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Burger Gate - FULL EP 2026
Transcript
00:00There was a little burger joint right by the office.
00:03I'd been eating there religiously for three years.
00:06That afternoon, I ordered my usual, a double cheeseburger.
00:09I took one bite and immediately noticed the lettuce was pathetically scarce.
00:14I said politely, think I could get a little extra lettuce, please?
00:17She looked up at me, eyes sharp as daggers.
00:20Extra lettuce? You think lettuce grows on trees?
00:23If you don't like it, the door's wide open.
00:25The whole place went dead quiet.
00:27Everyone staring right at me.
00:28I didn't say a word.
00:29I finished my burger, paid, and walked out.
00:31The next day, I dropped a message in the company group chat.
00:34Lunch is on me, everyone.
00:36We're hitting that new burger spot across the street.
00:38300 co-workers followed me like a herd.
00:41The owner stood in her doorway, pale as a ghost,
00:44watching her diner empty out for good.
00:46I'd been stopping by Wendy's diner for lunch ever since my first day on the job.
00:51I'd always thought of it as the office cafeteria.
00:54Convenient.
00:55Nothing fancy.
00:56But too easy to stick with.
00:58Wendy had always been snappy, loud, and short-fused.
01:02My co-workers grumbled every now and then.
01:05Over time, we just got used to her proprietor vibe.
01:08Until that day.
01:09Wendy!
01:10Usual please, I called.
01:12She just grunted behind the register without even glancing up.
01:15Ten minutes later, my burger arrived.
01:18Something felt off right away.
01:19I took a bite and tasted it.
01:21Lettuce.
01:21Or rather, the total lack of it.
01:23I carried my tray up to the counter.
01:25Wendy, I said, keeping my tone as calm as I could.
01:29She was counting receipts, scowling hard.
01:32The burger's a little light on lettuce today.
01:34She froze for a split second.
01:36You think lettuce is free?
01:37If you don't like it, don't eat it.
01:40She jabbed a finger at the door, practically yelling.
01:43My face burned.
01:44Not from embarrassment, but from pure fury.
01:46I just stood there holding that burger, feeling like I was getting publicly roasted in front of everyone.
01:54The elevator reached the 18th floor, administration.
01:57I went back to my desk and booted up my computer, trying to convince myself that the whole scene at
02:02lunch had been some kind of hallucination.
02:04I went back to my seat, thinking that was it.
02:07But then she came right over and lit into me.
02:09I called building management and asked for Leo's Burgers contact info.
02:13Less than 30 seconds after hanging up, Leo's number came through.
02:17This wasn't about revenge.
02:18It was a surgical strike.
02:20I needed Wendy to understand that she hadn't just lost a regular customer.
02:24She'd lost the business of an entire office building.
02:27I made myself a cup of coffee to clear my head.
02:29Hit send.
02:30The war had begun.
02:32Grabbed my phone and stepped out of the office.
02:34As the elevator doors slid shut, I caught my reflection in the polished metal.
02:39No expression, but my eyes were sharp.
02:41I didn't go straight to Leo's across the street.
02:44I stopped outside Wendy's diner first.
02:46Wendy was leaning against the counter, picking her teeth with one hand, scrolling her phone with the other.
02:52A faint smirk on her lips, like nothing happened this afternoon, like that worm never existed.
02:58Maybe in her eyes, it really was nothing.
03:01Now it's my turn.
03:04I let out a cold laugh, turn.
03:06Leo's burgers wasn't big.
03:08A young guy, maybe 27, 28, wearing a clean white chef's coat, then jumped down.
03:13So fast, he nearly missed a step.
03:15He hurried over, nervously rubbing his hands together.
03:18I gave a small nod, scanning the place.
03:20New tables, new chairs.
03:22Bright, clean, a world away from Wendy's across the street.
03:26How many burgers?
03:26Four, classic beef, cheeseburger, bacon burger, and a vegan falafel option.
03:31Sauce is my own recipe.
03:33I grind the beef, fresh every...
03:34I cut him off.
03:35Pricing, his words slowed.
03:37He seemed hesitant.
03:38I just looked at him.
03:39He shifted under my gaze.
03:41I shook my head.
03:42Give him time to process.
03:43Out my phone.
03:44Turned the screen toward him.
03:45His eyes locked onto it, pupils widening.
