Monday, February 16, 2026

Crumpled Note in the Trash

 Hello All:

It is a curious facet of human psychology how we can find profound meaning in the most mundane scraps of our environment. This phenomenon, known as apophenia, leads us to see patterns and connections where none exist—a face in a cloud, a message in the static, or perhaps a soulmate in a discarded piece of trash. For some, this isn't just a fleeting thought but a powerful internal engine that constructs entire realities from a single, frayed thread of hope.  

Crumpled Note in the Trash 


Jeff’s cubicle was a beige sarcophagus of unfulfilled potential, nestled in the quietest corner of the third floor where the air smelled faintly of ozone and old carpet. A man of soft edges and persistent sighs, Jeff lived in a world perpetually filtered through the lens of a "what if" that never arrived. His desk was a museum of small, hopeful things: a dried rosebud from a sister’s wedding, a postcard of Paris he’d never visited, and a collection of smooth stones from a beach where he’d once sat alone for six hours. He was a man who didn't just wear his heart on his sleeve; he had it tailored into the fabric of his existence, waiting for a seamstress who would never come.  

The morning was particularly gray, the fluorescent lights humming a low-frequency dirge that matched Jeff’s mood. He had spent the previous evening watching a romantic comedy for the eleventh time, his heart aching with a phantom limb syndrome for a love he’d never actually possessed. As he sat down, the emptiness of his wastepaper basket caught his eye. It was usually a graveyard for crumpled spreadsheets and snack wrappers, but today, it held a solitary passenger. A piece of cream-colored stationery, folded once, twice, and then crushed into a loose ball, sat at the very bottom.  

Jeff’s breath hitched. To anyone else, it was litter. To Jeff, it was a beacon.  

He reached in, his fingers trembling as they smoothed out the heavy, expensive paper. The handwriting was elegant, a flowing script in midnight-blue ink that seemed to pulse against the page. It read: “I saw you standing by the fountain, the sunlight catching the gold in your hair, and I knew. I have never felt a pull like this. Please, meet me where the lilies bloom at sunset. Yours, always.”  

Jeff didn't have gold in his hair—it was a mousy, thinning brown—but in the crucible of his delusion, the words shifted to fit him like a custom suit. He looked at the basket again. Someone had received this. Someone had walked past his cubicle, perhaps a beautiful stranger from the accounting department or the mysterious woman who worked in legal, and they had discarded this miracle in his bin. It wasn't a mistake; it was a sign. They weren't interested, but the universe had redirected the message to the one man capable of appreciating its depth.  

By lunch, Jeff was no longer a data entry clerk; he was a protagonist. He spent his break wandering the park across the street, searching for the fountain mentioned in the note. He found it—a weathered stone structure of a cherub pouring water into a cracked basin. He stood there for an hour, practicing how he would turn when she arrived, how he would hold the note like a secret handshake. He could almost feel her presence, a warmth on the back of his neck that was likely just the midday sun, but to Jeff, it was the vanguard of a soulmate.  

The afternoon was a blur of feverish daydreaming. He began to construct her in his mind. Her name was Elena. She wore silk scarves and smelled of jasmine. She was misunderstood, trapped in a cold world of ledgers and litigation, searching for a man who still believed in the poetry of the stars. He wrote back to her on a sticky note, though he didn't know where to send it. “I found your heart in the trash,” he wrote, “and I have given it a home.”  

As the clock ticked toward five, the suspense became an itch beneath his skin. He watched his colleagues leave, searching their faces for a flicker of recognition, a sign of the woman who had dropped the note. Sarah from HR walked by, and for a moment, their eyes met. She gave him a polite, slightly pitying smile. In Jeff’s mind, it was a coded message of longing. He followed her at a distance, his heart hammering against his ribs like a trapped bird.  

He followed her to the park, to the fountain, and then further, to a small botanical garden at the edge of the city where the lilies were indeed in full, heavy bloom. The scent was cloying, almost funereal. Sarah sat on a bench, checking her watch, looking restless. Jeff stood behind a manicured hedge, clutching the crumpled paper so hard the ink began to smear from the sweat on his palms. This was it. The culmination of a thousand lonely nights.  

A man approached Sarah—tall, athletic, wearing an expensive suit that screamed of a world Jeff could never inhabit. Jeff’s heart sank, then rebounded with a fierce, delusional protective instinct. He was the interloper. He was the one she was trying to escape when she threw the note away.  

