@AndyBurnhamGM@LeaningEmma Hey Andy. You would be a great loss to Manchester but an equally great asset to the country. I wish you every success and back you every step of the way.
Restaurante lleno.
Sábado.
Mesa de 6.
Padres, abuelos y un niño de 8 años corriendo entre camareros con una tablet en la mano.
Gritando.
Saltando.
Metiendo los dedos en los vasos de otra mesa.
El camarero se acerca:
—Perdona, ¿podéis decirle al niño que no corra? Hay platos calientes.
La madre ni levanta la vista del móvil.
—Es que es muy intenso.
El niño pasa otra vez.
Casi tira una bandeja.
El camarero respira.
—De verdad, se puede quemar.
El padre sonríe como si estuviera en una charla TED de crianza consciente.
—No queremos coartar su personalidad.
Claro.
Su personalidad.
Antes se llamaba educación.
Ahora es “expresión emocional”.
El niño agarra una aceituna de una mesa ajena.
La señora se gira.
—Oye, que eso es mío.
Y ahí salta la madre:
—Tampoco hace falta hablarle así. Es un niño.
Es un niño.
La frase comodín.
Rompe algo: es un niño.
Molesta: es un niño.
Pega: es un niño.
Invade mesas ajenas como si estuviera colonizando América: es un niño.
Piden la cuenta.
El niño tira un vaso al suelo.
Cristales.
Agua.
Gritos.
El camarero vuelve.
—Por favor, ahora sí necesito que se siente.
El padre se pone serio.
—No me gusta cómo le estás hablando a mi hijo.
—Solo le he pedido que se siente.
—Pues igual deberíais tener un restaurante más adaptado a familias.
Adaptado a familias.
Traducción:
“Mi hijo puede comportarse como un gremlin mojado y tú tienes que sonreír.”
Salen indignados.
Media hora después, reseña en Google:
“Sitio poco recomendable. No respetan a los niños. Personal muy seco. No volveremos.”
Y ahí está el problema.
No es el niño.
El niño hace lo que le dejan.
El problema son adultos que confunden educar con aplaudir cualquier salvajada.
Padres que no quieren poner límites porque les da pereza sostener un berrinche de 4 minutos.
Y luego llaman “sociedad hostil” a cualquier persona que no quiera aguantar el resultado.
Resumen:
Tu hijo puede ser libre.
Pero si su libertad consiste en molestar a todo el restaurante, igual no estás criando un niño con personalidad.
Igual estás criando una factura emocional que algún día pagarán los demás.
Y seguramente tú también.
*BRITISH WRITER PENS THE BEST DESCRIPTION OF TRUMP*
Someone asked "Why do some British people not like Donald Trump?" Nate White, an articulate and witty writer from England wrote the following response:
A few things spring to mind. Trump lacks certain qualities which the British traditionally esteem. For instance, he has no class, no charm, no coolness, no credibility, no compassion, no wit, no warmth, no wisdom, no subtlety, no sensitivity, no self-awareness, no humility, no honour and no grace – all qualities, funnily enough, with which his predecessor Mr. Obama was generously blessed.
So for us, the stark contrast does rather throw Trump's limitations into embarrassingly sharp relief.
Plus, we like a laugh. And while Trump may be laughable, he has never once said anything wry, witty or even faintly amusing – not once, ever.
I don't say that rhetorically, I mean it quite literally: not once, not ever. And that fact is particularly disturbing to the British sensibility – for us, to lack humour is almost inhuman.
But with Trump, it's a fact. He doesn't even seem to understand what a joke is – his idea of a joke is a crass comment, an illiterate insult, a casual act of cruelty. Trump is a troll. And like all trolls, he is never funny and he never laughs; he only crows or jeers.
And scarily, he doesn't just talk in crude, witless insults – he actually thinks in them. His mind is a simple bot-like algorithm of petty prejudices and knee-jerk nastiness. There is never any under-layer of irony, complexity, nuance or depth. It's all surface.
