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Random Acts of Kindness - 7/2/2011 3:01:37 PM   
sunshinemiss


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From another thread...

Lady Pact had received a kindness from someone she really didn't know which prompted me to share this story:

Last year, I was sick as a dog for a couple days and didn't go to work, and my students found out.  When I did come back, my voice croaking and such, they were all very sweet... and then one guy came in.  Not a great student, but pretty good.  He had a bag full of juice for the students (I don't want anyone else to get sick!  It's winter.)  And then he handed me a warm honey water tea (it's an amazingly yummy thing to get here).  I was so taken aback!  And to be honest, it touched me to be so cared about / for.

Let's share when we've been the recipient of a random act of kindness. 


best,
sunshine


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RE: Random Acts of Kindness - 7/2/2011 3:15:29 PM   
LadyConstanze


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I was £2 short at the supermarket and had forgotten to bring my wallet with me, just had left it at home and only had the cash I carried in my jeans pocket with me, I was mortified and wanted to take something back, the lady behind me said "No worries, there you go and have a nice day!" I tried to get her address to give her the money back, she said to not worry about it, it's her good deed for the day. It was so sweet and so touching, ever since I look out for somebody being a bit short in the supermarket or fishing for coins in front of the parking ticket dispenser, it's usually just a few Pence or maybe £1 or £2 but it makes somebody's day.

I'm forever grateful to that lady, not just because she gave me the £2, but also because she showed me such a simple way to make somebody's day and make them feel better, and to make somebody smile is carrying that smile with you.

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RE: Random Acts of Kindness - 7/2/2011 3:26:02 PM   
LadyPact


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From the other thread:

quote:

ORIGINAL: LadyPact
I walked into the event I was attending last weekend for the Saturday morning class.  Said good morning to the guy attending the door.  Gave Myself a moment's pause and contemplated the less than half full diet soda in My hand.  Thought to Myself, "hmmmmm..... an hour and a half class......, this is *not* going to satisfy My caffeine needs" and asked the guy where I might buy some wake up juice from a vendor.  The gentleman had to inform Me that there wasn't a drink vendor open at the event yet in the morning and all they had was bottled water.  I thanked him for his time and walked in. 

Unbeknownst to Me, the guy fetched another volunteer to cover the door, left the venue, went up the street to purchase a large coffee, and brought it to Me as I was browsing the vendor area.  He must have had a move on him to do it, too, because the thing was piping hot when he handed it to Me. 

What does a large coffee set someone back these days?  A couple of bucks at most.  First cup of coffee I've drank in five years or more, but there was no way I was going to pass it up after realizing what the guy went out of his way to do just to get it for Me.

Was I impressed?  You bet.





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RE: Random Acts of Kindness - 7/2/2011 4:26:17 PM   
Musicmystery


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sunshine,

15 years ago I had a very severe emotional trauma in my life. I picked myself up, and since it was impossible hide that something was wrong, briefly explained, so they wouldn't wonder.

They were terrific. One student evaluation at the end of the term said, "You have to admire someone who goes through some serious s**t and still shows up to do his job." Another sent me a joke a day...all term.

You know, I try to just smile at people, see them as more than a stranger I ran across...and most light up when I do.

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RE: Random Acts of Kindness - 7/2/2011 4:30:26 PM   
LinnaeaBorealis


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When I was moving into this apt, I was in a lot of pain, but the stuff needed to come in from my car anyway. I had sort of put it out to the Universe that a helper would be a good thing. The first plastic tub I tried to bring in, I had to keep stopping & putting it down & I was in so much pain, but I was determined. An Hispanic man who spoke no English walked up with his young son who did speak English & offered to help me bring everything in. At first I was hesitant about these strangers, but I needed the help so badly so I agreed. Between them they brought everything into the apt, which is down 4 steps at the back of the house. When they were finished, I asked the boy if he thought it would be ok to pay them--which I really couldn't afford to do--and they both refused payment. They just wanted to help me. I thought that was the sweetest thing ever.

Throughout my life I have been the recipient of & the giver of random acts of kindness & I still think that it's an amazing thing when it happens, because I never expect it at all.

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Forget your perfect offering
There is a crack in everything
That's how the light gets in
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RE: Random Acts of Kindness - 7/2/2011 4:39:59 PM   
SnowRanger


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Hello A/all.

