The Logical Engineer

A lawyer, a priest, and an engineer play golf every week.

One day, they’re stuck behind the slowest group they’ve ever seen—balls flying into traps, roughs, water, you name it.

Frustrated, they storm into the clubhouse and ask the manager:
“What’s with that group? They’re holding up the whole course!”

The manager replies,
“They’re retired firefighters. They lost their eyesight saving children from a burning orphanage. We let them play for free for charity.”

The priest says,
“I feel terrible. I’ll take a collection at church for their families.”

The lawyer adds,
“I’ll see if my firm can help them get compensation for their injuries.”

The engineer pauses, then says:
“Why can’t they play at night?”

💀💡 Engineers: Solving problems you didn’t want solved.

🚓 “The Best Excuse Ever”
A senior citizen was cruising in his brand-new Mercedes—
100 mph… 120… 140… 170!

He looks in the mirror—yep, flashing lights.

Suddenly he thinks,
“I’m too old for this nonsense.”
He pulls over.

The officer walks up and says,
“Sir, it’s Friday, my shift ends in 10 minutes. If you can give me a reason for speeding that I’ve never heard before, I’ll let you go.”

The old man says:
“Years ago, my wife ran off with a cop… I thought you were bringing her back.”

The officer blinked.
Then smiled.
“Have a good day, sir.” 😅

Related Posts

When Cancer Brought Me Home, My Mother Saw a Servant Instead of Her Daughter

I’ll never forget the Tuesday my doctor told me I had stomach cancer. I was 24, sitting alone in that sterile examination room, watching him struggle to…

When Humiliation Led Me to My Strength

The rain was pouring down that Tuesday evening, and I stood under the office awning with my boss and coworkers, laughing about something trivial. I saw my…

The Letter That Changed Everything: A Grandfather’s Second Chance

The envelope sat in my mailbox like any other piece of mail, but the moment I saw those careful, crooked letters spelling out “For Grandpa Steve,” my…

When a Letter After My Father’s Funeral Revealed a 40-Year Family Secret

The house felt too quiet that night. I sat at the kitchen table, staring at my phone, unable to shake the guilt pressing down on my chest….

When Cancer Brought Me Home, My Mother Saw a Worker, Not a Daughter

I never imagined that at 24, I’d be back in my childhood bedroom, bald from chemotherapy and too weak to stand most days. But life doesn’t ask…

The Day My Teenage Son Dove Into Deep Water — And Changed More Than One Life

The community pool was packed that Saturday, filled with the usual summer chaos — kids shrieking, parents chatting, lifeguards scanning the water with practiced boredom. I was…