 Lee was on his third career working well into his retirement, simply because he loved people. From my very first day, I could tell he was different from any manager that I had ever worked with before. It was in my late teens when I was working as a bellhop at a beautiful resort in the Wasatch Mountains. One day, an elderly guest pulled up and I helped her out of her car, just me simply doing the job I was hired to do. But after I helped her inside, Lee came up to me and he said, Clint, I was so happy to see that you noticed that that woman needed some extra help. He said, I saw how you were extra careful with her and you took your time as you walked her into the hotel door. He looked at me and he said, now that, that is the type of thing that can really make a difference in someone else's life. Keep it up. What an immediate connection that made. I remember I felt proud. And more importantly, it made me really think about the everyday interactions that I was having with our guests and the kind of impact they could have by catching me doing good, Lee reinforced my strengths.