I was about 14 years old when I figured out how to bug my family’s home telephone.
Although it was a touchtone phone instead of rotary dial by then, it looked a lot like this one. It was mounted on a wall in a hallway in the middle of the house. I had been tinkering for years with wires, batteries, phone parts and tape recorders. I understood the basics of the technology.
The cable containing four wires ran down the wall and through the floor to an unfinished basement. It was there that I conducted my experiment. I figured out how to trigger the power to a tape recorder when the phone rang. I had spliced the two wires carrying voices into a line-in cable to the recorder.
Every time the phone started ringing, the recorder started — with the record buttons already in position — and it recorded the conversation. I don’t recall how I rigged it to know when a call was over.
For a long time, I’ve told this story with amusement, but it wasn’t until the last few years that I understood what it was all about. The real insight in this story is that I didn’t trust anybody — and I thought nothing of betraying their trust, too.

Weddings are triumphs of love and hope over reasonable fears
Need for love drives behaviors; for me, old needs make me eat
As my path keeps changing, I can now admit my plans are useless
Little blonde cousins are sometimes perfect antidote for life’s bleak days
Police won’t do their job, but they’ll ticket you for doing it for them
Politicians have no right dictating the menu of your kid’s Happy Meal
What makes someone want you enough to make you a priority?
THE McELROY ZOO: Meet Sam, the baby kitten I stole