Some Americans might see this as refreshingly upfront. Well, we don't. We see it as having no inner world, no soul. And in Britain we traditionally side with David, not Goliath. All our heroes are plucky underdogs: Robin Hood, Dick Whittington, Oliver Twist. Trump is neither plucky, nor an underdog. He is the exact opposite of that. He's not even a spoiled rich-boy, or a greedy fat-cat. He's more a fat white slug. A Jabba the Hutt of privilege.
And worse, he is that most unforgivable of all things to the British: a bully. That is, except when he is among bullies; then he suddenly transforms into a snivelling sidekick instead.
There are unspoken rules to this stuff – the Queensberry rules of basic decency – and he breaks them all. He punches downwards – which a gentleman should, would, could never do – and every blow he aims is below the belt. He particularly likes to kick the vulnerable or voiceless or female – and he kicks them when they are down. So the fact that a significant minority – perhaps a third – of Americans look at what he does, listen to what he says, and then think 'Yeah, he seems like my kind of guy' is a matter of some confusion and no little distress to British people, given that:
• Americans are supposed to be nicer than us, and most are.
• You don't need a particularly keen eye for detail to spot a few flaws in the man.
This last point is what especially confuses and dismays British people, and many other people too; his faults seem pretty bloody hard to miss.
After all, it's impossible to read a single tweet, or hear him speak a sentence or two, without staring deep into the abyss. He turns being artless into an art form; he is a Picasso of pettiness; a Shakespeare of shit. His faults are fractal: even his flaws have flaws, and so on ad infinitum. God knows there have always been stupid people in the world, and plenty of nasty people too. But rarely has stupidity been so nasty, or nastiness so stupid. He makes Nixon look trustworthy and George W look smart. In fact, if Frankenstein decided to make a monster assembled entirely from human flaws – he would make a Trump.
@LeaningEmma Sensitivity is something to value not belittle. We need more of it in the world not less. You are also vulnerable and powerful. All qualities to treasure. Don’t let anyone tell you any different.
He did it politely and diplomatically but King Charles just reminded Congress:
• NATO was there for USA after 9/11
• British Troops did fight in Afghanistan
• Ukraine needs our help now
• executive power must be subject to checks & balances
• ice-caps are melting
• America’s natural wonders need protecting
A final piece of advice from Holly Butcher - written the day before she passed away from cancer at just 27:
“It’s a strange thing knowing you’re going to die young.
At 26, I thought I had time…
To fall in love.
Start a family.
Grow old.
But cancer doesn’t care about plans.
Now, I understand how fragile life really is. Every single day is a gift, not a guarantee.
I’m not writing this to scare you. I’m writing to remind you: really live.
Stop stressing over little things. Be kind to your body- move it, nourish it, stop criticizing it. One day you’ll wish you had appreciated it.
Go outside.
Look at the sky.
Feel the sun.
Just be.
Spend less time chasing “stuff” - more time making memories. Don’t skip moments with people you love.
Laugh more.
Write a note.
Tell someone you love them.
Complain less.
Give more.
Helping others brings more joy than anything you can buy.
Be present.
Put your phone down.
Show up - really show up.
You don’t need to have it all figured out. You don’t need a perfect body, or a perfect life.
Just follow what makes your heart light up. Say no to what drains you. Make changes when you need to.
And please - donate blood. I wouldn’t have had that extra year without it. And that year gave me memories I’ll hold close… forever.
Thank you for reading this.
Live your life well.
And maybe… we’ll meet again someday.”
Holly 🩷
Repost & share Holly’s important advice. ❤️
Meine persönlichen Gedanken zu den teilweise ekelhaften Kommentaren und Reaktionen, auf den tödlichen Unfall von Juha Miettinen:
Der tragische Verlust von Juha Miettinen, beim gestrigen Qualifying zum diesjährigen 24 Stunden Rennen auf der Nürburgring Nordschleife, steckt allen Motorsport Fans noch in den Knochen und trotzdem gibt es Kommentare dazu, welche mehr als pietätlos sind...
