“A man is judged by the people he helps, not by the job title he has.”
Alongside the letter were records showing he’d quietly donated over $180,000 to help others. I also inherited his Harley — and a keychain labeled “For the son who never learned to ride.”
When I visited his shop, his partner Samira told me Frank had created a scholarship fund and named it the Frank & Son Foundation. I agreed to help run it.
Weeks later, I led his final charity ride. A girl in a wheelchair — the scholarship’s next recipient — asked me to carry the ceremonial flag. After the ride, I signed a $64,000 donation check to cover her spinal surgery.
Later, I learned Frank had turned down a high-paying machinist job to care for my sick mom. I had always misunderstood his choices.
To honor him, I kept the shop open and added a vocational program for at-risk teens — teaching them to fix bikes and themselves. On what would’ve been Frank’s birthday, we held our first class. Ten kids, pizza, and a cake shaped like a spark plug.
I once thought success came with job titles. But Frank taught me that real respect comes from who you lift along the way.
Call your family. Hug the people who embarrass you. Their quiet courage might be the legacy you carry forward.