I am now working for a company that maintains saftey zones on construction sites. Recently I was on a job that required me to 'flag' a temporary one lane road. One of the cars I'd just stopped was playing his music loud enough to drown out a jack hammer. It took me a moment to get past my annoyance and realize that the guy was playing my favorite Seventies rock band!

I sang along for a song and a half; and, then it was time to release my traffic through the work zone. This guy popped out the CD he was playing and handed me Emerson, Lake and Palmer's "Brain Salad Surgery." Talk about a blast from the past.

I wish that I could relate a random act of kindness that I have done for somebody else. Nope....

Respectfully,
Mike
SnowRanger

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RE: Random Acts of Kindness - 7/2/2011 4:49:50 PM   
LinnaeaBorealis


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quote:

ORIGINAL: SnowRanger

Hello A/all.

I am now working for a company that maintains saftey zones on construction sites. Recently I was on a job that required me to 'flag' a temporary one lane road. One of the cars I'd just stopped was playing his music loud enough to drown out a jack hammer. It took me a moment to get past my annoyance and realize that the guy was playing my favorite Seventies rock band!

I sang along for a song and a half; and, then it was time to release my traffic through the work zone. This guy popped out the CD he was playing and handed me Emerson, Lake and Palmer's "Brain Salad Surgery." Talk about a blast from the past.

I wish that I could relate a random act of kindness that I have done for somebody else. Nope....

Respectfully,
Mike
SnowRanger


That is so fucking cool right there!!!


_____________________________

Ring the bells that still can ring
Forget your perfect offering
There is a crack in everything
That's how the light gets in
~~L. Cohen

Just one of the yahoo's

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RE: Random Acts of Kindness - 7/2/2011 5:15:14 PM   
erieangel


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Last night i walked to the store to get a few items and since i wasn't the car i locked the keys in the house. my son wasn't going home any time soon so i thought i was stuck. i went a neighbor to call my sister-who has a key to my house, but she wasn't home and i couldn't reach my son because he was in a 'dead zone'. The neighbor asked me if i knew where my was and when i told him i did, he offered me to get a key. my son was nearly an hour away. The neighbor didn't even ask for any gas money.

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RE: Random Acts of Kindness - 7/2/2011 5:38:21 PM   
angelikaJ


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There have been so many times that I have been blessed by being the recipient of the kindness of strangers.

This is just one.

1985 I had been staying with my boyfriend after having knee surgery. I was in a full, straight leg cast. We had just gone to bed when the smoke alarms went off and after knocking on the door of the upstairs neighbor, we went out the back because the front was very smokey. (Later my boyfriend was told that had we tried going down the front we most likely would have encountered a wall of fire on the stairs.) It was quite something navigating the narrow staircase with my crutches. I had found my way away from the front via a break in the hedge (boyfriend had gone to move his car to make room for fire trucks) when I saw a policeman and asked if he had a blanket. I was only wearing a bathrobe and shivering from both the cold of the late October night air and the shock of it all. He had no sooner asked if I had been in the now engulfed building when someone from down the street that I did not know somehow just offered to bring me home with them.
And they took me in... I stayed there until my boyfriend was free to come and get me (the husband let my boyfriend know where I was.) They made sure I was comfortable, warm and was able to prop up my leg.


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RE: Random Acts of Kindness - 7/2/2011 6:08:44 PM   
Kalista07


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This is seriously one of my favorite topics!!!

Back in 1993ish... I needed to have my thyroid out and my levels were too high so it remained too dangerous for them to do surgery. I had graves disease and my thyroid was trying to destroy the major organs of my body.  Long story short for the first time in my entire life the doctors told me I couldn't work full time.. I was unwilling to obey that order. They kept putting me in the hospital for a week at a time for lung complications, heart complications, malnutrition, etc. I was all of 22 and had really crappy health insurance which offered no prescription coverage. The medication I needed to remain living cost something like $250 a week. And this was before the whole FMLA thing.... so when I wasn't at work a full day I just didn't get paid.  As the story has been retold to me by my mom, one Sunday in the presbyterian church (known to a select few as the "chosen frozen" for their stoicism) when they began doing the prayers and concerns my name was brought up.... a brief update was given... health concerns..pending surgery... job issues..blah blah.. This very elderly man (Joe) stood up and said, " Well what are we going to do to help her?" And the new pastor said, "I suppose anyone who wants to can donate money or something after the service"... Joe was having no part of that!!! He took $100 out of his wallet and said, "I have $100 that I was taking to the bank after church, but I'm donating it to *kali* who else is in" They raised enough in the next three minutes to pay my rent for the next two months and my medication for the next three.  To say I was humbled is beyond and adequate descriptor.

