I found an extension lead running from my neighbor Ron’s garage into the socket at the back of my house. Furious, I confronted him, telling him it was my electricity he was using. He laughed it off, saying it was “only pennies.” Not long after, I installed a lockable cover to stop it. The next morning, a note appeared through my letterbox: “You’re colder than your electricity, mate.”
At first I was angry, then confused, and eventually unsettled by it. Ron had lived next door for years, a quiet man who spent most of his time repairing old things in his garage. After his wife Maureen died, he withdrew from the world, and we slowly stopped talking like we used to. I told myself I was just protecting my home, but something about the note stayed with me all day.
That evening, I noticed Ron’s garage was completely dark. Worried, I went over and found him collapsed inside. I called an ambulance, and it turned out his electricity had been cut off and he had been struggling with illness and poor health. The extension lead hadn’t been theft—it had been his only way to keep things running while he tried not to ask for help.
After he recovered, I visited him in hospital and apologized. I admitted I should have asked instead of assuming the worst. Over time, I helped him get support, neighbors began checking in, and Ron slowly came back to life. In the end, the “cord” between us wasn’t about electricity at all—it was about connection, and learning that sometimes people just need someone to notice before it’s too late.