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Tom's Blog on Life and Livingness

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“If you always put limits on everything you do, physical or anything else, it will spread into your work and into your life. There are no limits. There are only plateaus, and you must not stay there, you must go beyond them.” – Bruce Lee

Freddie Mercury FROZE on stage for 7 minutes at Wembley — 72,000 fans did something INCREDIBLE.
Freddy Mercury froze on stage for seven minutes at Wembley. 72,000 fans did something incredible. Freddy Mercury was in the middle of Bohemian Raphsody when something happened that had never occurred in Queen’s entire career. He stopped singing completely. For seven full minutes, the most electrifying frontman in rock history stood frozen at center stage while 72,000 while people held their breath.
What happened next would become the most beautiful moment in Wembley Stadium’s history. July 12th, 1986. Wembley Stadium, London. 8:47 p.m. The air was electric. 72,000 voices had been screaming for two solid hours as Queen tore through their greatest hits. The stage lights painted everything in gold and crimson.
Freddy Mercury owned that stage the way few performers ever have. He strutted. He commanded. He made 72,000 people feel like he was singing directly to each one of them.
The band launched into Bohemian Raphsody. The crowd went absolutely wild. But in the third row, section A14, something else was happening. Something that would change everything. Sarah Mitchell, 19 years old, sat clutching a photograph.
Her hands were shaking so badly she could barely hold it. The girl in the picture was her twin sister, Emma. They’d bought these tickets together 9 months ago. They’d saved for 6 months, working double shifts at the chip shop in Manchester. They’d planned every detail of this trip. Emma would never see this show. 3 weeks earlier, Emma had died in a car accident on the M6.
Sarah had spent those weeks in a fog of grief so thick she could barely breathe. Her parents had begged her not to come tonight. It’s too soon. Her mother said you’re not ready. But Sarah came anyway because Emma would have wanted her to because this was supposed to be their night because she needed to feel close to her sister one more time.
She’d been holding it together barely. The music helped. Freddy’s energy helped. For two hours, she’d almost felt normal again. Then came Bohemian Raphsody, the song Emma had played on repeat since they were 14. The song they’d sung together a thousand times in their tiny shared bedroom. The song Emma had been humming the morning of the accident.
The piano intro started. Freddy’s voice filled the stadium. “Is this the real life? Is it just fantasy?” Sarah broke. Not quietly, not gracefully. She stood up and screamed Emma’s name. Once, twice, three times. A raw animal sound of pure grief that somehow cut through 72,000 voices. People around her turned.
Some looked annoyed, some looked concerned. A security guard started moving toward her. But on stage, Freddy heard something. He was halfway through the second verse when he stopped singing. just stopped midword. Brian May’s guitar continued for a few bars before he noticed. Roger Taylor’s drums faltered.
John Deacon looked up, confused. Freddy stood completely still, one hand on the microphone stand. His eyes were scanning the crowd. The music stopped. 72,000 people fell silent. You could hear the wind moving through the stadium. You could hear Sarah Mitchell crying in row three. Freddy shielded his eyes against the stage lights, looking out into the crowd.
“Someone’s hurting,” he said softly into the microphone. His voice was nothing like his stage voice. It was gentle, concerned, human. The silence was absolute. “I can feel it,” Freddy continued. He wasn’t performing now. He was just talking. “Someone out there is carrying something very heavy tonight. Someone’s heart is breaking.”
Sarah felt like the entire stadium was staring at her. She wanted to disappear. She wanted to run, but her legs wouldn’t move. Freddy waited. The stadium waited. Then something extraordinary happened. A woman in section C five rows back stood up. She was crying too. She didn’t say anything.
She just stood there with tears streaming down her face. 5 seconds passed. A man in section G stood up. Then another woman in section F. Then two teenagers in the upper deck. Then a dozen more. Then a hundred. Within two minutes, thousands of people were standing, not cheering, not shouting, just standing in solidarity with whatever pain was filling that stadium.
Sarah looked around in shock. All these strangers, all these people who didn’t know her or Emma or what she was going through, they were standing with her. Freddy watched this happen with tears in his eyes. He nodded slowly as if understanding something profound. “Music, he said quietly into the microphone, is supposed to bring us together, not just when we’re happy, especially when we’re not.”
He looked at his bandmates. “Let’s do something we’ve never done before.” Brian raised his eyebrows. What are you thinking? Freddy smiled. “Trust me.” He stepped to the edge of the stage and sat down right there on the floor of the Wembley stage, legs dangling over the edge. He sat like he was on someone’s front porch.