Jeff stepped out from behind the hedge, the cream-colored paper held aloft like a holy relic. “I have it!” he cried, his voice cracking with the strain of his manufactured romance. “I have the note, Elena! You don't have to be with him anymore!”  

Sarah jumped, her eyes widening in genuine alarm. The man in the suit stepped between them, his face hardening into a mask of aggression. “Who the hell are you?” the man demanded. “And why are you following my wife? And my name is Sarah, you freak.”  

Jeff looked at the note, then at the angry couple, and then at the lilies. The sun was setting, casting long, distorted shadows across the grass. For a terrifying second, the veil slipped. He saw a man holding a piece of trash, shouting at strangers in a park. But the mind is a resilient architect.  

He blinked, and the delusion snapped back into place, stronger than ever. They were testing him. This was a test of his devotion. Sarah was playing a part to protect him from the man in the suit—her captor, surely.  

“I understand,” Jeff whispered, backing away with a knowing, tragic smile. “The timing isn't right. But I’ll wait. I’ll keep the note safe.”  

He turned and ran, disappearing into the twilight. As he reached the street, he looked down at the paper one last time. In the fading light, he noticed a small, printed logo on the back he hadn't seen before: “Property of the Milton Theater Group – Prop Dept.”  

Jeff tucked the paper into his breast pocket, right over his heart. “A secret code,” he muttered to himself, his eyes bright with a terrifying, unshakeable joy. “She’s an actress. She’s hiding in plain sight. Tomorrow, I’ll find the theater.”  

Monday, February 9, 2026

A Brew of Liberation

 Hello All:

Throughout history, certain substances have been viewed as catalysts for revolution and intellectual awakening. Coffee, in particular, was once banned in various cultures, from 16th-century Mecca to 17th-century England, because rulers feared that coffeehouses were becoming hotbeds for political conspiracy and free-thinking rebellion.

The "Age of Enlightenment" in Europe coincided directly with the widespread introduction of coffee. As people swapped weak ale for stimulating caffeine, the collective conversation shifted from a dull fog to sharp, analytical debate, proving that sometimes, the greatest threat to an oppressive regime is a well-caffeinated mind.

A Brew of Liberation

The city of Oakhaven didn’t smell like anything anymore. The "Sanctity and Sobriety Act" had seen to that years ago, scrubbing the air of any scent that might provoke a sensory awakening. Jacob walked with his head down, his movements rhythmic and sluggish, matching the grey cadence of the thousands of others shuffling toward the Cog-Works. In this dystopian reality, the government, a shadowy collective known as The Directorate, had systematically seized every asset, every acre, and finally, every ounce of human spark. They realized early on that a tired populace is a compliant one. By outlawing caffeine, they hadn't just banned a bean; they had banned the morning.

Deep within the reinforced spires of the High District, the elite sat in velvet chairs, their eyes bright and sharp, fueled by the very substance they denied the masses. But in the soot-stained alleys of the Lower Ward, Jacob held a secret that could get him liquidated. Tucked into the lining of his coat was a small, hand-cranked grinder and an envelope of oily beans he had bartered his grandmother's silver for. He wasn't just looking for a buzz; he was looking for the ability to remember how to hate his chains.

He slipped into a basement that officially didn't exist, a cramped space behind a laundry vent where a small group gathered. There was no fire. The smoke would give them away. But they had a battery-powered heating coil. Jacob placed the beans into the grinder, the cracking sound feeling as loud as a gunshot in the oppressive silence. "Careful," whispered Sophia, a former teacher who now spent her days sorting scrap metal. "The Securitas drones have been hovering closer to this block." Jacob didn't stop. He needed the clarity.

As the water began to simmer, the first faint hint of roasted earth and bitterness escaped. It was a sensory riot in a world of bland paste. Jacob watched as the water darkened, turning into a rich, obsidian ink. He took the first sip. It was like a lightning bolt hitting a stagnant pond. The lethargy that had sat behind his eyes for a decade evaporated. Suddenly, he wasn't just seeing the grey walls; he was seeing the structural weaknesses in the ventilation shafts, the patterns in the guard rotations, and the audacity of the lie they were all living.

"I can feel it," Sophia breathed, taking the cup. "I can... I can think of a way out. If we bypass the primary relay in Sector 4, the monitors go blind for ninety seconds." The room transformed. These weren't just slaves anymore; they were architects of their own liberation. The caffeine didn't give them a plan. It gave them back the cognitive machinery to build one.