Menschen die mit Motorsport vorher keinerlei Erfahrung oder Berührung hatten, aber auch solche die sich selbst als "Veteranen" bezeichnen, lassen sich zu folgenden Aussagen hinreißen:
"Er war 66 Jahre alt, da sind die Reflexe einfach nicht mehr da"
"Die langsamen Autos beim 24 Stunden Rennen, sind eine Gefahr für die GT3 Boliden"
"Selbst schuld wenn man in dem Alter noch Rennfahrer spielen will"
-----------------------------------
Ja, auch ich musste erstmal schlucken, als ich diese und weitaus ekelhaftere Kommentare gelesen habe. Es waren tatsächlich sogar Leute dabei, die sich lauthals darüber beschwert haben, dass ihnen der Vorfall "den Spaß" genommen hätte, denn "danach war ja nichts mehr Qualifying gewesen"
Betrachten wir den Unfall mal sachlich:
Im Bereich Steilstrecke hatte ein Fahrzeug im Vorfeld Öl/Kühlmittel verloren, was gerade in diesem Bereich (Hohe Geschwindigkeiten mit anschließendem hartem Bremspunkt) fatal ist.
Innerhalb kürzester Zeit führte dies dazu, dass mehrere Fahrzeuge (insgesamt 7) dort hart einschlugen, unter anderem auch der BMW von Juha.
Dieser wurde hart auf der Fahrerseite getroffen, während Juha sich gerade aus dem Wrack befreien wollte. (Weitere Details werde ich hier nicht nennen)
- Es handelte sich NICHT um einen Fahrfehler!
- Es hatte NICHTS damit zu tun, dass Juha in einem "langsamen" Fahrzeug unterwegs war!
- Es hatte NICHTS mit Reflexzeiten zu tun!
In einer Situation wie dieser ist es vollkommen egal, ob man mit einem VW Polo oder einem Bugatti Veyron unterwegs ist, man wird innerhalb von Sekunden von Fahrer zum Passagier!
Unfälle wie dieser sind wieder einmal die Bestätigung dafür, warum die Nordschleife auch die "Grüne Hölle" genannt wird. Allein die Topographie der Strecke führt dazu, dass selbst erfahrene Piloten an ihre Grenzen kommen.
Juha war ein erfahrener Pilot, mit unzähligen Kilometern auf verschiedenen Rennstrecken, aber besonders auf der Nordschleife.
Er übte diesen Sport mit Herz und Seele aus, war stets ein fairer Fahrer und bei den Fans somit auch sehr beliebt.
Ich selbst habe ihn bei dem ein oder andere Rennen der VLN/NLS getroffen und mich mit ihm unterhalten
Juha war ein guter Mensch, ein guter Rennfahrer und guter Sportsmann.
Diese ganzen unterirdischen Kommentare über ihn, von Leuten die keinerlei Ahnung haben, schmerzen nicht nur weil sie unfair, sondern auch mehr als unangebracht sind!
Das einzige was man über Juha sagen sollte wenn man ihn nicht kannte ist:
Ruhe in Frieden Juha Miettinen
18.01.1960 - 18.04.2026
Und alle anderen Kommentare, Vermutungen und/oder Äußerungen, sollte man sich alleine schon aus Anstand sparen!
Ich würde mich sehr freuen wenn ihr diesen Post bitte in euren Timelines teilen würdet, um so das Ansehen von Juha zu wahren und den negativen Kommentaren keinen Platz zu geben
Danke❤️
#24hNBR
#RIPJuha
🕯️���🕯️
Danke fürs Lesen
Euer Maxi 🔧🏁
Sadly Kloda’s rehoming has fallen through and she is still available.
Kloda is a 1 year old female Doberman. She is available and looking for a new home through no fault of her own.
Kloda is great meeting people and gets excited, she would jump up to say hello and sometimes doesn't know her own size.
She is house trained and healthy with no medical issues.
Kloda would be best in a home with no other dogs.
