Question (May 16, 2009 at 6:32am)

May. 16, 2009 at 6:32am

Joe, I attended one of your seminars recently, which was excellents. In your handout was a story called "The Murder of Harry D." Would you post it here please? Many thanks.

Posted in Questions by Anonymous

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Joe says:

THE MURDER OF HARRY D by Joe Piscatella

On the morning of his 40th birthday, Harry D. woke up with a start. It was 4:00 AM, still pitch dark, and he was sitting on the side of his bed trembling with fear. A voice had come in a dream whispering "Someone is trying to kill you, Harry."

With shaky hands, Harry lit up his first cigarette of the day and pondered the situation. His wife was now awake too, so he shared the horrifying message with her. "It's too terrible to think about," she said. "Let's have breakfast instead." But Harry couldn't shake his concern as he salted his fried eggs and carefully mopped up the bacon drippings with his buttered toast. "Who would want to kill me?", he thought, as he stirred sugar and cream into his coffee and lit another smoke.

He continued to ponder the question on the drive to the office. Buy waving through lanes, beating stoplights and shouting at other drivers was too frustrating to maintain concentration. Nor could he find time at work. Meetings, decisions, deadlines, phone calls, e-mails...everything always piled up. It wasn't until he was rapidly inhaling his cheeseburger and fries at lunch that the terror of his position became clear to him. It was all he could do to finish his chocolate shake.

He worked until 7:00 PM as usual. Drove home fast as usual. Had two cocktails as usual. Studied business reports as usual. And took his usual two sleeping pills to get his usual 5 hours sleep. As time went on, Harry began to take comfort in this routine. Apparently he was out-foxing the would-be murderer. "Whoever is trying to kill me," he said proudly to his wife, "hasn't gotten me yet. I'm too smart for him. "Yes, you are Harry," she replied, while slicing his second helping of prime rib.

The months turned into years and Harry continued on, certain that he was outsmarting his murderer. But, as it must to all men, death came at last. Harry D was 51 years old. It came at dinner while he was watching Monday Night Football, the closest Harry ever got to exercise. He simply fell over into his fettucini Alfredo. His grief-stricken wife demanded a full autopsy. It showed coronary artery blockages, elevated cholesterol and triglycerides, emphysema, ulcers, cirrhosis of the liver, high blood pressure, diabetes, obesity and a touch of lung cancer. "How glad he would have been to know," said his widow, smiling through her tears, "that he died of natural causes."
1 | May. 17, 2009 at 4:51pm

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