That was in 1992.... I try and return these acts whenever I have a chance, wherever I have a chance. I never did get to thank Joe in person. His wife assured me that he kept my thank you note next to his bed until the day he died.

More recently as life began to 'crash' in around me...with the marriage falling apart, past issues slamming me in the face un-dealt with, and a variety of other things that I won't bore you with here I began seeing a profession person who I was introduced to through a friend I met in the life style. He was 'fairly' expensive-ish. Only in that my insurance would not cover him, and it was an hour away. Although I also know he was charging me much less than he was charging anyone else. After I had been out of my home for a couple of weeks, I asked him how many sessions I had left that I had paid for.... We then had a conversation about where things stood between he and I financially.  Part of the reality is he knew my finances perfectly well because he helped me decide how much I could afford to spend on an apartment given my salary and what not. He told my my paid sessions had run out a while ago, and he knew when I was asked to leave the house that I would not be able to afford to pay him anymore. But, that he also committed to helping me through this until the end. So, currently I am seeing him for free... He does not see people for free!!! I am very honored to see him and consider it such an act of grace and kindness that he continues to work with me everyday!!

Sunshine, thanks for this thread. This was exactly the shift I needed tonight. This weekend is historically a little tough for me. So, thanks for that.
Kali



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RE: Random Acts of Kindness - 7/2/2011 7:38:45 PM   
KMsAngel


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once one has been the recipient of a random act of kindness, do you actively do the same from then on? if not in money then in other acts that are often just as meaningful?

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RE: Random Acts of Kindness - 7/2/2011 7:47:19 PM   
Kalista07


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quote:

ORIGINAL: KMsAngel

once one has been the recipient of a random act of kindness, do you actively do the same from then on? if not in money then in other acts that are often just as meaningful?


I suppose everyone is different Angel..... but for me it is a resounding YES!
Some days it is my personal mission to do these things and to try and remain anonymous and not get caught.  Some days that's the best part right there.

Kali


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RE: Random Acts of Kindness - 7/2/2011 8:13:54 PM   
LinnaeaBorealis


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Kalista07

quote:

ORIGINAL: KMsAngel

once one has been the recipient of a random act of kindness, do you actively do the same from then on? if not in money then in other acts that are often just as meaningful?


I suppose everyone is different Angel..... but for me it is a resounding YES!
Some days it is my personal mission to do these things and to try and remain anonymous and not get caught.  Some days that's the best part right there.

Kali



Yeah, this. I remember in 1970, when I was pregnant with my daughter, I didn't have much money. My boss refused to pay me "under the table", because that was dishonest, but every payday after he handed me my check, he'd look away from me & hand me $20 or $30 & say, "Get something for the baby." I had a friend then who had older children but she'd saved their baby clothes. She gave all of them to me. When I told her that I felt badly that I couldn't give her something in return, she told me about the "pay it forward" concept. She told me that whenever I saw someone in need who I could help, I should do that & that would be repaying her. Forty years later, I still think of her when I'm able to help someone out.

More recently, I've been helping a friend with a move. He's pretty disabled physically & I was doing pretty well pain-wise. Another friend wanted to know why I would help the first friend when he wasn't paying me. I was shocked at the question, but told her "That's what friends do for each other." What I really meant was, "That's what *people* do for each other." I do what I can when I can. And I get a lot of help when I need it too. It's a pretty cool system.

_____________________________

Ring the bells that still can ring
Forget your perfect offering
There is a crack in everything
That's how the light gets in
~~L. Cohen

Just one of the yahoo's

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RE: Random Acts of Kindness - 7/2/2011 9:29:23 PM   
MistressDarkArt


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quote:

ORIGINAL: KMsAngel

once one has been the recipient of a random act of kindness, do you actively do the same from then on? if not in money then in other acts that are often just as meaningful?


My neighbors across the street automatically take in my trash and recycling containers every week when they do their own. While they know it isn't necessary, they just like to do it. They are constantly looking out for me without getting in my business, an art unto itself.

