10 Office Moments That Teach Us Compassion and Kindness Still Lead to Happiness in 2026

People
04/18/2026
10 Office Moments That Teach Us Compassion and Kindness Still Lead to Happiness in 2026

Compassion and kindness have quietly become the most underrated success skills in the modern workplace, and the happiest professionals in 2026 are living proof. In a world of endless deadlines, digital burnout, and high-pressure office environments, a growing body of workplace research confirms that empathy and human connection play a crucial role in task performance. These 10 powerful office moments will remind you that no matter how fast the professional world evolves, kindness still leads to happiness — every single time.

  • My mom died at 6am on a Tuesday. By 9am my boss had texted saying he needed me in right now. I came in red-eyed and still in the clothes I had slept in. He looked at me across his desk and said, “Grief is temporary, move on now!”
    I sat there and nodded because I did not have the energy to respond to that the way it deserved. I moved on. Or I pretended to.
    Three weeks later he called the whole office together, which he never did. When we filed into the conference room, his eyes were red and his hands were shaking slightly, and he stood at the front and said, “My wife left me. Packed everything while I was at work and was gone when I got home. 22 years.”
    The room was completely silent. He tried to keep talking but could not. And then something happened that I did not expect from myself. I stood up, walked to the front of the room, put my hand on his shoulder and said, “Take all the time you need.”
    He looked at me and he knew exactly what I was doing and why. He broke down completely. I stayed with him in that conference room for two hours after everyone else had quietly left. He was a different manager after that, not perfect, but different, softer in the places that mattered.
    He apologized to me properly six months later, specific and sincere, for what he had said on the morning my mother died. I told him grief had taught us both something. He agreed. We have not talked about it since and we do not need to.
  • When our company did a round of layoffs, the HR department sent automated emails to everyone affected at 6am on a Friday. Except my manager, who had found out the night before, called each person on her team individually before the email arrived so nobody would read it alone in silence.
    She could not change the decision. She had no power over the outcome. She just decided that the people she had worked with for years deserved a human voice before a corporate message, and she stayed up until 2am making sure they got one.
    Every person she called that night has talked about it since. Not about losing the job, but about that call. That is the only thing anyone remembers.
AI-generated image

Very true, no matter how fast professions evolve, a human face is needed at the work place to have work life balance. Thank you you have calmed my anxiety a bit

Reply

My mother died February 8th 2005 at 2:37pm. I walked into her room and the doctor called all of us into a conference room and told this was it. She took her last breath and not 5 minutes later my boss called and said come into work or quit. I walked into work and he started poking me in the chest talking about company loyalty, priorities, and saying I can mourn later after work or after I quit. So I quit on the spot and knocked him out. I still talk to his supervisor to this day. My boss was fired 2 days later when they found out he violated company policy for bereavement by threatening me with my job and assaulting me on camera. His boss still laughs because the dude whistles when he talks because some of his teeth are missing.

Reply

My husband of 16 years passed away from cancer. I was his full time caregiver and also working full-time. I called my boss and told him I needed FMLA paperwork filled out as he was fading fast. He called me and fired me right then. At 41 I was widowed and had not job. Just goes to show that employers don't care about any thing except making money. The day of his funeral he called me to harness me about the key to the office saying if I didn't turn it in immediately he would drive to my home with police to get it. I told him to go ahead and try. Needless to say I sued him and of course won. I will never forget how terrible it made me feel. It was all about money, money, money. What a sad world we live in.

Reply

When I was 25, my father died on a wednesday at age 53. We had the wake on friday and the funeral on Saturday. I got a whole 3 days of bereavement leave for immediate family. I took off Thursday, Friday and Monday (they had to be consecutive days). My district manager asked my manager why I had to take Monday off, as I had the weekend to get over it.

Reply
just now
You can't hide three things: the Sun, the Moon and the truth. But you sure can hide a comment.

