play, the novel, every license and royalty and adaptation — to Great Ormond Street Hospital, Britain’s leading children’s hospital.
Not a portion. Not a fixed sum. Everything. Forever.
One of the most valuable literary properties in the world, transferred quietly to a children’s ward.
When asked why, Barrie deflected with characteristic obliqueness and refused to allow the hospital to publicize the amount. He made one request: never reveal how much.
They have kept that promise for nearly a century.
From that moment, every copy of Peter Pan sold, every stage production performed, every film adaptation licensed sent money directly to the children being treated inside that hospital—children fighting illnesses with no cures, in wards where imagination was sometimes the only thing that made the waiting bearable.
When Barrie departed in 1937, British copyright law meant the rights would expire fifty years later. In 1987, the royalties would end. The hospital would lose everything.
So Parliament did something it had never done before and has never done since.
It passed a special Act granting Great Ormond Street Hospital perpetual rights to Peter Pan royalties within the United Kingdom. The only law of its kind in British legal history. The boy who wouldn’t grow up would never stop helping children fighting to survive childhood.
Since 1929, the Peter Pan rights have funded the UK’s first pediatric neuroscience unit, pioneering heart surgery equipment, gene therapy research, and hundreds of thousands of treatments for children with conditions that, a generation earlier, would simply have been terminal.
In 2019 alone, the hospital treated 238,000 children.
Many went home.
Barrie wrote in his original play: “To depart will be an awfully big adventure.“
Because of what he gave away in 1929, thousands of children got a different adventure instead.
They got to grow up.
He created a fantasy about a boy who refused to age — born from his own childhood grief, shaped by his own longing for something that could not be recovered.
Then he transformed it into a lifeline for children who were desperate to have a childhood at all.
He asked for no recognition. He requested that no one reveal the numbers. He simply handed over the thing he had made and walked away.
Some legacies fade when their creators are gone.
This one has been saving lives every single day for nearly a hundred years.