She would be fine with children who are older, no young kids as she may knock them over.
Kloda would be suitable to someone who has a large secure garden that she can enjoy.
An experienced owner is best for her as she is a large dog.
She loves playing tug of war and will happily accept treats.
Kloda likes to sleep in the room with her owner at night, she has her own bed but prefers to sleep next to her owner.
She can be very strong on the lead and can benefit from lead training.
Kloda is chipped.
A home with no cats is best.
For more information or to offer Kloda a new home please email [email protected]
Sorry we are unable to accept messages to the page.
Gold Dancer died at Aintree on Friday. He was not the first. He will not be the last.
The RSPCA confirmed he was the 42nd horse to die in UK racing in 2026. It is only April.
Since the year 2000, 68 horses have died at Aintree alone. PETA responded by calling the Grand National Festival the Grand Massacre. Animal Aid said the words that landed hardest: Everyone who bought a ticket, placed a bet or watched the ITV coverage paid for this horse to die.
The BHA pointed to a falling fatal injury rate of 0.22 percent in 2025. Animal welfare groups said that number still represents hundreds of horses dying every year for entertainment.
Gold Dancer won £67,524. He was dead within minutes of crossing the line. The Grand National ran the following day.
💔THE SAD REALITY OF SMALL, INDEPENDENT RESCUES - ANOTHER FANTASTIC RESCUE HAVING TO CLOSE💔
We've just been informed that due to lack of donations & funds that Second Chances Animal Sanctuary based in #Ceredigion #wales will be closing its doors for good once all their dogs & other animals are rehomed
https://t.co/0ABk7APxQN
Text taken from their FB post👇
"It is with the deepest regret that I have to share some heartbreaking news.
Due to a severe lack of funds, we are no longer able to continue operating Second Chances Animal Sanctuary as we have been. This decision has not been made lightly, and it comes after exhausting every possible option.
Please know that the animals currently in our care will continue to be loved, cared for, and supported until we find them safe and suitable forever homes. They remain our absolute priority.
However, it breaks my heart to say that we are no longer able to take in any more animals in need.
Thank you to everyone who has supported us, believed in us, and stood by us. (If a miracle happens, I will absolutely let you know straight away). Your kindness has meant everything—not just to me, but to every animal we’ve been able to help.
This isn’t how I ever wanted things to end, but right now, it’s the reality we are facing 💔"
They currently have 16 dogs. These guys take in the large breed dogs that many rescues shy away from. Please remember there are always dogs in the background that aren't ready to be rehomed yet. Second Chances will still have running costs (food, Vet care, meds, day to day costs) until every animal is rehomed
If anyone can donate to help them, please click on the links below or see bank details at the bottom of the post
https://t.co/j8hCDtIPdO
https://t.co/guXn0gJPCN
23-11-85
65939508
Second Chances Animal Sanctuary
It's just a really sad day in rescue when this happens 😞
#teamgreenacres #rescue #k9hour #rehomehour #spanielhour #teamzay #StrongerTogether #ittakesavillage #teamworkmakesthedreamwork
Let me give you the complete list of Trump’s unforced economic errors.
Pull back on the tariffs.
Push forward on the tariffs again.
Uncertainty for every business in America
Nobody can invest. Nobody knows what the rules are tomorrow.
Go to war. Knock energy prices through the roof.
Go after people in the streets with violent demonstrations of force.
And here’s what we know about that last one that nobody in this administration wants to acknowledge: Fear dims economic innovation.
I don’t know the exact number of people living in this country without documentation.
But I know this: they are working. They are paying sales taxes. Many are paying other forms of taxes and they are contributing to GDP.
If you terrorize that population — if you make them afraid to leave the house, afraid to spend money, afraid to participate in the economy — you don’t just hurt them.
You hurt everyone.
He has caused slower growth.
He has created greater uncertainty than this economy has seen in decades.
He has crushed the tourism market.
People around the world are choosing not to come here.
That is real money walking away.
Everything that could be done wrong has been done wrong.