03:48He knew exactly what that number meant.
03:50Skipping the hardest part of building a business.
03:52Landing a stable, steady stream of customers from day one.
03:55Before this, most of them went to Wendy's.
03:58He looked up at me, and I saw something in his eyes I knew well.
04:01It was the look of a hungry man seeing food for the first time.
04:04Now I'm giving you a shot to make all 300 of them yours.
04:08The air went still.
04:09His breathing quickened.
04:10Red crept up from his neck, flooding all the way to his ears.
04:13It took him a few seconds to find his voice again.
04:16Why, me?
04:18I looked at him and didn't answer right away.
04:20I was trying to figure out how to say it.
04:23In the end, I chose the simplest way.
04:26I told him what happened at lunch today, and how I got accused of planting it myself.
04:30Leo stood there in front of me.
04:32His chair scraped against the floor with a sharp squeal.
04:35And then he bowed.
04:36Deep, almost a right angle.
04:38He held it for three seconds.
04:40When he straightened up, there was something in his eyes I hadn't seen before.
04:44Not gratitude.
04:45Not eagerness.
04:46It was ambition.
04:47I'm in.
04:47And the corner of my mouth lifted.
04:49Approval.
04:49I stood up, phone in hand, and let my gaze drift past the window across the street to
04:55the Wendy's diner sign.
04:56It creaked in the wind, swaying slightly.
04:58Wendy's good days were over.
05:00The next day, I put on my sharpest outfit.
05:03Today, the plan went live.
05:05I sent the first unofficial message in the group.
05:07At everyone, lunch is on me today.
05:10I looked at the screen, the corner of my mouth turning up.
05:13I tallied the list.
05:15316 people.
05:17Basically, the whole office.
05:18I sent the spreadsheet to Leo.
05:20Wendy was prepping for the lunch rush like any other day.
05:23Noon.
05:24Still no one.
05:25Wendy finally felt something was off.
05:28She walked to the door and looked across the street.
05:30At the entrance to Leo's burgers, Leo was holding a megaphone.
05:35Face glowing.
05:36Waving people in.
05:37Inside.
05:38Others queued out front.
05:40The scene was huge but organized.
05:42You'd have thought it was a movie premiere.
05:44Wendy stood in front of her empty diner, staring at the chaos across the street.
05:49Her mind went blank.
05:52She didn't understand.
05:53The same people who'd eaten at her place yesterday were all across the street today.
05:59I was just standing at the curb, arms crossed, watching.
06:03She watched her regulars.
06:05The faces she knew, laughing.
06:07Eating burgers across the street.
06:09Her temper hit its peak.
06:11She grabbed a patty and slammed it onto the floor.
06:14But she wasn't done.
06:17Oh no!
06:18Wadey's in trouble!
06:20Leo's burgers, day one, was a smash hit.
06:22He stared at the register, at the numbers flashing on the screen, his hands shaking.
06:26The first thing he did was send me some money through Venmo.
06:29I didn't take it.
06:30Told him to use it to buy himself something decent.
06:34Tomorrow's when the real fight starts.
06:36Everyone was talking about the burgers.
06:38Leo's burgers are amazing.
06:39The patties are so juicy.
06:42And the owner and staff are so nice.
06:44Jasmine is the best.
06:46I listened, but I didn't say much.
06:48Novelty doesn't last.
06:49I knew that.
06:50I was standing in the hallway.
06:52The next day, I stood in the hallway at work, giving me strange looks.
06:56Then my phone started blowing up.
06:58My hand trembled as I opened the photo.
07:01A grainy shot of my face, taken without me knowing.
07:04It brought me back to something I hadn't thought about in years.
07:09Fresh out of college, the first time I walked into Wendy's diner.
07:13There was this shy kid who kept stealing glances at me.
07:17Then one day, he worked up the nerve to actually talk to me.
07:20We were almost 10 years apart, but the conversation just flowed.
07:23Until the day he was leaving for college.
07:26He showed up with a bouquet and asked if I'd be his girlfriend.
07:29I said no.
07:31He was quiet for a moment.
07:33Then asked, can he give me a hug?
07:36I nodded.
07:37He held me, gently.
07:39I scrolled through my contacts and sent the post to him, the one I hadn't talked to in
07:44ages.
07:45He replied almost immediately.
07:47Meanwhile, inside Wendy's diner, things were a mess.
