Dutchess Locksmith Service

Dutchess Locksmith Service We provide Locksmith Services to Residential, Commercial, Institutional, and Industrial marketplaces.

We install and service: Mechanical Locks, Electro-Mechanical Locks, Access Control Systems, Safes and Vaults, Keying/ Master Key Systems, Exit Devices.

01/31/2026

Have you ever wondered what separates those who achieve their dreams from those who simply dream?
Sometimes, the line is drawn not by talent alone, but by sheer, unyielding perseverance in the face of relentless adversity.
The story of Michael Blake and Kevin Costner is proof.
They met in 1981, two young men trying to make it in Hollywood. Blake was a struggling screenwriter who had moved to Los Angeles in the late 1970s with big dreams. Costner was an unknown actor looking for his break.
Their friendship was forged in those early, hungry days. In 1983, Blake wrote a screenplay called "Stacy's Knights," and Costner starred in it. The film didn't make waves, but their bond did. They believed in each other when nobody else did.
Then Costner's star began to rise.
Wanting to help his friend, Costner leveraged his growing connections to set up meetings for Blake with Hollywood executives. He was putting his own reputation on the line, vouching for a writer who hadn't caught a break.
The feedback was devastating.
"I sent him on a lot of jobs," Costner later recalled on The Graham Norton Show, "and every report that came back was that he pi**ed everybody off."
Blake was frustrated. He had talent—Costner knew it—but he was letting his bitterness poison every opportunity. The rejection was getting to him, and he started to blame everyone but himself.
"He started bemoaning that it was Hollywood, that Hollywood doesn't know what they're doing," Costner remembered. "'They don't know about scripts; they don't know what good scripts are.'"
For Costner, this was too much. These Hollywood people Blake was dismissing had become his friends. His colleagues. The people who were actually trying to help.
There was a physical confrontation.
Costner grabbed Blake and pushed him against a wall. "Stop it! Fu***ng stop it! If you fu***ng hate scripts so much, quit writing them."
The argument was explosive. Costner was certain their friendship had reached its end.
But a week later, Blake called. He had nowhere to go. Could he stay with Costner?
In a remarkable display of grace, Costner said yes.
For nearly two months, Blake lived in Costner's home. He couldn't afford rent, so he poured everything into his writing. Every night, he would sit in Costner's house and write. He even read stories to Costner's young daughter at bedtime.
Eventually, Costner's wife had had enough of having a permanent houseguest. With regret, Costner told his friend he had to leave.
Blake packed up and moved to Arizona. He found himself in Bisbee, a small town far from the Hollywood lights, working as a dishwasher in a Chinese restaurant. For stretches, he was homeless, living out of his car or crashing on whatever couch would have him.
But he never stopped writing.
He had an idea—a story about a Civil War soldier who abandons his post and finds connection with a tribe of Native Americans. It was a Western at a time when Hollywood had declared the genre dead. It was an epic when studios wanted cheap and fast. It was unconventional when executives craved the familiar.
Costner and producer Jim Wilson recognized the story's power but knew no studio would touch it. They gave Blake advice that would change everything: write it as a novel first. Build an audience. Then use that readership to convince studios to adapt it.
Blake did exactly that. Over thirty publishers rejected the manuscript before Fawcett finally agreed to publish it as a paperback in August 1988.
The initial printing was modest. The cover art made it look like a romance novel. When Blake asked about a second printing, the publisher told him to "write another book."
But Costner hadn't forgotten his friend.
When Costner finally read the novel, he stayed up all night turning pages. By morning, he knew what he had to do.
He called Blake immediately. "Michael, I'm gonna make this into a movie."
Costner put up $75,000 of his own money to option the rights. He asked Blake to adapt his novel into a screenplay. He decided to direct it himself—his first time behind the camera. And he would star in it, too.
Hollywood called it "Kevin's Gate," mocking what they were certain would be a career-ending disaster. A three-hour Western with subtitled Native American dialogue, directed by an actor with no experience? The project was dubbed "Kevin's Vanity Project."
Costner didn't care. He had read Blake's story. He believed.
The film was shot over five months across twenty-seven South Dakota locations. Temperatures ranged from 100 degrees in summer to 20 degrees in winter. They used 3,500 buffalo, 300 horses, and real wolves. Costner worked sixteen-hour days, shooting and then going home to plan the next day's shots.
When the budget ballooned beyond control, Costner invested $3 million of his own money to finish the film.
On November 9, 1990, "Dances With Wolves" was released.
Critics were silenced. Audiences were moved. The film grossed $424 million worldwide, making it the highest-grossing Western in movie history.
At the 63rd Academy Awards, "Dances With Wolves" received twelve nominations—the most of any film that year.
It won seven.
Kevin Costner won Best Director. The film won Best Picture.
And Michael Blake—the man who had been homeless, who had washed dishes while the world ignored him, who had been pushed against a wall by his best friend and told to quit—walked onto that stage and accepted the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay.
The former dishwasher had written an Oscar-winning film.
Years later, reflecting on the journey, Costner simply said: "We made the movie. And Michael won the Academy Award."
Michael Blake passed away in 2015. His novel went on to sell 3.5 million copies. The film he wrote is preserved in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress.
But perhaps his greatest legacy is the lesson his life teaches.
Blake spent years being rejected. He alienated the very people trying to help him. He found himself homeless and washing dishes, his dreams seemingly dead.
But he never stopped writing.
If you have a dream, guard it fiercely. If you want something, fight for it relentlessly. Don't look for excuses.
The difference between those who achieve their dreams and those who simply dream is not always talent.
Sometimes, it's simply refusing to quit.