“I want to sing this song again,” he said, “but differently. I want to sing it for everyone who’s lost someone. Everyone who’s hurting. Everyone who came here tonight carrying something heavy.” He paused. “And I don’t want to sing it alone. The stadium held its collective breath. I want all of you to sing with me.”
Not performance, not concert, just together. Like we’re all in someone’s living room remembering the people we love. Brian picked up his acoustic guitar. Roger grabbed a simple hand drum. John nodded. Freddy began singing. “Is this the real life?” But his voice was different. Stripped down, vulnerable. No theatrics, no performance, just Freddy Mercury sitting on a stage singing about life and death and meaning.
And 72,000 people sang with him. Not shouting, not screaming, singing, really singing every word, every note. Sarah Mitchell sang through her tears. She sang for Emma. She sang with Emma. For seven minutes, that entire stadium became a cathedral of shared grief and shared love. When they reached, “Nothing really matters to me.” Freddy’s voice cracked.
He stopped trying to hide that he was crying. The song ended. The last note hung in the air for what felt like forever. Freddy stood up slowly. He looked out at those 72,000 faces. “Thank you,” he said. “Thank you for showing me what humanity looks like.” The concert continued. Queen played for another hour, but everyone knew they’d just witnessed something that transcended performance.
After the show, Freddy did something else unusual. He asked his security team to find the girl who’d been crying in row three. It took them 40 minutes, but they found Sarah as she was leaving the stadium. They brought her backstage. Freddy was sitting on a road case, still wearing his stage clothes, makeup running down his face from sweat and tears.
The backstage area was chaos, crew members rushing back and forth, equipment being packed. But in that small corner, there was stillness. When he saw Sarah, he stood up immediately. Not like a rock star greeting a fan. Like a human being greeting another human being who was hurting.
“I’m Freddy,” he said as if she might not know. Sarah tried to speak, but the words caught in her throat. She was still clutching the photograph of Emma. Still wearing the Queen t-shirt they’d bought together. Still trying to breathe through the weight of everything. Sarah, she finally managed. Freddy gestured to the road case. “please sit with me.”
They sat side by side. Two people who’d never met, connected by something neither of them could name. “Tell me about them,” he said gently, “the person you were singing for.”
Sarah looked down at the photograph. Emma’s face smiled back at her. 19 years old. Forever 19. “Her name was Emma,” Sarah began, and her voice broke on the name.

In 1982, Forbes magazine published its very first list of the 400 wealthiest Americans.
At the top of that list sat a name that most of the country had never heard.
Daniel Keith Ludwig.
Net worth: approximately $2 billion. Age: 85. Public profile: essentially zero. In an era when wealthy Americans were beginning to cultivate media presence and personal brands, Ludwig had spent six decades doing the precise opposite — building one of the largest private fortunes in American history while remaining so deliberately invisible that even many of his business partners had never met him face to face.
He was not hiding from anything specific. Secrecy was simply his operating philosophy. And it had worked extraordinarily well.
Ludwig grew up in South Haven, Michigan, the son of a real estate broker. He had almost no formal education beyond high school — he dropped out early and went to work. At the age of nine, he had already bought a small boat and begun charging for rides. By his mid-twenties he owned his first ship. By his thirties he had identified the single insight that would make him one of the most consequential figures in the history of global commerce.
The insight was this: if you could guarantee future cargo, you could finance ships before they were built.
It sounds simple stated plainly. It was revolutionary in practice. Banks would not traditionally lend against ships that didn’t exist. Ludwig figured out how to pre-sell the carrying capacity of vessels still on the drawing board to major oil companies — then used those contracts as collateral to finance construction. He effectively invented a new model of asset financing, and he used it to build a fleet of supertankers at a time when supertankers were reshaping how oil moved around the planet.
He built his own shipyards in Japan when American yards couldn’t build ships fast enough or cheaply enough for his ambitions. He became one of the primary architects of the modern supertanker industry — the vessels that made it economically possible to move crude oil from the Middle East to refineries across the world at the scale the post-war economy required.
He did all of this while maintaining a workforce that numbered in the tens of thousands without ever giving a single major press interview.
But Ludwig’s ambitions extended beyond the ocean.
In the 1960s and 1970s, he turned his attention to something that made his shipping empire look modest by comparison: the Amazon rainforest. He purchased an area of jungle in northern Brazil the size of Connecticut — approximately 1.6 million acres — and set out to build a fully integrated industrial ecosystem from nothing. A pulp mill. A kaolin mining operation. Rice paddies. Roads. A company town. He shipped an entire pulp mill — pre-built in Japan — up the Amazon River on barges to install it on-site.
