Trying to figure out why they have to incorporate a confusing gate sequence in the woman’s slalom in the Olympics?
Set it up with the same run for every individual!
I don’t care which time zone the Olympics is being staged in, it’s downright criminal to schedule the men’s hockey Gold Medal Final for Sunday @ 8 AM ET / 5 AM PT.
It’s the feature presentation of the entire two weeks.
Still need to get coverage beofre the January 15 deadline? Come see us in Berlin, MD tomorrow from 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. at the Ocean Pines Library for free, in-person assistance.
"My name's Leonard. I'm 74. I answer phones at Murphy's Plumbing. Been here six years, ever since my knees gave out and I couldn't crawl under sinks anymore. Now I just sit at this desk, take calls, dispatch the younger guys. Most people are angry when they call. Burst pipes, backed-up toilets, water everywhere. I get yelled at a lot.
But sometimes, I hear something else in their voice.
Like the woman who called at 11 p.m. on a Tuesday. "My kitchen sink's leaking," she said, voice shaking. "How much for an emergency visit?"
"$250 minimum, ma'am. Plus parts."
Silence. Then crying. "I can't. I'm sorry. I'll just… put a bucket under it."
Something in her voice reminded me of my daughter during her divorce. That same defeated exhaustion. "Ma'am, how bad's the leak?"
"It's... I don't know. A lot? It's dripping fast."
"Could you text me a photo?" I gave her my personal cell. Against policy, but whatever.
The photo came through. Loose coupling under the trap. Five-minute fix if you know what you're doing. I talked her through it. Step by step. Where to find the wrench, which way to turn it, how to check if it's tight.
Twenty minutes later: "It stopped! Oh my God, it stopped!"
"You did good," I said.
"How much do I owe you?"
"Nothing. You fixed it yourself."
She cried harder. "I'm a single mom. Three jobs. I've been trying to fix everything alone for so long. Thank you for not making me feel stupid."
After that, I started doing it more. When someone called panicking about a small problem, I'd walk them through it instead of sending a truck. Running toilet? Adjust the chain. Clogged drain? Try baking soda and vinegar first. Not everything needs a plumber.
My boss noticed. "Lenny, you're costing us jobs."
"I'm saving people money they don't have," I said. "The big jobs still come. But the single moms, the elderly folks on fixed incomes, they don't need to go broke over a loose washer."
He grumbled. But didn't fire me.
Here's what changed everything. A man called last month. "You walked my wife through fixing our sink two years ago. I'm a lawyer now, used to be unemployed. That night, we had $30 to our name. You saved us. I want to pay for someone else's emergency repair. Who needs it?"
I had a list. Always do.
Now? People call asking to sponsor repairs. "Pay it forward," they say. We've fixed problems for 60 families this year. No charge. Because someone else remembered what being broke felt like.
I'm 74. I answer phones most people curse into. But I learned something. People don't always need an expert. Sometimes they just need someone who believes they can figure it out themselves. Who doesn't make them feel small for not knowing.
So teach instead of charging. Explain instead of dismissing. That panicked person on the phone? They're not stupid. They're just scared. And a little patience costs nothing.
Sometimes the best fix isn't the wrench. It's the voice on the other end saying, "You've got this. I'll walk you through it."
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Let this story reach more hearts....
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Credit: Grace Jenkins
With an empty net goal and primary assist tonight at CAR, Ovechkin is up to 1,635 points. Needs just seven more to pass Joe Sakic and crack the top 10. #ALLCAPS