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Josh and Sir Issac Newton

One recent Saturday afternoon I called Josh Ridgell to see if he was up for doing some yard work.  Usually I try and coordinate with him earlier in the week but on that particular day something came up last minute where I needed his help.  I wasn’t really expecting that he’d be available.  However, he noted that he had just finished helping his Dad do a carpet job and could help me out the rest of the afternoon which he did.

(Commercial break Clyde Ridgell is an excellent carpet/flooring installer. If you ever need anything done or re-done in your haciendas give him a call.)

On the way down the road taking Josh home, I commented that I appreciated him helping me out on short notice and Josh said “It wasn’t a problem.  We had just gotten home when you called.  I remembered what you said about objects in motion so I figured I’d keep on working rather than just sit around the house and do nothing.” 

I smiled and said “Thanks.”  However, deep down inside I was kind of pleased that he had actually internalized and quoted back to me something that I had said to him previously about objects in motion tend to stay in motion.   

 
I didn’t bother telling him that Sir Issac Newton (click here)  had come up with that idea a long time ago and that it wasn’t a J. Scott Ridgell original.  Somewhere along the line Josh will be in a science class someday and go  “So that’s where that came from.”
  

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