My name’s Frank. I’m 64, a retired electrician.
Forty-two years I spent running wires through
houses, fixing breakers, making sure people had light in their kitchens and
heat in their winters. Never once did anyone ask me where I went to college.
Mostly, they just wanted to know if I could get the power back on before their
ice cream melted.
Last May, I was at my granddaughter Emily’s school
career day. You know the drill —
doctors, lawyers, a software guy in a slick suit
talking about “scaling startups.” I was the only one there with a tool belt and
work boots.
When it was my turn, I told the kids, “I don’t have
a degree. I’ve never sat in a lecture hall. But I’ve wired schools, hospitals,
and your principal’s house. And when the hospital generator failed during a
snowstorm in ’98, I was the one in the basement with a flashlight, keeping the
lights on for newborn babies upstairs.”
The kids leaned forward. They had questions — real
ones. “How do you fix stuff in the dark?” “Do you make a lot of money?” “Do you
ever get zapped?” (Yes, once, and it’ll curl your hair.)
When the bell rang, one boy hung back. Small kid,
freckles, hoodie too big for him. He mumbled, “My uncle’s a plumber. People
laugh at him ’cause he didn’t finish high school. But… he’s the only one in the
family who can fix anything.”
I looked that boy in the eye and said, “Kid, your
uncle’s a hero. When your toilet overflows at midnight, Harvard ain’t sending
anyone. A plumber is.”
Here’s the thing nobody told me when I was young —
the world doesn’t run without tradespeople. You can have all the engineers you
want, but if nobody builds the house, wires the power, or lays the pipes, those
blueprints just sit in a drawer.
We’ve made it sound like trades are what you do if
you can’t go to college, instead of a path you choose because you like working
with your hands, solving problems, and seeing your work stand solid for
decades.
Four years after high school, some kids walk away
with diplomas. Others walk away with zero debt, a union card, and a skill they
can take anywhere in the world. And guess what? When your furnace dies in
January, it’s not the diploma that saves you.
A few weeks ago, that same freckled kid’s mom
stopped me at the grocery store. She said, “You probably don’t remember, but
you told my son trades are important. He’s shadowing his uncle this summer.
First time I’ve seen him excited about anything in years.”
That’s the part we forget — for some kids, knowing
their path is important and changes everything. It’s not about “just” fixing
wires or pipes. It’s about pride. Purpose. The kind that sticks with you long
after the job’s done.
So next time you meet a teenager, don’t just ask,
“Where are you going to college?” Ask, “What’s your plan?” And if they say,
“I’m learning to weld,” or “I’m starting an apprenticeship,” smile big and say,
“That’s fantastic. We’re going to need you.”
Because we will. More than ever. And when the
lights go out, you’ll be glad they showed up.”
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