A few years ago my mom w/Alzheimer's slipped into a coma right after Xmas. She'd suffered so long with the disease none of my family was sure if 'this was it'. On New Year's eve, my brother told me I'd better hurry if I wanted to see her before she passed. I was a mess, too distraught to drive the distance and there was one of the worst storms to hit the Central Ca. Coast on the way. I didn't know how I would get to her in time. A contra-dance friend said he would drive me the 7 hours to northern Ca. and stay as long as needed, then drive me home. I said, "Ramzi, you've never seen me like this before. I do not ever remember feeling this devastated, and I'm mortified and embarrassed that I cannot make the simplest decision, right down to what shoes to pack. May I ask that for the length of this trip you decide where and when we stop for gas and food, which restaurant, order me something you know I like, and not ask me to navigate or take responsibility for anything for the next 36 hours or so? All I want to do is curl up in a ball in the passenger's seat and not have to talk, hear music in the car or make decisions. I need as much quiet as possible." And that's exactly what he did, and I didn't have to worry about a thing. He drove fast into the teeth of the storm on New Year's day, and I got to sit with her for a few hours and (try with tears splashing down onto her face) to sing her the song I wrote in my head on the way up to wish her a good goodbye. Although tired from the drive, he sat patiently with my family through the hours, calmly supporting them too. She died that night.

When I got home after her passing I could not believe what I saw. The day we were driving north in the storm, a huge cypress in my front yard had been split apart by the winds and fallen on my car. My neighbor across the street and the one next to me who I barely knew had taken chain saws and cleared the devastation in the driveway, stacking everything neatly on the shoulder of the street so it would be safely out of the way.

These are just two examples. I've been the recipient of a tremendous amount of kindness. It sounds a bit cliche, but yes, I try to 'pay it forward.'

< Message edited by MistressDarkArt -- 7/2/2011 9:30:28 PM >

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RE: Random Acts of Kindness - 7/2/2011 10:20:08 PM   
Tantriqu


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I had parted from my penultimate sub, and was now heading back to London by myself. We had had a surprisingly emotional goodbye, with him running after the train, and I was drained and sad. And now, en route to heading home, there was an emergency on the line, and with both the lifts and escalators out at Hampstead Heath tube station, we all had to go up via the emergency spiral stairs, ten storeys' worth.
After almost two months in Europe, I had one huge and one medium suitcase full of presents. I'd never noticed the weight since they rolled smoothly, and a good man was about to hoist them on and off the train. My shoulders strained and my arms began to shake, but I didn't think it would be safe to stop in a packed staircase.
At about the fourth flight, a beautiful Asian/East Indian young man overtook me, turned, smiled, gently took my burdens, and hoisting them without effort, gracefully ascended with me in tow.
The stairwell exit was so packed I barely had time to thank him before the sea of humanity parted us. He never spoke, and just smiled.
Wherever you are, I still love you.

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RE: Random Acts of Kindness - 7/2/2011 10:36:51 PM   
LafayetteLady


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I've had a couple that immediately spring to mind, and another that wasn't "random" but meant the world to me.

Years ago, I found myself having to walk home from the hospital after visiting the emergency room for an upper respiratory infection in the middle of the night. A little more than half way home, a young man (to me anyway) pulled over and asked me if I needed a ride. Although would say how crazy it was to accept the ride, I did. My home was still nearly 5 miles away! As I usually do, I followed my gut. On the ride the guy was polite and dropped me off at my home. Never saw him again. He did it just because he saw me walking (at 4 in the morning) and offered me a ride.

More recently when I was in the hospital with kidney failure, someone on my facebook (I used to play a lot of games there so have about 1000 contacts) wrote and offered to donate her kidney. She was completely serious. I messaged her back that the doctors said that I should make 100% recovery and her response was that if it turned out that I needed a transplant down the road, that it was something she wanted to do.

The not so random thing was years ago when my son was still very young. My mom had died and it was my ex's turn to have my son for Thanksgiving. I was going to be all alone on the holiday for the first time. One of my best friends, who lives in Germany flew to the US for the long weekend and took me out for Thanksgiving dinner, just so I wouldn't be alone. That was more than 10 years ago, but I've never forgotten how my friend flew across the ocean just so I wouldn't have to spend a holiday alone.