07:50The hundred plus patties she'd prepped for lunch sat untouched.
07:53A quiet, middle-aged guy who didn't say much was crouched on the floor, cleaning up in
07:59silence.
08:03She put up a tough front, but with the diner emptier by the day, she was panicking inside.
08:09Her solution?
08:09Drop prices.
08:11Two bucks less per burger than the place across the street, with free fries and free soda thrown
08:15in.
08:16She thought that'd be enough to win everyone back.
08:18The next morning, a big discount sign went up outside Wendy's diner.
08:22At those prices, she was basically selling at cost.
08:26A few random customers trickled in.
08:28But across the street at Leo's, same pack scene.
08:32Blue Wave employees poured in like a tide.
08:35Not a single one of them switched sides over two dollars.
08:38She didn't get it.
08:39Who turns down a deal?
08:40What she didn't know was that this morning, I'd added a little note to my lunch sign-up
08:44post.
08:45Quick heads up, Leo's Kitchen now has live cameras.
08:48Show your work badge and you're welcome to walk in and see for yourself.
08:51For people who sit in an office all day, what matters most?
08:54Price?
08:55Taste?
08:55No.
08:56It's peace of mind.
08:57I never played Wendy's price game.
08:59I played a different game entirely.
09:02While she was obsessing over discounts, I'd already taken my colleagues to a whole different
09:07level.
09:07At noon, I took a few department heads to Leo's.
09:11Jasmine, that was a hell of a move.
09:13We grabbed a table by the window.
09:15Perfect view of Wendy's confused, sour face across the street.
09:19One of the directors smiled and said, I'll take another two orders of fries.
09:25You want two orders of fries for $6.99?
09:28In your dreams.
09:29They left shaking their heads.
09:31Wendy's smear campaign fell apart.
09:33I stood a little ways from the entrance, watching Wendy fuming and cussing someone out.
09:39I knew I was almost there.
09:43The price cut strategy flopped.
09:46Not only did Wendy's business not pick up, but her attitude drove away even more customers.
09:51Her place was a ghost town again.
09:53Over a hundred burger patties sat unsold, so she came up with a new dirty move.
09:58If she couldn't win head-on, she'd switch tactics.
10:01She was gonna trash Leo's reputation.
10:04Rip out everything I'd built by the roots.
10:07That weekend, Leo's place was slammed.
10:09Right in the middle of the rush, two guys in uniforms walked in, stone-faced.
10:14Health department, surprise inspection.
10:17Good afternoon, gentlemen.
10:18Welcome, Leo said, polite but steady.
10:21We're a new spot, so I'm sure there's room for improvement.
10:24Feel free to point out anything.
10:26He kept his cool.
10:27But I knew, this fight was just getting started.
10:31The kitchen was spotless, floors dry, ingredients neatly organized, delivery dates clearly labeled,
10:37every single metric checked out.
10:40Honestly, it was cleaner than some places.
10:42She'd played every card she had, and ended up being their biggest hype woman.
10:46Instead of trashing Leo's reputation, she'd handed them the ultimate officially certified stamp.
10:53Leo won, and he won big.
10:55I stood across the street, watching from the crowd as he got swallowed by applause and cheers.
11:01Right then, I knew, Wendy was done.
11:04Finished.
11:05The inspection turned out to be the last straw that finally broke Wendy.
11:09After that, she was like a different person.
11:12Gone was the short-tempered owner.
11:14She'd turned into a rabid dog snapping at anyone who came near.
11:18She stopped caring about her business altogether.
11:20Her daily highlight was standing at her door, hurling the foulest curses she could muster toward Leo's side of the
11:27street.
11:27Her voice, hoarse and shrill like a crow's caw, echoed down the block.
11:32Even her husband Jack couldn't take her like that.
11:35They had a massive blowout, and he packed up and went back home.
11:39Wendy's diner became just her, and a whole building's worth of bitterness.
11:43The Blue Wave employees became her favorite target.
11:47Every afternoon when we walked over to Leo's for lunch, we had to endure her non-stop filth.
11:53But nobody paid her any mind.
11:58What's the point of engaging with a lunatic?
12:00I had Leo crank up the music in his place, loud, drowning out her desperate screams with upbeat pop tracks.
12:07We kept eating our burgers, kept chatting, like she was nothing but background noise.