But then, the red light of a thermal scanner pulsed through the ceiling. The Directorate knew. They didn't need to smell the coffee; they just had to detect the sudden, anomalous spike in brain activity from the basement. As the heavy boots of the Enforcers thudded on the pavement above, Jacob didn't feel the familiar cold prickle of fear. Instead, he felt a warm, focused resolve. He took one last, long swallow of the forbidden brew, stood up, and looked at the door.

The door burst open in a shower of splinters, but Jacob was already moving, his mind three steps ahead of the sluggish soldiers. For the first time in years, the people of Oakhaven weren't just awake—they were wide awake.

Friday, February 6, 2026

Boiling Gasoline, A Near Disaster

 Hello All:

The boiling point of gasoline is not a single number but a range, typically between 100°F and 400°F, because it is a complex mixture of over 150 different hydrocarbons. In a controlled laboratory setting, heating such a volatile substance requires precise thermal management to prevent the vapor pressure from exceeding the container's structural integrity or reaching its auto-ignition temperature.


Boiling Gasoline, A Near Disaster

The digital readout on the heating mantle flickered with a cold, blue light, mocking the heat building within the reinforced glass flask. Dr. Amelia Hart wiped a bead of sweat from her brow, his fingers hovering over the emergency vent release. Behind the thick polycarbonate shield, two liters of a specialized, high-octane gasoline blend began to shiver. It wasn't just fuel; it was laced with a proprietary catalyst that, if stabilized at a rolling boil, would revolutionize carbon-capture technology. If it failed, it would simply level the north wing of the institute. 

"Temperature at 188 degrees," her assistant, Lucas, whispered from the monitoring station. His voice was thin, strained by the realization that the fail-safe cooling loops were currently unresponsive. "Amelia, the pressure transducer is spiking. We should have hit the plateau five minutes ago." 

The liquid inside the flask began to churn, thick amber bubbles rising and popping with violent intent. The hum of the lab's ventilation system seemed to fade, replaced by the rhythmic thrum-thrum of the pressure building in the glass. The air in the cleanroom felt heavy, ionized by the static of a dozen high-powered sensors. Amelia watched the needle on the manual gauge climb steadily toward the red zone. A microscopic hairline fracture appeared on the neck of the flask—a jagged, silvery line that seemed to grow in slow motion. 

"The cooling pump is dead," Lucas yelled, his composure finally breaking. "We have an exothermic runaway! Amelia, get out of there!" 

Amelia didn't move. She knew the moment the seal broke, the vapors would find the heating element. She grabbed a canister of liquid nitrogen, her hands steady despite the adrenaline roaring in her ears. With surgical precision, she began to bypass the primary cooling line, manually injecting the sub-zero gas into the jacket surrounding the boiling volatile. The flask groaned, the glass screaming under the sudden thermal shock. For three agonizing seconds, the lab was silent, save for the hiss of nitrogen and the frantic ticking of the cooling metal. 

The pressure needle wavered, hovered at the brink of the red, and then, with a reluctant shudder, began to retreat. The violent churning slowed to a gentle, rhythmic simmer. The catalyst had bonded. The amber liquid turned a clear, shimmering emerald—the sign of a successful reaction. Amelia leaned her forehead against the cool shield, her breath hitching in her chest. They were alive, and the world was about to change. 

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

The Stitching at the Seam

Hello All:

The concept of the "Doppelgänger" has haunted human folklore for centuries, usually as a dark omen of one’s impending demise. However, the idea of a "Felt-Gänger"—a parallel version of ourselves stitched from fleece and stuffed with polyester—adds a layer of surrealist whimsy to the transition from this life to the next.

Jim Henson’s original Kermit the Frog was actually constructed from his mother's discarded spring coat and two halves of a ping-pong ball. It’s a testament to the idea that even the most iconic souls can be born from the most mundane materials, much like the strange transition our protagonist is about to face.

The Stitching at the Seam



Arthur Penhaligon did not expect the end to be so quiet. There was no bright tunnel, no choir of angels, and certainly no review of his life’s regrets. Instead, there was a sudden, jarring pop, like a bubble bursting, followed by the sensation of being hoisted upward by an invisible hand. When his eyes finally adjusted, he wasn't in a hospital room or a celestial meadow. He was standing in a hallway that looked suspiciously like the backstage of a 1970s variety show, draped in heavy crimson velvet.