The Jari Project was one of the most audacious private development undertakings of the 20th century. It was also, ultimately, one of the most expensive failures. The jungle resisted industrialization with a thoroughness that even Ludwig’s resources could not overcome. Soils that seemed fertile proved fragile. Exotic tree species imported for fast-growth pulpwood failed to thrive. The infrastructure costs were staggering. By the early 1980s, Ludwig had absorbed losses approaching $1 billion — an almost incomprehensible sum for a single private venture — and sold the project to a Brazilian consortium.
He barely discussed it publicly. He absorbed the loss and moved on.
Because for Ludwig, money had long since stopped being the point.
In 1971 — two decades before his death — Ludwig founded the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, endowing it with the resources to become one of the largest private cancer research organizations in the world. He structured his estate so that the vast majority of his fortune would flow into cancer research and related medical science upon his death. When he died on August 27, 1992 at the age of 95, that is precisely what happened.
The Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research today operates across multiple countries, has contributed to fundamental discoveries in cancer biology, and has helped develop cancer therapies that have reached patients worldwide. It is, by almost any measure, one of the most substantial private contributions to medical science in the 20th century — funded by a man who made his money moving oil across oceans in ships he built using financing models he invented from scratch with no formal education.
He never sought credit. He never gave speeches about his philanthropy. He gave no interviews about his legacy.
He simply built it — the fortune, the ships, the empire, the institution — and then directed it toward something he believed mattered more than his own name.
Daniel Keith Ludwig was the richest man in America in 1982.
Most people reading this have never heard of him.
He would have considered that a success.

Most garden beds need three inches of mulch. Not one. Not four. Three.
One inch blocks some annual weeds but dries out fast. Two inches saves water but still lets persistent weeds through. Four inches insulates roots in winter — but traps moisture against stems and causes rot in actively growing beds.
Three inches is where everything works at once. Weeds stop germinating through it. The soil underneath stays dark and moist between waterings. And the bottom layer is constantly decomposing — feeding organic matter into the soil while the top layer is still suppressing weeds.
The mulch is building your soil and protecting it at the same time.
The one rule at any depth:
– Pull mulch back an inch or two from every stem. Mulch touching bark holds moisture against it around the clock — that’s how collar rot starts. The bare circle around each stem isn’t laziness, it’s the whole point
Best mulch by use: straw for vegetable beds (light, cheap, breaks down in one season), wood chips for perennials and paths (lasts longer), shredded leaves for free soil feeding (decomposes fastest).
Three inches. Pulled back from stems. That’s the entire system

“The old man fed 200 strays every morning for 22 years. When he collapsed on the trail, they formed a circle around him and didn’t let anyone near for 3 hours until the ambulance arrived.”
In a coastal village in the western hills of County Cork, Ireland, there was a man who fed the cats.
Every morning. For twenty-two years.
He started in 2001, the year his wife passed. She had loved cats. They never had children. She used to leave scraps on the back wall for the few ferals that roamed the lane behind their cottage. Three cats, maybe four. A small kindness she never talked about.
After she died, he continued.
Not for three cats. Not for four.
By 2005, he was feeding forty. By 2012, over a hundred. By 2020, the number had stabilized at roughly two hundred — a sprawling colony of feral and semi-feral cats that lived in the hedgerows, stone walls, abandoned outbuildings, and coastal scrub surrounding the village.
Every morning at 5:45 AM, he left his cottage carrying two large plastic buckets — one filled with dry food purchased in bulk, one with water. He walked the same trail along the hillside above the village, approximately 1.4 miles each way. He had eleven feeding stations — rusted baking trays, old ceramic dishes, cut-open plastic containers — placed at intervals along the path.
He filled each one. Every day. In rain, in wind, in frost, in the brutal Atlantic storms that swept through every winter. He never missed a morning. Not once in twenty-two years.
No one helped him.
The village knew about him. Everyone did. Some thought he was eccentric. Some thought he was wasting his money. A few complained about the cats. No one ever walked the trail with him. No one ever carried a bucket.
He paid for the food himself. A local shop owner estimated he spent between €80 and €100 per week — nearly all of his pension. His cottage had no central heating. His furniture hadn’t been replaced in decades. His shoes were repaired with tape. He ate simply — bread, soup, tinned fish.
The cats ate before he did. Every single day.
He never named them. He said it wasn’t his place. But he knew them. He knew which ones were sick. Which ones were new. Which ones had disappeared. He kept a small notebook — a battered blue ledger — where he recorded markings, approximate ages, injuries he’d noticed, and dates. The notebook, when later examined, contained over 3,400 entries spanning two decades.
He brought injured cats to a local veterinarian in a cardboard box on the bus. He paid what he could. When he couldn’t pay, the veterinarian treated them anyway. Over the years, the vet estimated he had brought in over 300 cats. The man never asked for receipts. He never asked for recognition.