01/30/2026

We adopted Walter so he could die.
I know how harsh that sounds—but it’s the truth.

He was 13 years old.
A senior pit bull with cloudy eyes and a slow, careful walk.
The shelter file said: “Hospice Foster.”

His family had surrendered him because he “slept too much” and struggled to get around.
So we prepared ourselves for goodbye.

Orthopedic beds in every room.
Ramps instead of stairs.
Quiet evenings. Gentle mornings.

We truly believed we were offering him a peaceful place to spend his final weeks.

But Walter had other plans.

Week 1: He slept—deeply. The kind of sleep that only comes when you finally feel safe.
Week 2: He realized this wasn’t temporary. He wasn’t going back. This was home.
Week 3: He discovered the stuffed toy.

Not a new one.
Not fancy.
Just an old, soft, worn little plush—and he carried it everywhere.

That’s when the “dying” pit bull vanished.

The dog who “could barely walk” started trotting proudly through the house, stuffed toy clamped in his mouth like a prize.
The dog who “slept too much” began waking us up early, toy in hand, ready to start the day.
At night, he sat just like this—holding it close, as if afraid it might disappear.

That’s when it hit us.

Walter wasn’t dying.
He wasn’t weak because of his age.
He was exhausted—from loneliness.
From hard floors. From being given up.

Now he’s 13 years old.
He steals pizza off the counter.
He beats me to the backyard.
And he still carries that same stuffed toy—proof that joy found him again.

We failed at hospice fostering.
But we succeeded at something far better.

We gave a senior pit bull a reason to hold on—and he showed us that sometimes, love doesn’t just extend a life…
It brings it back. 🐶❤️

01/30/2026

I paid a homeless man to sit in my unlocked truck twice a week for two months. I told him it was for my dog’s safety. That part wasn’t true.
The truth is—I didn’t know another way to keep him alive.
My name is Leo. I drive deliveries to pay the bills. Riding shotgun with me is Barnaby, a Golden Retriever mix I rescued from a kill shelter last year. He’s missing his back left leg and part of his ear. Some people see damage. I see survival. He’s gentle, loyal, and absolutely useless as a guard dog.
That winter cut deep. Temperatures dropped below zero, and life felt just as unforgiving.
One afternoon, I stopped at a superstore to grab a quick sandwich. That’s when I noticed the van—an old rusted thing from the 90s, tires worn smooth, windows patched with cardboard like bandages.
Beside it stood a man I would come to know as Silas. He wore a thin, faded army jacket that no longer remembered warmth. He was shaking a near-empty gas can, trying to coax out the last drop. His hands were split and bleeding from the cold.
I walked up and pulled a twenty from my wallet. “Hey,” I said gently. “Looks like a rough day. Grab yourself some food.”
He straightened immediately. Spine stiff. Eyes sharp. “I’m not a beggar,” he said. “I’ve got a pension coming. Just waiting on the paperwork.”
He wasn’t waiting on paperwork. He was hungry. But I recognized that look—pure pride. The kind that refuses charity even when the world has already taken everything else.
I slid the bill back into my pocket. “Sorry, sir.”
I turned toward my truck. Barnaby had his nose pressed to the window, watching Silas. He didn’t bark. He whimpered—soft and worried.
That’s when the idea hit me.
I rolled the window down. “Hey—are you looking for work?”
Silas squinted. “Depends.”
I sighed like a stressed mess. “I’ve got to pick up a catering order. Twenty minutes. My dog has terrible separation anxiety. If I leave him alone, he destroys the seats. I need someone to sit in the driver’s seat. Just… be there. I’ll pay fifteen bucks. Cheaper than fixing the upholstery.”
Silas studied the truck. Then Barnaby. Barnaby wagged his tail—slow, hopeful thumps.
“Fifteen dollars?” he asked.
“Yep. To save my seats.”
He grunted. “Fine. I can sit with a dog.”
And just like that, it became routine. Every Tuesday and Thursday, I’d suddenly “need help.”
I’d leave the engine running so the heater blasted. I’d go inside, buy a coffee, and watch through the window.
At first, Silas sat stiff as stone. But then Barnaby—who usually feared men in hats—did something unexpected. He limped over and gently laid his heavy head on Silas’s lap.
I watched a man who wouldn’t accept a dollar slowly remove his hand from his pocket. He stroked Barnaby’s fur. Then he pulled out a dry cracker—probably all he had—broke it in half, and gave the bigger piece to the dog.
“You and me,” he murmured. “We’ve both been through it.”
Soon fifteen became thirty. Sandwiches appeared “by accident.”
“They messed up my order. Was gonna throw it out.”
Silas always ate. But only after doing the job. He wasn’t being helped—he was earning.
Then one Tuesday, the van was gone. I waited. An hour passed.
My chest sank.
A cart attendant told me an ambulance had come. “Heart condition,” he said. “Collapsed.”
I felt empty. I didn’t even know his last name. Just another soul nearly erased.
Yesterday, I walked to my truck and found an envelope tied to the mirror.
Inside was no cash. Just an old Purple Heart. And a note written on the back of a soup label.
“Delivery Kid,
I’m at the VA hospital now. Paperwork finally went through. I’ve got a bed. Warm room.
You’re a bad liar. I was a K9 handler for twenty years. I know anxiety. Barnaby doesn’t have it.
He wasn’t scared. He was taking care of me.
You gave me a job because you knew I wouldn’t take charity. You let me feel useful again. Like a soldier.
I can’t repay you. Give this to Barnaby. He earned it.
—Silas”
I cried in my truck. I tied that medal to Barnaby’s collar. He sat taller, proud, like he understood.
We live in a world that worships independence. Where asking for help feels like failure. But sometimes the kindest thing isn’t a handout—it’s a way to receive help without losing dignity.
We didn’t just save Silas. He saved us.
He reminded me that everyone—no matter how worn or forgotten—still has worth.
Sometimes, you don’t need a hero.
Sometimes, you just need a three-legged dog and a reason to show up. 🐾❣️