The air smelled of cedar shavings and hot stage lights. Arthur looked down at his hands, relieved to see they were still flesh and bone, though they felt strangely heavy. As he took a tentative step forward, a door at the end of the hall creaked open. A figure stepped out, and Arthur’s heart—which he was fairly certain had stopped beating minutes ago—gave a phantom thud of pure, unadulterated confusion.

Standing before him was Arthur. Or rather, it was a three-foot-tall version of Arthur made entirely of tan felt. The puppet had the same receding hairline made of wispy grey yarn, the same oversized plastic spectacles perched on a foam nose, and was wearing a miniature version of the corduroy jacket Arthur had been buried in. The Muppet-Arthur stared up at him with unblinking, black-button eyes.

"Took you long enough," the Muppet-Arthur said. His mouth moved in a stiff, rhythmic "flap-flap" motion that didn't quite match the resonance of his voice, which sounded exactly like Arthur’s, only slightly more nasal.

"You're... me?" Arthur stammered, kneeling to get a better look. The floor beneath him felt soft, like a giant pincushion.

"I'm the version of you that didn't have to worry about cholesterol or taxes," the Muppet replied, patting Arthur’s knee with a soft, four-fingered hand. "I’m your Internal Essence, rendered in high-quality fleece. Every human has one. We live in the Liminal Green Room. It’s where the soul gets its final costume change before moving on to the Big Show."

Arthur looked around the hallway. Through the gaps in the velvet curtains, he could see other pairs. A stern-looking woman in a lab coat was engaged in a heated debate with a blue, furry monster that shared her distinctive mole. A young boy was playing tag with a vibrant, neon-orange version of himself. It was a chaotic, surreal processing center where the gravity felt optional and the physics were governed by whatever would be funniest in the moment.

"So, what happens now?" Arthur asked. "Do we merge? Do I become... soft?"

The Muppet-Arthur laughed, a buzzy sound that vibrated in Arthur’s chest. "Not quite. I'm here to conduct the final interview. I’ve been acting out your life over here on the B-Stage. Every time you tripped on the sidewalk, I did a pratfall. Every time you fell in love, I sang a power ballad to a cardboard moon. Now, we have to decide which parts of the 'performance' were worth keeping."

The puppet pulled a tiny wooden stool from behind his back and sat down. "Tell me, Arthur. When you were alive, did you ever feel like someone was pulling your strings, or were you the one with the hand inside the glove?"

Arthur sat on the floor, leaning against the velvet. For the first time since his diagnosis, he didn't feel tired. He felt light. He began to talk—not about his career or his bank account, but about the time he spent three hours trying to save a bird with a broken wing, and the way the rain smelled on his wedding day. As he spoke, the Muppet-Arthur nodded, scribbling notes on a tiny felt clipboard.

Slowly, the crimson hallway began to fade. The velvet turned to mist, and the smell of cedar was replaced by something fresh and vast. Arthur realized his own hands were starting to look a bit more vibrant, his skin tone shifting toward a healthy, saturated hue.

"Final verdict?" Arthur asked as the light grew blinding.

The Muppet-Arthur stood up and offered a fuzzy hand. "You were a bit of a drama, a little bit of a comedy, and occasionally a technical glitch. But overall? A solid run. The audience loved you."

As Arthur reached out to shake the puppet's hand, his fingers didn't meet flesh. They met soft, warm fleece. He looked down and saw his own arm was now a glorious shade of sky-blue foam. He didn't feel diminished; he felt simplified, distilled into his purest, most joyful form.

With a final "wocka-wocka" echoing in the distance, the curtain rose on whatever came next.


Tuesday, February 3, 2026

Embracing the 21st-Century Workforce: Why Age Should Never Be a Barrier to Employment

Hello All:

I've mentioned recently of a little crisis I had back in December in which I lost my job. Rest assured, I've landed a new one and am in a happier place. But over the weekend I had an enlightening experience which led to reflect on how employers go about interviewing and hiring candidates--mainly, when it comes to the older worker which many of us agree do receive a considerable amount of discrimination.

Shortly after being laid off (as in the very next day) I had an interview with a promising employer. My resume was rock solid. I interviewed well. I met all the criteria and even passed the little hands on test in the lab. Well, I didn't land the job. No hard feelings, right? The other guy was just better qualified, right? But they didn't just hire one other guy. They hired a large group of people, my colleagues, at the same company that I had been laid off at!

