Alright! Should someone not answer after the second time you try to contact them....forget about 'em. They forgot about you!
11 Workplace Moments When Quiet Kindness Became Someone’s Reason to Keep Going

1.
My coworker held my hand through my divorce and mom’s diagnosis. She was my rock. But when she quit, she vanished overnight. I kept sending memes every week anyway. 6 months of nothing.
Then, one Tuesday, she replied. I wasn’t prepared for what she said. She eventually replied, explaining that she had seen every message but wasn’t in the place to respond. She had been going through a lot, and after losing her job because she couldn’t keep up with work and personal challenges, she had to step back from everyone.
Now that she was doing better, she was grateful for the small gestures that had reminded her someone cared. It showed that quiet acts of kindness in the workplace can quietly keep someone going, even when it seems like they’ve vanished.
That is very harsh. You do not know what they are going through and maybe your continuing concern helps more than you know.
You know, I haven't the slightest clue where any of my coworkers live. We text and so far that's it.
Just because someone leaves a place doesn't mean that they also leave all of the people behind and I'm glad that you continued to be there for her because she may not even known that she needed you but I imagine she probably did. But when someone is going through a mental health crisis they can't always reach out, for whatever reason, embarrassment, shame even though it isn't due, or they are just plain overwhelmed, they just feel like they can't at that time in their life but that doesn't mean that they really don't need or want what it is you're doing and it is helping them hold on even though it may not seem like much to you. A simple hello, I'm thinking about you, can change the entire thought process someone might be going through and no one even knows it! A smile can change someone's day even when others don't think it's much at all and your memes may just have saved her life! You don't know where her head was at but apparently she was in a pretty dark place at the time and you were the Only one that remembered her while she was in a crisis, that is more than you will ever imagine if she was feeling lost and alone as people often do and are afraid to reach out to people they know because they are afraid of being judged and you never did that to her, you just gave her support without judgement or questions and that's apparently exactly what she needed. So thank you because it makes the job for mental health specialists a lot easier when there are people out there like you because we know that some really bad things can happen if someone doesn't have any kind of support like you gave her, and sometimes that's just waiting patiently for them to come to you.
I am also like that with my friends. I think the most important thing is caring and showing compassion.
You know kindness doesn't cost a thing but it's one of the greatest gifts you can give to anyone.
2.
I was dreading the morning staff meeting, convinced my manager would roast me for missing that client call. When I walked in, my coworker handed me a mug with a sticky note: “You’re killing it, even if you don’t see it.” I blinked, expecting a joke. She just smiled and went back to her notes.
That little cup of tea made me sit up straighter all day. Weeks later, I realized she did it for every new hire, just small reminders that someone noticed.
3.
I stayed late at the diner again, cleaning tables I’d already polished, expecting a lecture from the night manager. Instead, the cook slid a fresh slice of pie across the counter with a grin: “For surviving the chaos.” I laughed, thinking it was sarcastic. He meant it sincerely.
It hit me how much it mattered that someone acknowledged the grind. That night, I left feeling a little less invisible than usual.
4.
I braced for a lecture after spilling coffee on the client presentation binder. But my coworker quietly handed me a fresh copy and whispered, “We’ve all had worse days.” Then she just went back to her desk.
That small act kept me from spiraling. Later I found out that she’d saved other people from similar panic too, quietly, without recognition.
5.
In 1980, I wore pants to work for the first time as a woman. Every disapproving eye followed me down the office. Including my boss’s. Some even came out into the walkway to watch me walk through the door at the other end. The Personnel Director (male) asked my boss if she thought I was “appropriately dressed”.
He got short shrift from her. “The women aren’t here for you to look at their legs all day, David,” she said with a half laugh. My boss was a formidable lady so he backtracked quickly, and decided he should go do something “urgent” elsewhere. By the end of the year, several women in the office were also regularly wearing trousers.
It seems so odd, in my lifetime, that what is normal now seemed shocking in 1980! It just goes to show — clothes have no gender and we should wear what we’re comfortable in!
6.
I was ready to snap at the front desk after a long shift at the hotel. A bellhop handed me a small note: “You make this place less stressful for everyone.” I stared at it, he smiled and kept rolling luggage. It didn’t feel like a big deal at the moment, but I carried that little acknowledgment with me for weeks.
7.
I had messed up the coffee order again at the law firm and was ready to hide. The receptionist slid a cup across my desk with a note: “You’re doing fine, don’t stress.” I laughed nervously, she didn’t flinch.
That tiny gesture made the office feel less hostile. Months later, I realized she had been doing that for every nervous junior.
8.
Tom, a warehouse manager, assumed the new recruit would resent him for correcting a packing mistake. Instead, the recruit quietly stayed late helping Tom reorganize the shelves without a word. That small act of support reminded Tom he wasn’t alone in the grind.
9.
At the restaurant where I worked, I accidentally dropped a tray of dishes in the middle of dinner service. My first thought was that I was about to get yelled at by the head chef. Instead, the dishwasher quietly picked up the pieces, muttered, “Happens to everyone,” and went back to work.
I expected at least an eye-roll or lecture. That small gesture made me feel like I could survive the rest of the shift without panicking. Even now, I remember it as one of the rare times someone’s calm kindness carried me through chaos.
10.
During a daycare shift, I tripped over a toy in front of the parents while carrying snacks. I braced myself for embarrassment or someone pointing it out. Another teacher walked over, handed me a wipe, and whispered, “You’re doing fine.” I nodded. She just went back to supervising the kids.
That tiny act stopped me from dwelling on the mistake the whole day. I still think about it when I get nervous in front of people, it reminded me small gestures matter.
11.
At the tech startup where I interned, I accidentally deleted half of the code branch we were working on. I braced myself for someone to yell at me.
Later, a quiet engineer sat next to me, silently helping me restore it, then said, “We’ve all been there. You’ll get it.” That act of calm support made me want to learn, not hide. It made the difference between quitting and finishing the project. I realized later that it was more impactful than any formal praise.
Small acts of kindness and compassion can leave a lasting mark, turning ordinary days into moments of inspiration. In a world that often feels fast and impersonal, these gestures remind us that success is also about the humanity we bring to work.
Read next: 12 Real Moments Where People Prove Compassion and Empathy Are the Secrets to Happiness
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