On August 1st, my wallet with a month’s rent was stolen. While I cried on a park bench, an older man gave me a check for the exact amount, saying a stranger once helped him buy a suit for his first job.
At the airport for my mother’s funeral, I missed my flight. A woman with a toddler sat with me, gave me tissues, and then her family bought me a new ticket.
On a train, I grew annoyed at a restless child until her exhausted mother left me a chocolate and a note explaining her daughter’s condition.
In a coffee shop, a stranger let me borrow her charger so I could finish a paper.
In high school, when my shoes were falling apart, a girl quietly gave me new sneakers, pretending they were leftovers.
A regular at the café where I worked bought extra coffees for homeless people on a freezing day.
After my father died, a quiet neighbor mowed our lawn every week until my mom recovered.
As a museum guard, I let a blind boy touch the art to “see” it; I was later promoted.
When my car broke down in the rain, a stranger fixed it without a word and drove off.
A student gave up her portfolio so a quieter boy’s stolen artwork could be seen.
At the grocery store, when I paid for a man’s declined items, he gave me a hand-carved elephant—the last piece of his old life.