It was weird. I wasn't sure what to think about it. Why all of them, but not me. It didn't take long for me to realize that it's because I'm nearly 55. 

Now I'm not complaining. Really, I think my current gig is better. But my objective is to address the millions of employers out there who seem to be hanging onto 20th Century thinking when it comes to the older worker. I hope I can at least reach a handful of these employers and reassure them that the older worker is an excellent investment for the company. It's time to move out of the 1970s perspective of the older worker.

Read on!

Embracing the 21st-Century Workforce: Why Age Should Never Be a Barrier to Employment

A few evenings ago, while preparing dinner with my wife, she mentioned something that hit hard: a company I recently interviewed with had hired several of my former colleagues from our last layoff wave—but not me. The realization stung. At nearly 55, I've come to believe age played a key role in that decision. It's a reminder that outdated stereotypes about workers in their mid-50s persist, even in the 2020s.

We need to move beyond the 20th-century mindset that labels anyone over 55 as "old," tired, or simply biding time until retirement. The reality is far different. Financial pressures mean many of us cannot afford to retire early—recent studies show Gen X households often have median retirement savings as low as $40,000–$100,000, far short of what's needed for a comfortable retirement. Many continue working not just out of necessity, but because we find purpose and fulfillment in our careers.

Gen X has grown up prioritizing health, fitness, and an active lifestyle. We're not slowing down; we're redefining what it means to age. Advancements in medicine, technology, and wellness allow us to stay sharp, energetic, and adaptable far longer than previous generations. This isn't the 1970s—people today are healthier, more engaged, and better equipped to contribute meaningfully well into their 50s, 60s, and beyond.

Reflecting on my own experience, the situation felt especially odd. I was among the first interviewed at that company, with nearly 25 years of specialized knowledge and a detailed resume showcasing proven results. Yet a large group of former colleagues was brought on—except me. It reinforced a frustrating pattern: too often, employers overlook seasoned candidates, assuming they're overqualified, expensive, or nearing an exit.

The evidence suggests this bias is widespread and costly. Recent surveys indicate that 90% of workers over 50 believe age discrimination is common in the workplace, with many reporting they've seen or experienced it directly. In tech and other industries, older workers are disproportionately affected during layoffs and hiring, despite bringing irreplaceable benefits: deep expertise, strong work ethic, reliability, lower turnover, mentorship for younger teams, and advanced problem-solving from years of real-world experience.

Employers who embrace experienced workers gain a competitive edge. We deliver consistent productivity, institutional knowledge, and a mature perspective that fosters innovation and stability. We take our roles seriously as a meaningful part of a balanced, purposeful life.

It's time for companies to catch up to the 21st century. The next time a candidate with decades of experience walks through the door, look beyond assumptions about age. Hire the talent, the drive, and the proven track record. You'll find motivated contributors ready to add immediate value—and build stronger, more resilient teams in the process.

Age should never be a barrier. Let's build a workforce that values experience as an asset, not a liability.

Monday, February 2, 2026

The Reality Persistence Protocol

 Hello All:

It is fascinating to consider how much of our personal history is now stored in "the cloud," a digital ether that we trust implicitly to safeguard our most precious memories. Digital forensic experts have discovered that data "ghosts"—fragments of deleted files—can sometimes persist on servers for years, yet an intentional algorithm can wipe a specific person's existence from your photo library in milliseconds?. This intersection of absolute surveillance and absolute erasure provides the perfect backdrop for a tale of high-stakes suspense.

The Reality Persistence Protocol

The morning mist clung to the jagged coastline of Big Sur like a damp shroud as Alexander Hartley stared at his smartphone, his thumb hovering over the "Recent Photos" folder. He had spent the last forty-eight hours in a high-stakes meeting at a secluded estate, brokering a deal that would change the face of global logistics. He remembered the handshake, the flash of the camera, and the celebratory drink with a man whose face was known to every intelligence agency on the planet. But as Alexander scrolled, the screen showed only empty landscapes and the interior of a cheesy roadside art gallery he’d ducked into to lose a tail. The man—the key to everything—was gone.