12:12And that indifference, that hurt her more than any comeback ever could.
12:16Her ranting lasted a week.
12:18After a week, she realized it wasn't getting her anywhere, it was just making her the joke of the block.
12:24So she changed tactics.
12:26She started coming after me.
12:28The day they hauled her away, a bunch of people went out to watch.
12:31I didn't.
12:32I just had a co-worker take a photo for me.
12:34In it, the roll-down door at Wendy's diner was shut tight, with a police department seal plastered across it.
12:40One morning, I went down to the underground garage to get my car.
12:44On my white sedan, someone had spray-painted two giant red letters.
12:49All four tires were slashed.
12:51I looked at the scene in front of me, not angry, just a cold laugh.
12:56I called the cops and notified building management, pulled the security footage, and there was Wendy's face, twisted with rage,
13:04clear as day on the monitor.
13:05The cops found her in no time.
13:07Face to face with the evidence, she didn't even try to deny it.
13:11I did it.
13:14Wendy was taken into custody, and Wendy's diner shut down for good.
13:18The burger war that had lasted nearly a month came to an end with my decisive victory.
13:23In the end, Wendy was charged with criminal mischief.
13:2615 days in jail, and she had to pay for all the repairs.
13:30Total came to $3,200.
13:32At the office, I became something of a celebrity.
13:35A lot of people would see me and half-jokingly call out, Jasmine the Great.
13:39New interns were all given the same piece of advice by the veterans.
13:42You can afford to piss off the boss.
13:44But whatever you do, don't cross Jasmine.
13:46That earned me the nickname Thanos of Blue Wave.
13:49Leo's place expanded.
13:50He took over the little convenience store next door that was up for sale and knocked down the wall.
13:55The space doubled in size.
13:56And there were a lot more seats.
13:58He hired four more staff members.
14:00And even so, the place was packed every single day at lunch.
14:03A month later, the buyout I'd promised came to an end.
14:06I settled the entire bill with Leo in one go, over $20,000.
14:11It was money he'd earned, fair and square, through his skill, his honesty, his service.
14:16I thought that would be the end of it.
14:20Until one day, I ran into someone in the company parking garage, Jack, Wendy's husband.
14:25He looked like he'd aged 10 years in the past month.
14:28She wanted me to tell you.
14:30She's sorry, Jack said.
14:31His eyes reddening.
14:32A man in his 50s.
14:34Standing in front of me.
14:35His enemy.
14:3620 years younger.
14:37On the verge of tears.
14:38I didn't feel a thing.
14:40Not even a flicker of satisfaction.
14:42Jack.
14:42Go back and tell her this.
14:44I accept her apology.
14:45But I will never forgive her.
14:47Because back then, she never once thought about letting me off the hook either.
14:50So we're even.
14:51We're even.
14:52I said it casually, but only I knew how much resentment and bitterness was behind those words.
14:57If, that afternoon, after Wendy had finished playing into me, she'd shown even the slightest hint of remorse, I wouldn't
15:03have taken things as far as I did.
15:05But there were no what ifs.
15:06I set that photo as my lock screen.
15:09Every day I remind myself.
15:11Never mess with someone who looks like they have a lot of patience.
15:14Because you never know, when they decide to stop arguing and start playing by the real rules, just how badly
15:21you might lose.
15:25A week later, someone I never expected showed up.
15:28Wendy's son, Lucas.
15:29He looked polished now.
15:31Hello.
15:31Can we chat?
15:32A crisp suit, a world away from his mother.
15:33His tone was sincere.
15:35He said everything that happened was his mother's own doing.
15:37And his family accepted that.
15:39I picked up my coffee and didn't say anything.
15:42Waiting for what came next.
15:43Because I knew he didn't come all this way just to say that.
15:46Lucas's eyes turned red.
15:48After she got out of lockup, she wasn't the same.
15:50Doesn't eat.
15:51Doesn't drink.
15:52Doesn't talk.
15:53Just locks herself in a dark room all day.
15:55The day before yesterday, she got hold of a knife when my dad wasn't looking.
15:59Slid her wrists.
16:00My hand tightened around the coffee cup.
16:02He stood up.
16:03And for a second.
16:04I thought he was about to get on his knees.
16:06My head started spinning.
16:07I hated Wendy.
16:09I hated her cruelty.
16:10Her unreasonableness.
