---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: N Sekar <[email protected]>
Date: Sun, Nov 23, 2025, 12:13 PM
Subject: Fwd - Dignity of labour, among other lessons this teaches us
To: Kerala Iyer <[email protected]>, Narayanaswamy Sekar <
[email protected]>, Suryanarayana Ambadipudi <[email protected]>,
Rangarajan T.N.C. <[email protected]>, Chittanandam V. R. <
[email protected]>, Mathangi K. Kumar <[email protected]>,
Mani APS <[email protected]>, Rama (Iyer 123 Group) <[email protected]>,
Srinivasan Sridharan <[email protected]>, Surendra Varma <
[email protected]>


The man wearing a three-thousand-dollar suit glanced at my hands and asked
if I was there to fix the air conditioning.

My hands are thick. The knuckles are scarred from years of busted wrenches,
and there’s a permanent line of grease under my nails that no amount of
scrubbing will remove. I looked at his hands—smooth, pale, and topped with
a heavy gold watch.

“No, sir,” I said, my voice too deep for the quiet high school library.
“I’m here for Career Day. I’m Jason’s dad.”

His smile was polite, but his eyes said everything: *You?*

My name is Mike. I’m 58. For thirty of those years, I’ve been a long-haul
truck driver. I’m a widower, a veteran, and a father. My son Jason is a
good kid, a senior at this polished suburban school where I feel about as
welcome as a mudflap at a black-tie gala.

This school was my late wife Sarah’s world. She was a teacher here—she
loved these halls and these students. After she passed, the school created
a scholarship in her name. And when Jason, bless his heart, told his
teacher I was a “logistics and supply chain expert” and should speak at
Career Day, I couldn’t say no. It felt like saying no to her.

So I came. I parked my F-150—the one I’m still making payments on—between a
brand-new German sedan and a luxury electric SUV. I walked in wearing my
best jeans, a clean flannel shirt, and work boots.

The library was filled with the parent all-stars. Dr. Chen, a neurosurgeon,
showed a slick video about brain mapping. Mr. Davies, the man with the
watch, spoke next about investment strategies, “leveraging assets,” and “Q4
projections.” He said the word “synergy” five times.

The kids’ eyes were dull with boredom. Parents nodded like they understood.
My son Jason slouched in the back, trying to disappear.

Then the principal touched my shoulder. “Mr. Riley? You’re up.”

I walked to the front. No PowerPoint. No video. Just me. I could feel the
judgment in the room. The whispers from moms in yoga pants: *Is he the
janitor? Whose dad is that?*

I gripped the wooden podium—Sarah once stood at this very spot. I took a
breath.

“Good morning,” I said. My voice echoed. “My name is Mike Riley. I’m not a
doctor or an investment guy. I didn’t finish college. I’m a truck driver.”

The silence shifted—from polite attention to uneasy curiosity. The finance
dad glanced at his phone.

“My son calls me a ‘logistics expert,’ which is a fancy way of saying I
drive a big truck a very long way. And I guess I’m here to explain why that
matters.”

I nodded toward Dr. Chen. “Ma’am, what you do is extraordinary. You save
lives. But that brain-mapping machine you use—those microchips, wires, and
plastic—they didn’t appear from thin air. They came from factories, got
loaded on pallets, strapped onto trucks, and hauled thousands of miles by
people like me.”

I turned to the finance dad. “Sir, your graphs are impressive. But those
numbers stand for real things. Corn from Iowa. Steel from Ohio. Electronics
from California ports. This country isn’t a website or an algorithm—it’s a
real place. And the only thing connecting it is the highway. And the people
who won’t stop driving on it.”

The room went silent.

“In March 2020,” I continued, “when the world shut down, you all stayed
home. You baked bread. You did puzzles. We were told: *keep driving.* The
highways were empty—like a scene from a disaster movie. Just me and 40,000
pounds of toilet paper. You can laugh. But my dispatcher called me crying
because her mother couldn’t find any. And I drove 18 hours through three
states because if I didn’t, shelves stayed empty. You can’t Zoom a
five-pound bag of potatoes. You can’t download sanitizer.”

Teachers nodded. Students leaned forward.

“Two winters ago, I was stuck on I-80 in Wyoming. Blizzard shut down the
state. I sat in my cab for 72 hours. It was 20 below. I couldn’t sleep—not
because of the cold, but because of the sound. The hum. The hum of the
refrigeration unit on my trailer. I was hauling insulin. Life-saving
medicine. If that unit stopped… if I ran out of fuel… the whole load was
worthless. But I wasn’t thinking about money. I thought about the
grandmother in Denver, the kid in Omaha. So I stayed. I checked the
temperature every half hour. For three days. I served 12 years in the Army.
I thought nothing would be harder. I was wrong.”

I looked for Jason. He was sitting straight now. Focused.

A kid in the front, wearing a “Future CEO” shirt, raised his hand. “Don’t
you regret it? Not going to college? My dad says people in jobs like that
just… didn’t have other options.”

The room froze. I heard the principal gasp.

I looked at the boy. Calm. “Son, I respect your path. But when the power
goes out, your degree won’t turn the lights back on. You call a lineman.
When your toilet backs up, your business textbook won’t fix the pipes. You
call a plumber. And when you walk into a store, you expect food on shelves.
You expect life to run smoothly. We are the people who make the world work.
Don’t ever think we’re not proud of that.”

A voice broke through—shaking.

“My mom’s a dispatcher.”

A skinny kid in the back stood up, tears in his eyes. “She works for a
shipping company. People yell at her all day. They call her stupid when a
package is late. But she’s the one who finds a driver when a hospital needs
supplies. She works overnight, on holidays, moving dots on a screen to save
lives. She’s not stupid.”

He looked at the CEO shirt kid.

“She’s a hero. And so is he.”

You could hear a pin drop. The finance man put down his phone. The
neurosurgeon looked at her hands.

And Jason walked to the front and stood beside me. He put his arm around
me. He didn’t say a word. He didn’t need to.

I don’t remember much after that. I think people clapped. The principal
shook my hand with tears in her eyes.

Driving home, Jason was quiet. Then he said, “Dad… I never knew about the
insulin. That was incredible.”

“It’s just the job,” I said.

“No,” he replied. “It’s not just a job.”

Here’s the truth: This country isn’t built on spreadsheets or code alone.
It’s built on calluses. On sweat. On steel. On the backs of people who show
up—in blizzards, in pandemics, at 3 a.m.—to keep shelves stocked and lights
on.

We’re not invisible. We’re the foundation.

Next time you talk to a kid, don’t just ask, “Where are you going to
college?” Ask, “What do you want to build?” And if they say, “I’m learning
to weld,” or “I’m becoming a plumber,” or “I’m going to drive trucks like
my dad,” look them in the eye and say:

“This country needs you. We’re counting on you.”

Yahoo Mail: Search, Organize, Conquer
<https://mail.onelink.me/107872968?pid=nativeplacement&c=US_Acquisition_YMktg_315_SearchOrgConquer_EmailSignature&af_sub1=Acquisition&af_sub2=US_YMktg&af_sub3=&af_sub4=100002039&af_sub5=C01_Email_Static_&af_ios_store_cpp=0c38e4b0-a27e-40f9-a211-f4e2de32ab91&af_android_url=https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.yahoo.mobile.client.android.mail&listing=search_organize_conquer>

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Thatha_Patty" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/thatha_patty/CABC81ZcWOfM-Wit%2BNZtK-7JWcW%3Drn%2BABYqAq6Jt9_Ye1YdmZYQ%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to