What a shame people, employers can be so insensitive. When my mother passed, the plant manager took me to a private room during the wake and told me to take as long as I needed. I'll never forget his kindness. It truly made a difference. He's since passed away but we kept in contact for years before he passed. I was always grateful for him being an understanding person when I really needed it, unlike the manager I worked for.

Reply

I had to leave work when my grandma died to help my dad. The next day while I was helping with funeral arrangements, my manager called my house. When my mom told him what I was doing, he responded with " ok good, I was just making sure her grandma actually died, we really need her here ( I was a Hilo Driver) Needless to say I found another Job and never looked back

Reply

I worked at a university as a PA professor.for three years. We were always short staffed. On average I worked eight to eighteen hours per day. I taught history and physical exam, endocrinology, several labs and whenever needed for other subjects as well as scheduling clinical rotations and finding new spots for close to 350 students. In addition our program was on track to lose ts accreditation when I first arrived. We managed to retain accredidation and our national exam scores increased significantly. I never called in sick but after going through two department chairs the third would not have been my choice; however, he was hired anyway. I was ill and called in one morning but was told to get my ass into the office! I asked my boss to put that into an email to me and went into work. It was obvious I was ill. A week later he resigned. Im not quite sure why but I'm assuming he realized he was out of bounds. Consequently I continued to get seriously ill and required a hysterectomy. The surgeon screwed up and nicked my collon and I developed several large abdominal assess. Treatment included central IV antibiotics for six weeks and I was off work for months. I never returned to that job and later returned to clinical practice in Yuma, AZ.

I often wonder how some people climb the Corp ladder to become bosses. After all, doesn't it just take a bit of common sense and compassion for fellow humans.

I still am a bit embarrassed to be human. Animal are much more civil and kind to one another, aren't they?

Your kindness towards your boss is what the world is severely lacking and before it's to late I hope there are more people like you that walk the walk and talk the talk like Jesus Christ taught us to do. God bless you!

Reply

When ugly situation happens to people, we tend not to feel or worry about it because we were not directly hit or it seems so remote & far until we become the victim someday.

Reply

I think there’s kindness still out there. It’s just people don’t realize that kindness is a very powerful thing and the smallest effort of Kindness to another it’s very precious and remembered immensely. I think we have to try a little bit harder be kinder to our fellow humans. I mean humanity is real and it’s worth fighting for.

Reply

Most are, then you have @cheryl cadwell, former "politician" & self appointed disciplinary of wrong think. 😹😹😹😹

Reply

How much ever a person is rude to us , we need to be polite, revenge is easy , stay kind is hard

Reply

Karma never spare any one. A person is rude,arrogant , egoistic in his speech or behavior is hated by god and sooner or later he or she will be punished

Reply

Hm interesting story , however something doesn’t quite match, first the person going to work 3 hours after mother died ? Nobody in the world would have done that and even if it did happen i don't think the person would be in a psychological condition to shun off the 3 hour grief and concentrate on producing work?! Furthermore if his wife had left the boss , he doesn't seem like an empath , since he is so insensitive to the death of the colleagues mother , as to to call everyone and be vulnerable and announce his wife left him , it does not go with his character he is more a narcissistic type who does not take defeat and would hide it from everyone as not to be shamed and would say that he divorced her and told her to leave the house ! And the finale “ Take all the time you need” ?! From employee to the boss? Who is giving who permission to take all the time you need? The employee to the boss?
Well just my way of thinking, have a great day everyone ☺️

Reply
just now
The comment was deleted. Go home guys.

Yes they will if they are the only one bringing in money to keep a roof over the families head and food in the table. Some live pay check to pay check and can not afford to get let go with out another job in place to cover the bills.

Reply

You shouldn't respond to a comment without fully understanding or comprehending what the person was conveying. It makes you look ridiculous. She said that to him "Take all the time you need" because that's EXACTLY what he was suppose to say to her when she told her manager of her Mom passing! English comprehension is Vital when understanding why or how the statement came full circle.

