I was asked to cover for a sick ToastMaster speaker on Tuesday, so I'm going with Jim's favorite customer interaction of mine

Mikey P

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and using this story which some of you will recall from 2006

The original contained some unfortunate verbiage and descriptions that I no longer in my vocabulary so I asked Chat GPT to clean in up and turn it into a TM speech...What do you think?


Title: A Van, A Hose, and a Hero

Mr. Toastmaster, fellow members, and guests,

Some days in this line of work, you just clean carpets. Other days... you run damage control for a man in a motorized wheelchair, bury broken pottery, and jam a tracheotomy tube back into someone's throat. And somehow, that turns out to be one of the most meaningful days of your life.

It all started with a routine follow-up job. My helper had cleaned a home two weeks prior while I was away. The homeowner—a man with Parkinson's—had an unfortunate incident involving a leaking catheter bag. His wife scheduled us to come clean the affected areas. She wouldn’t be home, but her husband would let us in.

The drive was long, winding, and frankly, brutal. I joked to myself that I was going to charge more just for the drive alone. But I wasn’t ready for what came next.

We knocked on the door and were met by a surreal sound: a cross between a tomcat in heat and a wheezing bagpipe. Somehow, buried in that noise, we heard, "Come in."

Behind the door stood a man—mid-50s, trach tube in his throat, pants half-down, limbs contorted by disease—but eyes bright and fully present. He smiled and led us, somehow climbing stairs, to show us where the incident had occurred. He even joked, "Good news!" when I told him I couldn’t smell anything.

we completed the small task and as we packed up, I struck up a conversation. His speech was mostly incomprehensible, but he tried. He got excited. Too excited. And in one sudden move, yanked his tracheotomy tube out.

Now, I've done a lot in my career. But calmly stepping in to reinsert a trach tube? That was a first. And one I won't soon forget.

Once he recovered, he was eager to show us his prized possession: a high-tech van his wealthy friends had gifted him. But the van wouldn't open. Frustrated, he sped off in his advanced wheelchair to retrieve the key.

Out of our sight, we heard a CRASH/BANG BOOM. Pots. Driftwood. Soil. Terra cotta shrapnel everywhere. He was covered head to tow, as was the wood U shaped wheelchair ramp

We rushed over to find him tipped in a bush, laughing. "My wife is going to kill me!" he mumbled. We were all in tears from laughing and worry.

He insisted on trying again and rolled inside while we cleaned up the mess.

Moments later—CRASH again. This time inside. He'd tipped his chair into a display shelf filled with family heirlooms.

I begged him to rest. He refused. And tripped.

He lay there, crying. We helped him up, fixed what we could, and I made a decision.

"Tell your wife we knocked the plants and shelf over. No charge today."

He looked at me with tears in his eyes: "You guys are the best."

Turns out, the van key wasn’t where he thought it was—he’d been sitting on it the whole time.

As we prepared to leave, he asked us to sweep up the debris outside better. Turns out he wasn't even allowed outside—last time he fell and severely burned himself on hot pavement.

Before we left, he shared that he had built his house—and ten others—by hand, before Parkinson's took over. He added, almost casually, that his throat cancer came from being treated with radiation for colic as a baby.

That day I went in expecting to clean carpets. I left having cleaned up something much more sacred: human dignity.

Ladies and gentlemen, we all sign up for a "job." But some days, God hands you a mission.

And sometimes, the best payment isn’t in dollars—it’s in being told, in the most broken voice imaginable, "You guys are the best."

Thank you.
 

Mikey P

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I asked AI if that content would fit the 5 to 7 minute speech requirement and it replied-

Yes, your speech fits well within the 5 to 7 minute Toastmasters time window.


Here's a rough breakdown based on average speaking pace:


  • Conversational/narrative speeches are typically delivered at 125–140 words per minute.
  • Your speech contains approximately 880–950 words, depending on emphasis and pauses.

Estimated Timing:​


  • At 125 words per minute → ~7.2 minutes
  • At 135 words per minute → ~6.8 minutes
  • At 140 words per minute → ~6.5 minutes

Summary:​


✅ Yes, it’s the perfect length for a 5–7 minute Toastmasters speech, especially when you:


  • Add pauses for emphasis
  • Allow natural audience reactions (laughter, emotion)
  • Deliver with deliberate pacing

Let me know if you’d like help practicing or tightening any sections for timing or emotional flow!
 
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Mikey P

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Speech Notes: A Van, A Hose, and a Hero

Opening:


  • Start with contrast: sometimes you just clean carpets, sometimes you get more than you bargained for
  • Tease: tracheotomy, pottery, and perspective—all in one visit
Setup:

  • Routine call: follow-up job, urine spot, wife not home, husband will let us in
  • Drive was rough—joked about charging extra
Arrival:

  • Strange noise behind the door—describe it humorously
  • Man appears: physical condition difficult, but mentally sharp
  • Led us upstairs, joked about the urine smell—"Good news!"
Turning Point:

  • Conversation: excited, unintelligible—but he was trying
  • Suddenly yanks out tracheotomy tube
  • Moment of panic: I had to put it back in
The Van Episode:

  • Wants to show off his gifted van
  • Outside button won’t work
  • Zooms off in his power chair to get key
First Crash:

  • Wheelchair mishap: crashes into pots and driftwood
  • Covered in soil, but laughing
  • Line: "My wife is going to kill me!"
Second Crash:

  • Goes inside to get key—crashes into pottery display
  • Refuses help, trips again
  • Laying on the floor crying—emotional moment
  • I waive the cleaning fee, say we'll take the blame
  • He cries again: "You guys are the best."
Closing Moments:

  • Key was in his fanny pack all along
  • Sweeping up evidence: he's not supposed to be outside
  • Reveals he built the house and 10 more—before Parkinson’s
  • Throat cancer? Radiation treatment for colic as a baby
Closing Message:

  • Expected to clean carpets—left helping preserve dignity
  • “Sometimes, the universe hands you a mission”
  • Real payment: the broken-voiced "You guys are the best"
Close with gratitude.
 

Mikey P

Administrator
Joined
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Messages
116,177
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did doctors ever treat babies with colic with radiation

ChatGPT said:​

Yes — in the early-to-mid 20th century, some doctors did use radiation treatments for conditions like colic in infants, but it wasn’t common and is now considered dangerous and inappropriate by modern standards.

Historical Context:​

In the 1920s to 1950s, medical use of X-rays and other forms of radiation was far less regulated and poorly understood. Radiation was sometimes used to treat:
  • Enlarged thymus glands (which some incorrectly thought caused colic or breathing problems in infants)
  • Acne, tonsillitis, and other non-cancerous conditions
In particular, “thymic irradiation” was done on infants who were thought to have an “enlarged thymus” causing colic or noisy breathing — though this was a misinterpretation of normal anatomy in many cases.

Consequences:​

These treatments often caused serious long-term health issues, including:
  • Thyroid cancer
  • Leukemia
  • Growth abnormalities
  • Other radiation-induced cancers
Because of these outcomes, such practices were abandoned by the late 1950s and early 1960s as the risks of ionizing radiation became clear.

Today:​

Colic is now understood as a benign, self-limiting condition in infants, likely related to immature digestion or nervous systems. Radiation has no place in its treatment.
Let me know if you want sources or examples from historical medical literature.
 

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