The veterinarian said of him: “He came in with a cat in a box every two or three weeks for twenty years. Always polite. Always quiet. Always alone. He never once said ’my cat.’ He always said ’one of the hill cats needs you.’ As if they belonged to the hill and he just worked there.”
On the morning of October 14, 2023, the man — now eighty-six years old — collapsed on the trail.
He had a stroke. A major ischaemic event that dropped him mid-stride between feeding stations six and seven. The buckets fell. The food scattered across the wet grass. He went down on his right side on the muddy path and did not get up.
He was conscious. He could not move his left side. He could not speak. He could not call for help. The nearest house was over half a mile away. The trail was not visible from the road.
No one saw him fall.
But the cats did.
Within minutes, they began arriving. First five or six. Then dozens. Within approximately thirty minutes, by the estimate of the paramedic who eventually reached him, over a hundred cats had gathered on the trail.
They formed a circle around him.
Not a loose gathering. A circle. A dense, tight ring of bodies — pressed flank to flank, facing outward — surrounding the man completely. Some sat. Some stood. A few lay down against his body, pressing into his chest, his back, his legs. The warmth was significant — the morning temperature was 4°C, and the man’s core temperature when paramedics arrived was only mildly hypothermic despite lying motionless on wet ground for over three hours.
The cats kept him warm.
But they also did something else.
A hillwalker who spotted the unusual gathering from a distance and approached to investigate was the one who called emergency services. But when he tried to reach the man, the outer ring of cats blocked his path. They did not attack. They did not hiss. They simply would not move. He described it later as “a wall of cats, shoulder to shoulder, and none of them would let me through. I’ve never seen feral cats do anything like that. They were protecting him.”
The paramedics who arrived had the same experience. The crew lead — who later shared the account through a regional first responder network without identifying the man — said:
“We could see him on the ground. We could see he was breathing. But there were easily a hundred cats around him in a circle and they were not interested in letting us in. We ended up approaching very slowly from one side, and a few of them shifted just enough for us to get through. But they didn’t scatter. They stayed the whole time. While we stabilised him, while we got him on the stretcher, while we carried him out. They followed the stretcher for about two hundred metres down the trail before they stopped. And then they just sat there. In a line. Watching.”
The man survived. The stroke left him with permanent left-side weakness. He could no longer walk the trail. He was moved into assisted living in a nearby town.
He could not feed the cats.
For the first time in twenty-two years, the trail was empty at 5:45 AM.
For three days, the cats waited at their stations.
Then something happened that no one organised, no one announced, and no one took credit for.
Volunteers began walking the trail.
First it was the hillwalker who had found him. Then the veterinarian’s assistant. Then a woman from the village who had never spoken to the man but had watched him pass her window every morning for fifteen years. Then a teenager. Then a retired postman. Then others.
Within two weeks, a rotation of eleven volunteers was covering the trail daily. They used his feeding stations. They carried buckets. They followed his route exactly. A copy of his blue notebook was made and shared among them so they could continue monitoring the cats as he had.
They called themselves nothing. They had no name, no social media page, no fundraiser. They just walked the trail.
The man was told about the volunteers during a visit from the veterinarian. He was sitting in a chair by the window of his care facility. He had not spoken much since the stroke. His speech was halting and effortful.
He listened. He looked out the window for a long time.
Then he said, slowly:
“Tell them… station four… the dish is cracked. Water leaks out by afternoon. Needs replacing.”
He didn’t say thank you. He didn’t cry. He gave a maintenance instruction.
Because that trail was his life’s work. And he wasn’t sentimental about it. He just needed it done right.
As of early 2025, the man is eighty-eight. He is still in assisted care. He cannot walk the trail. His blue notebook has been continued by the volunteers — new entries added weekly in different handwriting, a living document passed between eleven people who never knew each other before an old man fell on a hillside and a hundred cats held the line.
The cats still come to the stations every morning. Some are old — survivors from the early years. Most are new generations born into a colony that has never known a morning without food.
The dish at station four has been replaced.
The veterinarian visits the man once a month. He brings photographs of the trail cats. The man studies each one carefully. He still doesn’t name them. He still calls them “the hill cats.”
He was asked once — just once — by a care worker why he did it. Twenty-two years. Every morning. Alone. In all weather. Nearly all his money. No recognition.
He said:
“My wife left food on the wall for three cats. I just kept going. That’s all. She started it. I just didn’t stop.”
He paused. Then:
“You don’t stop.”


I am officially old. 19 out of 20.
Missed on the AOL address.
Start by doing what is necessary, then do what’s possible, and suddenly you’re doing the impossible. – Saint Francis of Assisi
