I was so focused on the numbers on my meter that I forgot there was a person on the other end of that cable. The shame came later—sitting in my silent living room after the paramedics left, realizing I’d locked more than a plastic cover. I’d locked the possibility of being the one person who noticed he was slipping away.
Helping Ron back on his feet didn’t erase that moment, but it reshaped it. The budget plans, the second-hand appliances, the neighbors slowly circling in—it all grew from one hard lesson: asking “What’s going on?” matters more than asking “What’s this costing me?” Now, every time I see that bench on my lawn, or glance at the little carving of two houses joined by a wire, I remember how thin the line is between nuisance and need, between intrusion and a quiet cry for help. And how easily a locked socket can become an open door.