Every photo featuring his contact had been surgically excised, leaving behind blurred backgrounds where a human being should have been. Panic, cold and sharp, pricked at Alexander’s spine. This wasn’t a glitch; it was a digital assassination. If the photos were gone, it meant the "Security Feature" of his encrypted cloud service had been breached by someone with back-door access—likely the very people who wanted the deal dead. He looked toward the SUV limousine parked near the cliffs, its engine idling with a low, predatory hum. His chauffeur, a man he’d known for a decade, sat motionless behind the tinted glass.

Alexander stepped back from the overlook, his mind racing through the events of the previous night. They had improvised a meeting at a bizarre dollhouse museum to avoid detection, laughing over the absurdity of such a powerful man standing among miniature Victorian parlors. He distinctly remembered taking a selfie in front of a scale-model lighthouse. He opened the app again. The lighthouse was there, but he was standing alone, his arm outstretched to embrace a ghost. The realization hit him: if they could delete the digital proof of the man's presence, they could delete Alexander just as easily.

A notification chimed on his phone—a single text from an unknown number: "Syncing Complete.". Suddenly, his phone began to heat up in his hand. He watched in horror as his entire contact list began to vanish, name by name, flickering out like dying stars. He scrambled toward the SUV, desperate for the protection of his security detail, but as he reached the door, the window rolled down. It wasn't his chauffeur behind the wheel. It was a stranger wearing a clean, corporate smile and a headset.

"Mr. Hartley," the man said, his voice as smooth as polished glass. "Google has flagged your recent activity as a violation of our reality-persistence protocols. We're here to facilitate the manual override.". Alexander turned to run, but his legs felt heavy, his surroundings beginning to blur at the edges just like the photos. He looked down at his own hands and saw them turning translucent, the colors of the Big Sur sunset bleeding through his palms. The bar where they’d shared drinks, the dollhouses, the SUV—it was all being scrubbed from the server. As the world faded to a digital white, his last thought was a terrifying question: was he the one being deleted, or was he the one who never existed at all?.

Friday, January 30, 2026

Sweepstake Prize: a family evening with President Donald Trump (fiction!)

Hello All:

The other night I had an interesting dream about our president. I kind of giggled when waking up because it felt like he were my friend. It's not the first time I've dreamt of Trump. Shortly after the 2016 election, he came to me in a dream to tell me we had a lot of work to do. After the 2020 Election was stolen I had a dream that he approached in his limousine and gave me the power fist.

And today's story is my most recent dream. No, the family in the cover artwork is not my own family. They are AI generated.

Evening with Donald Trump

Our family had won a sweepstakes. The prize was unusual, to say the least—a visit from none other than President Donald Trump.

The day of the visit arrived, and with it, a large SUV limousine pulled up to our house. A chauffeur in a crisp uniform stepped out and opened the door for Trump who emerged, dressed in a sharp suit, his signature red tie neatly knotted. He greeted us with a warm smile and a firm handshake; exchanged pleasantries as we settled into the limousine.

Of course this is the President of the United States and you have to make the most of the time. Whoever was in charge of this event had to improvise a plan for the evening and settled on a cheesy art gallery featuring dollhouses. It was weird, and we all hoped it would be enough to keep the President entertained.

As mentioned before, the art gallery was a quirky place, filled with intricate dollhouses that showcased various eras and styles. Trump seemed genuinely amused by the display, taking his time to examine each one with a curious eye.We felt a sense of relief as he laughed and joked about the tiny details.

We spent the evening wandering through the gallery, taking photos in front of the dollhouses. Trump was a good sport about it, posing for selfies and even striking a few playful poses. We couldn't believe how well the evening was going, despite the odd circumstances.

After the gallery, we decided to grab a late dinner at a nearby bar, complete with plenty of Secret Service agents to keep the president safe. The atmosphere was lively, with patrons enjoying their drinks and chatting loudly. People were excited to see President Trump. And he insisted on paying for the meal which left us with a strange mix of gratitude and disbelief. We clinked glasses and shared stories, and for a moment, it felt like we were all just ordinary people enjoying a casual outing. Trump was charming and engaging, and I couldn't help but admire his ability to adapt to just about everything. As for the family, we continued to take photos, capturing moments of laughter and camaraderie.

At the end of the evening when President Trump departed for the White House, we noticed something strange. We tried to access the photos on our phone, but they were nowhere to be found. We checked our Google Photos app, only to discover that every picture with Trump in it had been deleted, leaving a feeling of pang of disappointment, wondering if it was a security feature or a political statement from the app.