12/02/2025

He had saved three officers. He had taken a knife meant for someone else. He had stood between danger and the innocent more times than anyone could count.
And still… the only appointment waiting for him was the one no hero deserves.

I work as a vet tech in a county shelter. You think you’ve seen the worst of humanity until something comes along and breaks you in a brand-new way.

His name was Ares.

Nine years old. German Shepherd.
His intake form said only three brutal words under “Reason”: City Police—surplus.

Not old enough to rest.
Not young enough to keep.
Not claimed by anyone.
Not wanted by anyone.

His partner—his human—had been reassigned and given a new dog. And because Ares had been “donated equipment,” he didn’t qualify for retirement, a pension, or even the dignity of an adopted home.

They didn’t drop off a dog.
They abandoned a soldier.

When I first saw him, he wasn’t shaking or whining. He stood in the back of the kennel like a statue carved from loyalty and confusion. His spine quivered from arthritis, but his eyes were alert—searching, waiting, listening for a command that would never come.

He was a warrior stranded in silence.

Stray dogs get two weeks. Owner surrenders? A day.
A decorated K9 officer?

“As space is needed.”

I couldn’t breathe when they said that. And I absolutely could not be the one to send him off.

“He’s unadoptable,” my supervisor told me gently. “He’s a tool. He’s trained for work. He’s too old. Too risky.”

But all I could see was a heart that had been emptied out for others.

“He’s not dangerous,” I whispered. “He’s just… lost.”

That night, without asking permission, I signed the foster papers. I drained my savings, telling myself emergencies come in all forms—and this was one.

When I clipped the leash onto his collar, he finally lifted his head. Not with joy, not with fear—just a quiet acceptance, like he was telling me:

“This is the order. I will follow it.”

At home, he moved like a ghost wearing fur.
He didn’t play.
He didn’t rest.
He didn’t understand the soft bed I bought, choosing instead to lie by the front door like he was guarding a station that no longer existed.

He paced the house in slow, deliberate sweeps—clearing rooms, checking corners, assessing exits. He wouldn’t touch his food until I said “Okay!” in a sharp tone, mirroring old training commands I’d studied online.

He wasn’t living.
He was waiting for a mission that would never come.

And then one night… it did.

A pounding on my door at 1 a.m.
My neighbor, trembling and pale:
“Leo’s missing—my baby—please—he’s gone!”

Her little boy, non-verbal and prone to wandering, had slipped out into the cold darkness.

Before my fear could even form words, Ares appeared beside me—alert, focused, transformed. The confusion in him burned away like fog under a spotlight.

All he needed was purpose.

“Give me something of his,” I said.