Reply

No wonder his wife left him. He actually had no business involving the whole office. Not their problem. But you told him it was ok to be an arsehole by even going in when he demanded it.

Reply

I don't know.. I think this man really did something really cold and awful by telling her to come in to work and with that sentence, just because he has power over her. She should have said no. And to first tell everyone about HIS problem and apologize only 6 months later is pretty insane and not something to congratulate him on. We have to stop coddling these people and stop subordinating and just say: "This was not okay, it was insensitive, please apologize and don't do it again."

Reply

Unless his wife left the same day my mother passed, I wouldn't have heard the news because no way would I work for the heartless AH that called me in the day she died!

Reply

STILL TRYING TO FIGURE OUT, WHY SHE WENT IN TO WORK AT ALL? NOTHING ELSE MATTERED IN THAT MOMENT. A DEAD PARENT (AS IN LESS THAN AN HOUR AGO) TRUMPS (I HATE THAT WORD) EVERYTHING.

Reply

I think you are a wonderful person for reaching out to your boss after the way he treated you when your mom died. You were there for him then he was there for you belatedly true but I guess better late than never. You helped him be a better person. Your mom would be proud.

Reply

When we don't understand where someone is coming from or what someone is feeling it's important to ask people if it's something that matters to them. I'm not a griever, we are born to die. Last year I was at work on the phone with the ER attending who was trying to resuscitate my fiancé of 14 years after an accident and I had to make the decision for them to stop, so he was declared dead while I was on phone. I didn't need to leave work, what was going home to sit with our cats going to do that I couldn't do at work? But if someone else's mom is at hospital? Of course I'm going to cover for them as long as they need. We all have different outlooks and life requirements and the big thing is to communicate this because you have to remember, people can't read your mind. Some of us are matter-of-fact about things that distress others and just because we don't understand why you choose to be sad doesn't mean we don't want you to have the space and resources you need- we just have to be told what those are.

Reply
just now
A cat is having a nap right on this comment.

They must have really loved each other for her to get the hospital to turn off life support and then carry on working. Absolute rubbish. Do not believe for one minute. The lady who lost her mother and few hours later the boss called and told her to come in. Do you people in USA ( assuming it is USA ) have human resource to talk to. No HR would order anyone into work after losing a parent or family member. Well not here in UK or Ireland or rest of Europe. Would not happen.

Reply

I don't understand why you weren't at the hospital with your fiance. But I am not judging we need to accept each other's differences. We need to accept each other where we are even if we don't always understand. But if you don't grieve how do you deal when someone you love dies or leaves.

Reply
  • I interviewed for a job two years ago and did not get it. The hiring manager sent a rejection email like every other hiring manager sends a rejection email, short and vague and final.
    Then three days later, she sent a second email, personal and specific, explaining exactly what had impressed her and precisely what skills she thought I should develop before my next interview. She had no obligation to do that.
    Six months later she emailed again with a different role and said she had kept my resume on her desk. I was hired that week. I had been unemployed for four months when that first rejection came. That second email kept me going through all of it.
  • I quit a job badly, gave almost no notice, left at a terrible time for the team, and burned what I assumed was every bridge behind me.
    A year later a potential employer called my old boss for a reference and I spent a week sick with anxiety about what he would say. I got the job.
    At a company event years later, I ran into my old boss and thanked him and admitted I had been terrified about that call. He said, “You were a good employee who made a bad exit, those are not the same thing and I was not going to punish your career for one bad week.
    I have thought about the generosity of that distinction every single time I have been asked to give a reference for someone since.

Has a manager or employer ever shown you unexpected kindness that changed your career? Tell us in the comments.