16:11Her viciousness.
16:12I wanted her to pay.
16:13I wanted her to answer for what she did.
16:15But not like this.
16:17I wanted her to hurt.
16:18I didn't want her dead.
16:19Take the money back.
16:20I said.
16:21Let me think.
16:22I walked out of the cafe.
16:23The sun hit my eyes hard.
16:28I walked out of the cafe.
16:30The sun hit my eyes hard.
16:31And they stung.
16:32Did I really win this war?
16:33I'd torn apart a family.
16:35And put a weight on my own conscience I wasn't sure I could carry.
16:38In the end.
16:39I went to the hospital.
16:40Not because of the $5,000 Lucas tried to give me.
16:43Not because I suddenly turned into some soft-hearted saint who felt sorry for her.
16:47I went because I needed to close this war.
16:49The one I started.
16:50With.
16:51My own hands.
16:52I owed myself that much.
16:53The hospital room reeked of antiseptic.
16:55Wendy lay in the bed.
16:57Her face the color of parchment.
16:58Her body wasted away.
17:00In just a month.
17:01She looked like she'd aged 20 years.
17:03Her wrist was wrapped in thick white gauze.
17:05When she saw me come in.
17:06Something flickered in her dull eyes.
17:08And then went dark again.
17:10Neither of us said a word.
17:11The silence was suffocating.
17:12The only sound was the clock on the wall.
17:15Ticking away like it was counting down the final seconds of this whole absurd mess.
17:20Neither of us said a word.
17:21The silence was suffocating.
17:22The only sound was the clock on the wall.
17:25Ticking away like it was counting down the final seconds of this whole absurd mess.
17:29After a long while.
17:30I spoke.
17:31She laughed thin.
17:32A laugh uglier than crying.
17:33That was the second time Wendy said sorry.
17:35The first time came through Jack.
17:37This time.
17:38She said it herself.
17:39I looked at her face.
17:40Gaunt.
17:41Drained of all color.
17:42And just like that.
17:43The hatred I'd been holding on to vanished.
17:45I stood up.
17:46When I reached the door.
17:47I turned back.
17:48Wendy.
17:49When you get better.
17:50If you ever want to open a place again.
17:52I'll introduce you to someone who can teach you how to make a real burger.
17:55A good one.
17:56No charge.
17:57Then I opened the door and walked out.
17:59She'll be okay.
18:00I said.
18:00And I think.
18:01I'll be okay too.
18:05Wendy never ended up reopening her burger place.
18:08After she got out of the hospital.
18:09She and Jack sold their place in the city and moved back to their hometown.
18:13Word was they'd bought some land in the countryside and started an orchard.
18:17All things considered.
18:18It was probably the best possible ending.
18:20Jack would occasionally send a box of apples.
18:22Big.
18:23Sweet ones.
18:24Into the city with a relative who came in to sell produce.
18:27Every time.
18:27I'd Venmo him the market price.
18:29When he refused to take it.
18:31I'd just add the money to his phone bill instead.
18:33Somehow.
18:34We fell into this strange.
18:36Unspoken understanding.
18:37Leo's burgers.
18:38On the other hand.
18:39Absolutely blew up.
18:40Leo turned out to have a real head for business.
18:43He trademarked the brand.
18:44Opened several locations.
18:46Even landed some venture capital.
18:48He wasn't the kid who needed my help anymore.
18:50People started calling him the burger king.
18:52I stayed on as office manager at Blue Wave.
18:54Same routine.
18:55Work.
18:56Home.
18:56Handling the daily grind of the department.
18:58But the way people looked at me had changed.
19:00There was a real respect there now.
19:02Something earned.
19:06A year later.
19:07Thanks to my organizational skills and the kind of reputation you can't fake.
19:11I got promoted to director of administration.
19:13First thing I did was push through a formal employee feedback and support system.
19:17Anonymous channels.
19:19Direct access to me.
19:20No filters.
19:21I wanted everyone at Blue Wave to feel good about where they worked.
19:24To feel like they mattered.
19:25So no one ever had to go through what I did.
19:28Feeling humiliated over something.
19:29In my own way.
19:30I was changing the little world I was part of.
19:32Another lunch hour.
19:34I sat by the spotless window at Leo's Burgers.
19:36Sunlight warm on my face.
19:38On the plate sat a classic beef burger.
