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The Line Kept Pulling

I flew down to Orlando from Baltimore in late February of 2026 to spend a week with my dad. His name is Paul Singer Sr., and at sixty three, he was one of those men who still moved like he had unfinished work to do. He had the kind of hands that looked permanently weathered, thick across the knuckles, veins raised under the skin, the hands of somebody who had spent his whole life fixing, carrying, building, and refusing to sit still. I had always admired that about him. Growing up, he was never the kind of father who talked much just to hear himself. If he had something to say, it mattered. If he laughed, it was real. If he told you not to worry, you believed him. I was thirty one at the time, living in Baltimore, training regularly, working out six days a week, still keeping the same discipline I’d had since I was younger. I’m a fifth degree black belt in Tae Kwon Do, so I’ve always trusted my body. Trusted my grip. Trusted my balance. I’m not saying that to brag. I’m saying it becau...
Recent posts

My little sister just moved in with me and It’s the best thing that’s happened to me.

okay so some context, i moved out at 18 for uni, been living alone in a different city for 9 years. came back home only for holidays. it was... not always easy growing up. my dad wasn't great to my mom, i remember her calling me crying a lot those years. he passed away a few years ago. my sister stayed back with my mom through all of that while i was sending money and trying to help from a distance. she finished her uni in the same city, stayed close to home. we handled things differently i guess. so she just finished her master's, applied to the same company i've been at for 4 years, got the job (same branch as me lol), and we decided to move in together for at least 2 years partly to save money, partly because my mom basically suggested it and honestly she wasn't wrong. having someone you actually know in a city where you've mostly just... existed alone is different than i thought it would be. it's been one month and i don't know. she's not the annoy...

My daughter’s search history…

Teenagers. Don’t you just love ‘em? My daughter recently turned 16, and to say she’s having a rebellious stage would be an understatement. She was never into the whole boy thing, and I don’t think she’s experimenting with drugs or anything like that. Her real problem is stealing. She’s my little kleptomaniac, but damned if I don’t love her with all of my heart. From the moment she was born, she was my pride and joy. Never someone I could really say no to. However, with this new phase she’s going through, I find the two of us arguing more than we ever have in my life. I’m not just gonna stand around and let her take money from her mother’s purse, nor am I going to allow her to run off with the car in the middle of the night without so much as asking us. It’s gotten pretty vicious. I hate it. I hate it more than I’ve ever hated anything. It’s one of those things where the anger doesn’t really stem from her, personally. It’s just so hard to see her like this. That’s what makes it frustra...

Taking a gap year was genuinely the best decision of my life so far.

I’m graduating in may this year with a bachelors in mechanical engineering. When I joined college I wasn’t ready I was a loser. Failed all my classes freshman fall. Put on academic probation, freshman spring I passed all of them but bad grades. So still probation. Sophomore fall I did a little better but since my gpa was already so low I was still in probation lol. So 1 1/2 years in probation. Sophomore spring, grinded like 12 hour days every day for the semester. It was the most mentally challenging thing I ever did. I had bad fundamentals and was desperate to stay in school. That was my first semester with actual A’s and B’s. Mind you sophomore spring is when you reach the hard classes and my fundamentals were already bad. Took a gap year , I was starting to have panic attacks even tho I did good and got out of probation (barely) so I took a gap year. Got an operator job at a CNC shop like 18hr. With overtime made 45k. I was able to pay off like 80% of my current debt (first 2 years...

My dad called me

My dad called me today. It had been so long since I’d last heard his voice, and a tear fell down my face as he spoke to me. He told me how much he missed me, how much he wished he could still be with me, and how much he wishes that I could be with him. He told me I could be with him. His voice broke over the phone. He sounded destroyed. The closest thing I can compare it to is how he sounded when mom died, the pain in his voice as he watched her writhe away in her hospital bed. Even still, during this call, he seemed to be even more distraught than then, more urgent and beckoning. I swore it felt as though he needed me. It was a bit of a shock. My dad was always the strongest man I knew. Our relationship had been built on respect and professionalism rather than memories and love. Therefore, when I felt the emotion in his voice as he begged me to visit him, I couldn’t help but feel uncomfortable rather than susceptible. I listened intently as he instructed me what he needed me to do. H...

A transit officer forced me to break my company's weirdest safety rule. The news is calling his death an animal attack.

I was desperate for work when I found the listing. I had been unemployed for several months, and my savings were entirely depleted. The advertisement was posted on a basic online job board. It was a position for an independent vending contractor, and the job required a clean driving record, the ability to lift heavy boxes, and a willingness to work the overnight shift. I applied immediately and received a phone call the same day. The hiring process was brief. I met a man in a small, unmarked office in a commercial district. He handed me a uniform shirt, a set of heavy keys on a metal ring, and a thick binder containing the training manual. He told me my route would cover the subterranean levels of the city transit system. The public metro network is massive, sprawling under the city in a complex web of concrete tunnels and train platforms, and my job was to drive a supply van to the designated service entrances, load my rolling cart with snacks and beverages, and restock a specific li...

I’ve been "renting" my neighbor’s dog for $20 a week so I don’t look like a creep when I come home at 3 AM.

I’m 28, and because of my job, I usually get home around 2 or 3 in the morning. My neighborhood is one of those too quiet places where everyone knows everyone’s car. After a few weeks of walking from my car to my front door in the pitch black, I noticed the curtains in the house across the street twitching every single night. I realized I had become the "suspicious character" of the block. To fix this, I made a weird deal with my neighbor, an older guy who has a high-energy Golden Retriever. For $20 a week, I rent his dog for a 15-minute walk the moment I get home. Now, instead of being the "creepy guy coming home at 3 AM," I’m the "dedicated local hero who helps a senior citizen with his dog." The neighborhood group chat went from Who is this guy? to God bless that young man’s soul. The only problem? The dog has now adjusted his internal clock. My neighbor told me the dog starts sitting by the front door at 2:50 AM every night, wagging his tail and whini...