She handed me a tiny sneaker.
I clipped Ares into the old K9 harness—his armor, his identity—and held the shoe out to him.

“Ares,” I said, steadying my voice.
“Find him.”

He inhaled once.
Just once.

Then he barked—sharp, certain—and moved with a determination that ignored pain, time, age. We stumbled after him through thorns, mud, darkness so thick it swallowed the world.

He did not hesitate.
He did not question.
He did not stop.

Twenty minutes later, he halted at the edge of a ravine. He gave a deep, commanding bark.

And from the darkness came a tiny cry.

Leo.

Cold. Scared. Shivering, but alive.

Ares didn’t leap down or make a scene. He simply sat tall beside the ravine and looked back at me with the calm, steady eyes of a veteran who knew—

Mission accomplished.

Paramedics called him heroic. Officers saluted him. But Ares didn’t want praise. The moment the boy was lifted to safety, he leaned against my legs, exhausted down to the marrow.

That night, for the first time, he didn’t guard the door.

He walked into my room, circled the soft bed he once refused, and lowered himself into it with a long, trembling groan.

He finally believed he was home.

He got six more months. Beautiful months. Months of gentle walks and warm sunspots and learning—slowly, painfully—that he was allowed to rest. That he was allowed joy, even in small doses. He even chased a tennis ball once, startling himself with the instinct.

And when his body finally said “enough,” I held his head in my lap as he drifted toward the peace he’d never been granted.

“You did good, Ares,” I whispered against his fur. “You came home. You can rest now.”

His eyes softened. He touched my hand with his tongue—one last gesture—and then he let go.

Here’s what Ares taught me:

Heroes don’t stop being heroes because they grow old.
Their value doesn’t expire.
Their hearts don’t run out of purpose.

He wasn’t surplus.
He wasn’t equipment.
He wasn’t done.

He just needed someone to believe he still had something left to give.

And he did.

Somewhere in a shelter right now, another aging warrior is waiting—quietly, faithfully—for someone to see him.

Not as a burden.

Not as a liability.

But as a hero who still has one more mission left.

With Carole's HotDogs – I'm on a streak! I've been a top fan for 11 months in a row. 🎉
10/30/2025

With Carole's HotDogs – I'm on a streak! I've been a top fan for 11 months in a row. 🎉

With Carole's HotDogs – I'm on a streak! I've been a top fan for 10 months in a row. 🎉
09/21/2025

With Carole's HotDogs – I'm on a streak! I've been a top fan for 10 months in a row. 🎉

09/20/2025

A wildlife researcher was sent deep into the Amazon to set up trail cameras to study the bear population. His camp was positioned near a small village, whose people agreed to guide him through the dense forest and point out the bears’ travel routes. After a long day of placing cameras, he returned to review the footage. At first, it showed what he expected, bears wandering through the jungle. But then one clip stopped him cold.

On the screen, a child was riding on the back of a bear as if it were the most natural thing in the world.
Convinced he must be imagining it, the man sprinted to the village and showed the footage. The elders gathered around, glanced at the image, and chuckled.

“Oh, that’s the chief’s son,” one of them said casually. “He’s been living with the bears for six months now. It is our custom, for the son of the chief to become one with nature.”

[Video] THE TELEPROMPTER WENT OFF 🤣🤣
09/20/2025

[Video] THE TELEPROMPTER WENT OFF 🤣🤣

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09/20/2025
07/01/2025
03/13/2025

In 1965, six boys (ages of 13 and 16) decided to play hooky and “borrow” a fisherman’s boat to sail from Tonga to Fiji.

Before setting sail, they brought with them food and supplies but made the mistake of falling asleep during their first night out at sea. When they awoke, the boat had been damaged by the waves. They were adrift for several days before washing up on an uninhabited island. This would be their home for the next 15 months.⁣

The boys initially survived by eating a diet that consisted mostly birds, coconuts and fish. Their standard of living improved once they were able to climb to the top of the rocky cliff where they found an abandoned settlement near a volcanic crater. The boys were able to find bananas, seeds and chickens!

After finding several food sources and building shelter, the boys established rules. They worked in pairs and issued time-out to avoid any fighting. They also held song and prayer sessions every morning and night before they fell asleep.⁣

In 1966, Australian Capt. Peter Warner discovered the marooned boys after spotting their fire. He would later write in his memoir that “the boys had set up a small commune with (a) food garden, hollowed-out tree trunks to store rainwater, a gymnasium with curious weights, a badminton court, chicken pens and a permanent fire.” ⁣

Overall, the boys were in good health when Warner found them. However, upon their return, the boys were thrown in jail for stealing the boat. Warner secured the rights to a documentary about their survival story on the condition that they get released and re-enact on camera.⁣

The photos you see above are from the original 1966 documentary with the actual boys themselves.

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