19:40Extra lettuce.
19:41Extra special sauce.
19:43The patty was juicy and tender.
19:44The lettuce crisp and fresh.
19:46I ate slowly.
19:47Across the street.
19:48The space that used to be Wendy's diner now had a new sign.
19:51A 24-hour convenience store.
19:53Bright lights.
19:54People coming and going.
19:55Like the greasy, screaming burger joint had never existed at all.
19:59My phone buzzed.
20:00A message from Lucas.
20:01A photo.
20:02Lush green orchard.
20:03Rows of fruit trees.
20:04Wendy and Jack stood side by side beneath the branches.
20:08Their skin was tan dark from the sun.
20:10But their smiles.
20:11I'd never seen them like that.
20:13Radiant.
20:16Content.
20:17Below the photo.
20:18A line.
20:19Director Jasmine.
20:20My parents said when the fruit ripens in the fall.
20:22They'd love to have you visit.
20:24I looked at the photo and smiled.
20:26Typed back.
20:26Sounds good.
20:27I looked up.
20:28Leo was walking out of his office.
20:30Now the director's office.
20:31He wore a crisp suit.
20:32Beaming with energy.
20:34Talking to a group that looked like investors.
20:36Walking them through the vision of his burger empire.
20:39He caught my eye and gave a small nod.
20:41Smiling.
20:42I nodded back.
20:43I looked down at the last bite of my burger.
20:45I put it in my mouth and chewed slowly.
20:47In this burger war.
20:48Was there really a winner and a loser?
20:50Maybe not.
20:51Wendy lost her restaurant.
20:52But found a kind of peace she'd never had.
20:54Leo built his business.
20:56But gained a weight of responsibility he'd have to carry.
20:58And me.
20:59What did I come away with?
21:00It wasn't a title.
21:01It wasn't the respect of my co-workers.
21:03It was something simpler.
21:05The understanding that you can.
21:06And you should.
21:07Go after the life you want.
21:09But the catch is.
21:10You have to deserve to be treated gently by this world.
21:12And that gentleness comes from just one thing.
21:15Respect.
21:16Respect for others.
21:17And respect for yourself.
21:21Autumn arrived.
21:22I drove out to Wendy and Jack's orchard.
21:24I'd never taken this road before.
21:26But the GPS said I was half an hour out.
21:28Before I'd even parked.
21:30I saw Jack waiting for me at the entrance.
21:32Wendy stood beside him.
21:33Holding an apple in her hand.
21:35When she spotted me.
21:36Her expression flickered with nervousness.
21:38But then she smiled.
21:39Wendy walked me through the orchard.
21:41She didn't say much.
21:42Just occasionally pointed to a tree.
21:44These are hugess.
21:45Or those are galas.
21:46She picked one and handed it to me.
21:48I took a bite.
21:49Sweet.
21:50She stopped under an apple tree.
21:51Suddenly quiet.
21:52Her hands fidgeted in front of her.
21:54Then she looked up at me.
21:55Her eyes read.
21:56Jasmine.
21:57Thank you.
21:58This time.
21:58She smiled.
21:59Like a little kid.
22:00Jack came over with a tray of burgers.
22:02Grinning.
22:06Jack came over with a tray of burgers.
22:08Grinning.
22:08We used the recipe you gave us.
22:10Wendy's been practicing for weeks.
22:12Give it a try.
22:13I took a bite.
22:14The beef was juicy and tender.
22:15The lettuce crisp.
22:16The sauce hit just right.
22:18I looked up.
22:19Wendy was watching me.
22:20Nervous.
22:21It's good.
22:21I said.
22:22She froze for a second.
22:23Then the tears came.
22:25But she was laughing.
22:26Crying and laughing at the same time.
22:28Jack stood beside her.
22:29Chuckling.
22:30His eyes red too.
22:31I took another bite.
22:32Yeah.
22:33It was really good.
22:34That afternoon.
22:35We sat in the orchard for a long time.
22:37Ate burgers.
22:38Picked apples.
22:39Talked about nothing important.
22:40No one mentioned the past.
22:42No one talked about the war.
22:43But I could feel something had shifted.
22:45Life's funny that way.
22:46You never know which comes first.
22:48The last straw that breaks you.
22:50Or the first stone that builds something new.
22:52But here's the thing.
22:53Sometimes, they're the exact same thing.
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