The Wisdom Chain

The Wisdom Chain Transferring knowledge and wisdom through community, education, events, and media.

Dick Anderson is a     A man that built his   with hardwork and devotion but most importantly….. People skills.  Stay tu...
04/22/2026

Dick Anderson is a A man that built his with hardwork and devotion but most importantly….. People skills. Stay tuned for what’s happening next.

Worth sharing…My grandmother has a flour drawer in her kitchen and I didn't understand why until she told me she can't a...
01/12/2026

Worth sharing…

My grandmother has a flour drawer in her kitchen and I didn't understand why until she told me she can't afford to bake anymore. She's 83 and living on $980 a month social security and last week she told me flour costs too much now to keep stocked. This woman who baked every single birthday cake for our family for forty years, who taught me to make pie crust when I was seven, who won ribbons at the county fair, has an empty flour drawer because groceries are $200 a week and her medication is $340 a month.

I found out because I stopped by unannounced and caught her eating toast for dinner. Just toast. No butter because butter is expensive. She tried to laugh it off, said she wasn't hungry anyway, but I looked in her cabinets and it was canned soup and crackers and nothing else. Her flour drawer that used to overflow with Gold Medal and cake flour and bread flour was completely empty except for one measuring cup and a sifter. I stood in her kitchen trying not to cry while she told me it's fine, that she doesn't need to bake at my age anyway.

I went home and started a small baking business the next day selling custom celebration cakes through. Just simple designs at first, nothing fancy, but people started ordering for birthdays and graduations. Every single dollar I make goes straight to her grocery fund. I don't tell her where the money comes from because she'd be furious, so I say I'm helping her budget better or that I found discounts. Last week I filled her flour drawer completely, five pound bags of every type, and she stood there crying saying it's too much.

I also started buying her baking supplies from other makers, gorgeous wooden spoons and vintage measuring cups that make her happy just to look at. She's started baking again, making bread for the neighbors, and yesterday she asked if I wanted to learn her cinnamon roll recipe that she's never written down. I took the day off work and we spent six hours in her kitchen, flour everywhere, and she kept saying she can't believe she gets to do this again.

My mother said I'm enabling her and I told her to leave. You don't get to watch someone slowly disappear because they can't afford flour and call it aging gracefully. This country abandons old people and expects families to just accept it. I'm not accepting it. That flour drawer is staying full even if I have to bake a thousand cakes. She raised me and now it's my turn.

This is the way.

What a powerful reminder of why Wisdom Chain exists!We gathered at Touchmark for a spectacular performance by Joe Weigan...
01/09/2026

What a powerful reminder of why Wisdom Chain exists!

We gathered at Touchmark for a spectacular performance by Joe Weigand, who brought Theodore Roosevelt vividly to life. Through humor, heart, and masterful storytelling, “Teddy” recalled moments from his life in a way that was entertaining, educational, and deeply human.

Joined by Dick Anderson, Martyn Meisner, Hudson Tyler, Mikki Meisner, and nearly 80 others, the room was filled with laughter, curiosity, and a shared appreciation for lived experience.

This is what intergenerational wisdom looks like in action. Stories remembered. Lessons passed on. History made alive.

Thank you to Touchmark for hosting such a meaningful evening, and to Joe Wiegand for reminding us that wisdom, when shared well, has the power to inspire generations.

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I almost called the police. That’s the first thing you think of when you see a seven-year-old sitting on a curb in the f...
01/02/2026

I almost called the police. That’s the first thing you think of when you see a seven-year-old sitting on a curb in the freezing rain at 8:00 PM.

I was filling up my truck at a gas station on the edge of town. The kind of place where the streetlights flicker and people don’t make eye contact. But I couldn’t look away from him.

He was wearing a hoodie that was too thin for November, soaking wet, hugging a backpack to his chest like a life preserver. No umbrella. No adult. Just staring at the door of the 24-hour convenience store.

I’m 68 years old. My knees hurt when it rains, and I don’t have much patience for nonsense. But I have even less patience for a child suffering.

I walked over. “Hey, son. You waiting for a ride?”

He jumped. He looked terrified. “My mom said stay right here. She said don’t move.”

“In this weather? Where is she?”

He pointed toward the massive warehouse distribution center across the street. A gray concrete block where people pack boxes for twelve hours straight. “She’s on overtime. If she leaves, they fire her.”

He said it with a maturity no second-grader should have. He wasn’t complaining; he was explaining the economics of survival.

“Come on,” I said. “I’m not leaving you out here.”

I took him inside the store. I bought him a hot chocolate and a turkey sandwich. We sat on the metal stools by the window.

“I’m Frank,” I said.

“Leo,” he whispered, blowing on the steam.

“Does your mom know you’re out here, Leo?”

“She thinks I’m inside the lobby,” he admitted. “But the guard kicked me out. Said no loitering. So I waited on the curb.”

My heart broke. Not just a crack, but a shatter.

We sat there for two hours. I learned that Leo likes Minecraft and hates math. I learned he wants to be an astronaut because “it’s quiet in space.”

At 10:15 PM, a woman in blue scrubs came running across the street. She looked exhausted, her hair plastered to her face by the rain. She burst into the store, her eyes scanning wildly until they landed on us.

“Leo!”

She ran over, grabbing him, checking his face, his hands. Then she looked at me. The fear in her eyes wasn’t just panic; it was the terror of a mother who thinks she’s about to lose her child to the system.

“Please,” she sobbed, backing away. “Please don’t report me. I’m a good mom. I swear. My sitter canceled last minute. I called five people. I have no family here. If I missed this shift, I can’t pay rent. Rent is $1,800. I had no choice.”

She was shaking.