  • I was offered a job at a salary I could not live on and I turned it down with a polite email explaining that I needed more to make it work. I expected nothing back.
    Instead, the hiring manager replied within an hour, saying she had gone back to her own boss and made the case and they were increasing the offer. She said, “I have been in that position and I did not want to lose you over a number we could actually move on.” I have never had an employer fight for me before I was even an employee. I accepted immediately.
    I have been there for three years and I have never forgotten that she went back into the room on my behalf before I had done a single day of work for her.

That computer says "glast" what's a glast?

Reply
  • I covered my coworker’s $20 lunch. I had $23 left until payday so I asked her to pay me back. She snapped, “Are you that desperate over $20?” I said nothing.
    The next week at the company potluck in front of everyone I pulled out a homemade dish and put it next to her. She said, “What’s this?”
    I said, “Last month I had $43 to my name and I spent $20 of it on your lunch because you were having a bad day. I didn’t tell you that when I asked for it back because I didn’t want you to feel guilty. I still don’t. But I made this for you today because that’s just what I do for people I care about.”
    She put her fork down and said, “You had $43 left and you bought me lunch?” I said, “Yeah. And I’d do it again.” She didn’t talk for the rest of lunch.
    The next morning she left $20 on my desk with a sticky note that said: “I’m sorry. No one’s done something like that for me in a long time and I didn’t know how to handle it.

I used to work at Burger King. Once a young woman came through the drive thru and ordered a Kids meal. I ran her card and it declined. She didn't have cash. I told her to wait a moment and I ran my card so she could feed her kid. She was so appreciative she cried. She came back a couple days later and paid me back.

Reply
  • I was fired from a job I had given four years of my life to and the process was cold and fast and handled entirely by HR with my manager nowhere in sight. I cleared my desk and left.
    Two days later I got a personal email from a senior colleague I had respected enormously but was not close to. He said he had heard what happened, that he thought it had been handled badly, that he wanted me to know my work had mattered, and that he would be glad to be a reference whenever I needed one.
    He had nothing to gain from sending that email and significant risk in sending it. I used his reference in every interview I had for the next year. I got hired eight months later at a better company with a higher salary. That email was the thing that made unemployment survivable.
  • I was three months into a new job when I made a significant mistake that affected a major client. I was terrified. My manager called me in and I sat down ready to start apologizing.
    Instead she said, “I have already spoken to the client and taken responsibility, we are going to fix it together, and this conversation is just between us.” She did not minimize what had happened. She just decided that a new employee making an early mistake did not need to have their career derailed before it had properly started.
    I worked for that company for six more years. I never made that particular kind of mistake again. She knew that the way you treat someone in their worst professional moment determines everything about who they become in your team.
  • I was in the final round of interviews for my dream job when the hiring manager pulled me aside after the last session. She said quietly that they were going to hire someone with more direct experience but that I had been the best interviewer they had seen in months and she did not want me to leave without knowing that.
    She spent twenty minutes telling me exactly what to do before applying for a role like that again. She owed me none of that. Most employers would have sent a standard rejection email and moved on.
    I did everything she told me to do. Eighteen months later I applied for a similar role at a different company and I got it. I still think about her when I am in any kind of hiring position and someone deserves more than a form email.
  • There was a period at my company when one of our colleagues was clearly struggling financially, coming in without lunch, leaving early to avoid the team dinners, quietly disappearing from anything that cost money. Nobody said anything directly because nobody knew how.
    One of the senior managers started ordering too much food to team meetings and then insisting people take the leftovers home at the end of the day, making it completely normal and practical, never drawing attention to why. It went on for months.
    The colleague in question told me years later that he had known exactly what she was doing and that it had gotten him through one of the hardest stretches of his life without ever having to admit it to anyone.
    She had found a way to help that preserved every bit of his dignity. That is a skill no degree teaches you.

Abh koi dayalu nahi hai mujhe lagta hai sab matlabi dohare chehere wale hai

Reply

Which of these moments do you wish had happened in your own career? Tell us below and tell us what you would have needed to hear.

Comments

Get notifications

Related Reads