And we’re just getting started on paying the price for it.
MAGA calls Europe freeloaders. Here’s what they’re not telling you.
1. Ramstein Air Base, the most important US military hub outside America, is built on German land provided rent-free, with Germany contributing hundreds of millions to its upkeep. The US couldn’t replace it anywhere in the world.
2. Every US military operation in the Middle East, Africa and Central Asia flows through Ramstein. Lose it and US power projection in the Eastern Hemisphere is crippled.
3. The UK provides and maintains RAF Lakenheath used almost entirely by the US Air Force. Italy provides Aviano. Greece provides Souda Bay. Turkey provides Incirlik. European land. European infrastructure. American operations.
4. The US Sixth Fleet depends entirely on European ports for fuel and supplies. Souda Bay, Naples, 11 Greek ports. Without them the Sixth Fleet cannot operate in the Mediterranean or project power into the Middle East.
5. The majority of NATO��s intelligence and surveillance capacity is hosted on European soil and fed directly to the CIA, NSA and Pentagon.
6. Early warning radar at Fylingdales, UK. Missile tracking in Greenland. Norwegian monitoring stations near Russia. All dependent on European goodwill.
7. It would cost America MORE to bring the troops home than keep them here. European hosts subsidise roughly a third of all basing costs.
8. Europe is America’s largest arms customer. Stop buying American and part of their defence industry goes bankrupt.
9. The bases aren’t charity. They’re America using European soil, European money and European goodwill to project power across the world.
10. We’re not the freeloaders.
🚨NEW: Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has fired Army Chief of Staff General Randy George. Serving for over 40 years, George received the Purple Heart.
RETWEET if you stand with General George against Trump!
Let me explain something to the MAGA crowd, because clearly someone needs to.
They seem to think NATO is cosmic room service. You pick up the phone, say “hello, we’re having a bit of a war here,” and thirty-one countries march to your rescue. A continental Uber for military adventures.
That is not how it works.
Article 5 is a mutual defense clause. The clue is in the word mutual. And it has been triggered exactly once in NATO’s entire history. After September 11. When America was attacked. Not Europe. America.
Every NATO member showed up. They went to Afghanistan. They fought. They bled. They died. In America’s war. On America’s behalf.
Now imagine they hadn’t.
Over 1,100 allied soldiers died in Afghanistan. British, Canadian, German, Danish, Polish. And yes, even Ukrainian soldiers, who had no NATO obligation whatsoever. Gone. Without them, those are American names on those graves. Sons from Ohio. Fathers from Georgia. Kids from Nebraska who never came home.
Then there is the money. NATO allies spent over 100 billion dollars on a war that started on American soil. Without that, Washington pays every cent. On top of the 2 to 3 trillion the war already cost.
And without allied bases across Europe and Central Asia, American supply lines collapse entirely. Without British forces in Helmand and Canadians in Kandahar, the Taliban reconstitutes in three years instead of ten. The gaps get filled one way. More American deployments. More American coffins arriving at Dover.
Afghanistan was bloody. But NATO took the hit. Without them, every single one of those casualties would have had an American name.
Trump called allies like these losers. Suckers.
If you are a certain kind of broken person, that probably makes sense to you. But for the rest of us, what those soldiers did has a different name. Honor. The bond between men who have been in the same dirt, under the same fire. Between Brits and Americans, Frenchmen and Norwegians, Canadians and Danes. Not a diplomatic relationship. A blood bond. Brotherhood forged in places most people will never see and cannot imagine.
In that culture, you do not mock a fallen ally. You do not sneer at the dead. It is the lowest thing a human being can do. Trump did it to a standing ovation.
If you are a MAGA supporter travelling to NATO countries, understand this. There are no friendly pats on the back waiting for you. No one will buy you a beer. The governments who share your worldview sit in Minsk, Moscow and Pyongyang. Brutal dictatorships where journalists disappear, elections are theatre and dissent is a medical condition treated in basements. Not London. Not Paris. Not Rome, Stockholm, Copenhagen, Berlin or Ottawa.