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RE: Random Acts of Kindness - 7/2/2011 10:45:37 PM   
sexyred1


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Two things happened to me:

Once in college, my dad had sent me money for my tuition and rent and since he had wired it, I had a few thousand dollars in cash.

I was making a pay phone call at the student union and left the envelope full of money in the phone booth.

When I discovered that I was missing the envelope, I freaked out and ran back to the student union. Believe it or not, someone has left a note with a phone number asking if someone lost money.

I called them and they asked how much did I lose. I told them and they said they would meet me to give it back. My boyfriend and I went, rather nervously, but it was a nice guy who said he figured that another student left the money and since he was poor, he did not want to hurt someone else, even though he could have easily taken it and no one would have found out.

Another time, when I graduated college and first started working in NYC, I got paid, cashed my check and went to get some frozen yogurt. Apparently, someone somehow reached into my bag and took my wallet.

I was so distraught as I had just started working at the company. The owner of the company heard the story and he gave me all the money back, even though I had only worked there one month.

I never forgot those acts of kindness.

< Message edited by sexyred1 -- 7/2/2011 10:46:09 PM >

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RE: Random Acts of Kindness - 7/3/2011 3:15:49 AM   
needlesandpins


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this is a lovelt thread and i've enjoyed reading through it.

i've had lots of random acts of kindness over the years and i also try to do the same. some of those acts from others to me have maybe not been so random, more spur of the moment because they know me. one such act happened when i threw my ex out for good. it involved travel, costs, and a hotel for the other person to spend some time with me and all at very spur of the moment. however, what that means to me can not be counted in pounds and i will be forever thankful for those hours. as the advert goes......cost of a bus ticket and 11 hours travel ££, cost of a hotel for the night ££, cost of hours spent with a friend in need....priceless.

it does amaze me though that some people can't just accept that you are doing something for someone else because you can and you want them to feel better. a young girl i work with has just moved into her first house so she's a little strapped for money, she has a multitude of other stuff going on which is making things very tough for her. there really isn't much i can do to actually help her but i gave her some eggs from my chickens because they make a meal so it's one less to worry about. also in past conversations she had said that no-one ever bought her flowers and that her favorites are white roses, so i bought her a bunch. as i wouldn't be seeing her on my shift i left them at work for her to pick up later on her shift. everyone else questioned me about them and wanted to know why i had bought them for her, what had she done for me and so on. they could accept that i was doing it just because i wanted to to hopefully cheer her day a little. as it was she was chuffed with them and said i had made her day.

i've had people i don't know help me out with busfare when i haven't had the correct change and i do the same for others.....passing it forward. but i have to say that my acts of kindness are also a little selfish because knowing that someone else feels a little better because i've done something to help them also makes me feel good too. in times where i'm very down myself i need all the happy i can get, so if helping someone else helps me too it's win win all round.

needles

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RE: Random Acts of Kindness - 7/3/2011 6:12:41 AM   
gungadin09


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A girl at work cans her own jam. She brought some in for all the employees, but she knows i ride my bike to work. She was afraid the cans would break and so she special wrapped them and everything, and put them in a bag so i carry them home on my bike. The same girl also saved me a loaf of my favorite bread because she knew we weren't going to be making it in July.

A while back, my bike got a flat far from home, and a stranger gave me a life home.

On a road trip, my cat jumped out of the parked car, and ran away. Three months passed, and i had about given up hope, when i got a call from this lady. She had found Sable, and had been feeding him in her backyard until he trusted her enough to let her look at his ID tag. When i got him back, he was dehydrated and nearly starved. A couple more days and he would have been a gonner. She saved his life.

pam


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RE: Random Acts of Kindness - 7/3/2011 6:23:46 AM   
sunshinemiss


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I"ve read about 2/3 of the thread, and I'm so full with the love and goodness that I gotta stop so I can take it in.

But I did want to mention this:  After I started this thread, I had to go to a training session for a project I'm involved in.  It was raining BUCKETS!  I saw a car stop next to a man without and umbrella, and the person inside just handed one over.  Totally random. 

I'm so glad that this thread is so well received.  I think the umbrella thing, so small, is just as important to share as the big ones.  Please don't sit back, folks, and say "Oh nothing big every happened to me."  One little $5 umbrella made me grin like a fool today.  What's your $5 story?

best,
sunshine


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