A little boy walks into a barbershop and makes every adult in the room feel stupid.What starts as harmless teasing turns into a brutal lesson in who’s really in control.
From greedy senators to sentimental cowboys and “lost” old men, every story slices at our certainties until they ble…
Beneath the laughs, this collection quietly dismantles our assumptions. The boy who keeps choosing two quarters over a dollar isn’t slow; he’s gaming the adults who underestimate him. The “generous” barber and the opportunistic senator expose how power often hides behind politeness, while the priest and police officer reveal that character shows most in how we repay kindness.
Other stories twist everyday logic into something uncomfortably revealing. The cowboy’s three beers, the old man “lost” in the park, the ducks going from zoo to beach, and the man who envies his wife’s “easy” life all turn on one simple device: we assume we understand people, and we’re wrong. By the time elderly couples confess their secrets and husbands regret their wives’ healthy habits, the punchlines feel less like jokes and more like mirrors. The humor lands—and then it lingers.