You have abandoned the open societies, the free press, the rule of law, the places where people actually want to live. You traded the best of civilization for a very small, very dark room. Frankly, it serves you right.
Gandalv / @Microinteracti1
We haven’t received a single application for poor Lola. She is only 2 years old. Pls give her a RT and let’s find her special person 🙏
https://t.co/0D0QKxCax1
Who are these two men? They are Marcus Harvey and Tre Jones from Marion, Indiana. They should have been all over the news but they weren't...
Some time ago they saw a house fully engulfed in flames with people still inside.
So they kicked in the front door and risked their own lives to save the occupants inside.
None of the occupants would still be alive if it wasn’t for them.
Neither one gave a second thought about anybody’s color, they just did what was right.
These are the heroes the media tends to not show us.
Every phone call I've taken this week has broken my heart a little bit more.
So much unnecessary suffering.
Please spread this information, as far and wide as you can.
You may save a life.
🙏
A hedgehog *out in the open* in the day is in serious trouble and needs urgent help.
Always.
No exceptions.
Any size.
Any time.
Hedgehogs are nocturnal prey animals, they have no defences in the daytime, it's deadly dangerous for them.
They are designed to hunt at night, to navigate and catch insects in the dark, occupying a specific ecological niche.
They are not adapted to withstand high temperatures, and their shape means they rapidly dehydrate during daylight hours.
They are nocturnal animals.
So they don't come out in the day simply because they're hungry, or lost, or disturbed, or to move nests, or are pregnant, or for any other trivial reason.
They come out in the day because it's warmer than the night and they are feeling cold.
Deadly cold.
They're feeling cold because they're so sick they're starting to die, and hypothermia is a stage of dying. Blood has been redirected to the vital organs, keeping them alive as long as possible, leaving the limbs feeling cold.
If you see a hedgehog like this, out in the open, in the day time, no matter how 'well' he looks, it is an emergency.
Every minute counts.
DO NOT put them in a box and keep them, feeding them, not calling a rescue for advice for 3 days until their agony and infection is too much for them to bear and they stop moving.
DO NOT feed them then move them under a bush because you think they shouldn't be in the sun, leaving them, utterly defenceless, to be predated alive there.
DO NOT take them to a vet, none of whom are trained in wildlife and will simply put to sleep even viable wild animals.
Please take them to a rescue (never a vet) URGENTLY.
Just Google 'hedgehog rescue near me' to find a list.
More info: https://t.co/I1vcAnWv1t
Please retweet CONVICTED | Levi Balmer, aged 20, from #Rutherglen, #Glasgow#G73#SCOTLAND – tortured a puppy to death - AVOIDS JAIL!!!! 📢📢📢 #UK
Feb 2026. Balmer caused the 16-week-old Cane Corso/American bulldog crossbreed physical and mental suffering which left her in such severe pain that she died.
He inflicted horrendous injuries against the puppy, which included deliberately burning her and striking her multiple times, causing numerous fractures and wounds.
He held her on a hot surface leaving her with second and third-degree burns. He also physically attacked the dog and fractured one of her teeth.
She suffered scalding to her face, hind limbs, tail and pads, was bleeding from a wound to her shoulder. Blood was coming from her nose and mouth combined with lameness and swelling. She was in acute pain prior to death.
On Christmas Eve 2024, a call was made to the Scottish SPCA Animal Helpline by a vet with concerns about the condition of a deceased dog that had been brought into the practice. The vet explained Mabel had been brought into the practice multiple times before with serious injuries and that there were suspicions she had suffered significant abuse.
A Scottish SPCA Inspector spoke to Levi Balmer on the phone, and an investigation was launched into the cause of Mabel’s death.
The Scottish SPCA requested permission for Mabel’s body to be uplifted in order to carry out a post-mortem, which Balmer agreed to. On the same day, the Inspector attended the vet to see Mabel’s body.