“Stop,” I said gently. I held up my hands. “Nobody is reporting anyone.”

I looked at her. Really looked at her. I saw my own daughter in her. I saw a generation of parents breaking their backs just to keep a roof over their heads, paralyzed by the cost of childcare that costs more than a mortgage.

“I’m retired,” I said. “I used to be a mechanic. I sit at home and yell at the TV most days. It’s a waste of time.”

I wrote my number on a napkin.

“Next time the sitter cancels, you call me. I live ten minutes away. I’ll sit with him. I’ll help him with his math. No charge.”

She stared at the napkin. “Why? You don’t know us.”

“Because he shouldn’t be in the rain,” I said. “And you shouldn’t have to choose between feeding him and keeping him safe.”

That was six months ago.

Today, I picked Leo up from school. We went to the library. He’s actually getting pretty good at math. We cook dinner before his mom, Sarah, gets off her shift.

But here is the part that matters.

I told my buddies at the VFW hall about Leo. Just old guys, veterans, retirees. Guys who thought their useful days were over.

Now? We have a “Grandpa Patrol.”

My friend Mike picks up a neighbor’s kid for soccer practice because the dad works two jobs. Another guy, Dave, sits on the porch and watches the bus stop so the single mom next door can leave for her nursing shift without worry.

We aren’t doing anything big. We aren’t passing laws. We’re just filling the gaps.

Last week, Sarah got a new job. Better hours. No more night shifts at the warehouse. She cried when she told me she didn’t need me to watch Leo every day anymore.

“You saved us, Frank,” she said.

“No,” I told her. “I just held the umbrella.”

Look around your neighborhood.

There are Leos everywhere. They are the latchkey kids. The quiet ones. The ones waiting in cars while their parents run errands they can’t afford to skip.

The world is hard right now. Prices are up. Patience is down. Parents are drowning in silence because they are too ashamed to ask for help.

You don’t need to be rich to fix this. You don’t need to adopt a child.

You just need to notice. Buy the extra meal. Offer the ride. Be the safe place.

We used to say “it takes a village.” somewhere along the way, the village burned down.

It’s time we build it back up. One kid, one umbrella, and one act of kindness at a time.

Be the village.

**reposted from;
Things That Make You Think

From all of us at the The Wisdom Chain.  We wish you all merry Christmas and happy holidays!
12/06/2025

From all of us at the The Wisdom Chain. We wish you all merry Christmas and happy holidays!

11/20/2025

I sat down with Jahnea LeCouris, Founder and Executive Director of Restored and Revived, and let me tell you… this woman embodies legacy.

Our conversation cracked open a truth I think we all forget. Legacy isn’t built in the spotlight. It’s built in the moments when no one is watching. It’s built in perseverance - in showing up when life knocks you down, in choosing purpose over comfort, and in holding a vision big enough to outlive you.

Jahnea has lived through what most people would crumble under, and still she rises. Still she builds. Still she believes that anything is possible for the person who refuses to quit.

If you want to understand what legacy really looks like, listen to someone who has rebuilt their life brick by brick… and then turned around to help others do the same.

Big respect for this powerhouse woman and the impact she’s making in our community. The ripple is real.

11/19/2025

I had the privilege of interviewing Tony Carlston of CutCo Gifting — and let me tell you, this man embodies entrepreneurship.

Tony doesn’t just think outside the box. He’s never even acknowledged the existence of the box.

Our conversation was a reminder that entrepreneurship is really an experiment in courage.
Trying new things.
Testing ideas.
Paying attention to what works and what doesn’t.
Letting data — not doubt — lead the way.

The fastest way to grow?
Get out of your own way.
Stop waiting for perfect.
Start trying things that scare you a little.

Tony is proof that when you stay curious, stay humble, and stay in motion… success eventually has no choice but to catch up with you.
Entire video can be found at www.thewisdomchain.link

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11/19/2025

I had the privilege of interviewing Tony Carlston of CutCo Gifting — and let me tell you, this man embodies entrepreneurship.

Tony doesn’t just think outside the box. He’s never even acknowledged the existence of the box.

Our conversation was a reminder that entrepreneurship is really an experiment in courage.
Trying new things.
Testing ideas.
Paying attention to what works and what doesn’t.
Letting data — not doubt — lead the way.

The fastest way to grow?
Get out of your own way.
Stop waiting for perfect.
Start trying things that scare you a little.

Tony is proof that when you stay curious, stay humble, and stay in motion… success eventually has no choice but to catch up with you.

✨ When wisdom gets transferred, it multiplies.When you share what you’ve learned — the lessons, the stories, the insight...
11/11/2025

✨ When wisdom gets transferred, it multiplies.

When you share what you’ve learned — the lessons, the stories, the insights earned through both triumph and trial — something powerful happens.
It doesn’t just add to another person’s life. It multiplies through every conversation they have, every decision they make, and every person they go on to influence.

That’s the beauty of wisdom: it compounds.
It grows communities, strengthens families, and shifts generations.

So don’t hold your wisdom hostage. Share it.
Because every time you do, the ripple becomes a wave.

🌊

“The Wisdom Chain Mindset is built on the value of devotion to mankind and the belief that we can learn, change, and hel...
11/08/2025

“The Wisdom Chain Mindset is built on the value of devotion to mankind and the belief that we can learn, change, and help those around us have a better tomorrow. We can all work together and live in a world that is constructive to all. Constructive to all is a key phrase to understand the Wisdom Chain.
The Wisdom Chain growth mindset has enormous personal applications that can be tested and tried each day. We humbly believe that the Wisdom Chain mindset is for everyone and works for everyone.”

“Wisdom Tool” book launch is coming soon!





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