The Scottish SPCA Inspector said: “The image of Mabel still follows me to this day. It was quickly evident she has been victim of extreme abuse and cruelty during her short life; her wounds were so severe. It is one of the most distressing cases I have ever dealt with.”
Balmer admitted causing unnecessary physical and mental suffering to Mabel. This had left her in such severe pain that she passed away, with her death likely being caused by pain-related stress.
Sentencing | 162-hour community payback order; 12 months of social work supervision. A 10-year ban.
Full story: https://t.co/lh0Jzrqwf3
https://t.co/yfIWFITyxI
Original post on fb👇
https://t.co/pnWGlbdXrM
#dogs #LeviBalmer @ConservativeAWF@RosieDuffield1@APDAWG1@PeterEgan6@RSPCA_official@ScottishSPCA@liamgallagher@RobbieRinder@peta@NickDixonITV@itvnews@BBCNews@EamonnHolmes@GBNEWS@PatrickChristys #animalcruelty
Please share this so that people know not to ever let Levi Balmer buy or be near another animal.
RIP Mabel, you deserved better 🌈
I went to my neighbor's door at 7:45 PM ready to ruin her night.
I'm 72 years old. Retired. Widowed. All I wanted was quiet.
For four months, the crying from next door had been constant. On Tuesday it had been going for three straight hours. Not crying. Screaming.
I had my HOA speech ready. I was going to be the villain.
She opened the door before I could knock a second time.
I forgot every word I planned to say.
She was 24 years old, trembling, hair matted to her face, eyes swollen nearly shut. Her toddler was on the floor behind her, red-faced and gasping.
"I know," she said before I could speak. She wasn't looking at me. She was looking at the floor. "I'm trying."
Her husband had been deployed two weeks ago. The baby had a double ear infection. That morning, her washing machine had flooded the hallway. The repair man wanted $250 just to look at it.
"I don't have $250," she whispered. "I don't have anyone."
I have never fixed a washing machine in my life. I sold life insurance for 40 years.
But I looked at that girl — because that's what she was, a girl, completely alone — and I heard myself say:
"I used to be a mechanic. Let me take a look."
I lay on her linoleum floor for an hour. I searched YouTube tutorials on my phone. I got soaked in gray water. I cut my knuckle on a rusty clamp.
I pulled a baby sock out of the drain pump.
When the water finally drained, I felt prouder than I did the day I retired.
I took the baby so she could shower. He screamed when she handed him over. I started humming the only lullaby I could remember — the one my father used to sing.
Ten minutes later, he was asleep on my shoulder, drooling on my best flannel.
I sat in that messy living room in the warm silence and realized something that knocked the air out of me:
I hadn't held another person in two years. Not since my wife died.
When she came out, hair dried, clean clothes, she looked like a different person. She put her hand over her mouth when she saw us.
"He never sleeps for strangers," she whispered.
"I'm not a stranger," I said. "I'm Frank. I live next door."
She told me I'd saved her life.
"It was just a clogged pump," I mumbled, and walked home.
I looked at the grease under my fingernails for a long time.
I didn't wash it off.
Tomorrow I'm going to mow her lawn. Her husband is fighting for our country. The least I can do is fight the weeds.
Check on your neighbors. We're all drowning in something they can't see through the walls.
Credit: James
Ai image is for demonstration purpose only.
Tonight, Britain holds its breath for a woman who has given it so much.
At 91, Judi Dench is resting quietly at home, surrounded not by spotlights or applause, but by the soft presence of family during what loved ones describe as a “fragile time.” There are no dramatic scenes — just tenderness, privacy, and a nation murmuring its gratitude into the silence.
For decades, she has been the beating heart of British theatre and film — breathing life into the words of William Shakespeare, commanding stages with quiet majesty, and moving audiences to tears in films like Belfast. Her voice has carried our stories. Her presence has defined generations.
Now, as she gently withdraws from the glare of the spotlight, the country sends its love back to her — wrapped in thanks, admiration, and the countless memories she gifted us. A national treasure, forever etched into Britain’s soul.