I have hard time not helping others but how person helped was in position to help them. Unless in small village there are millions in the city.
12 Small Acts of Kindness That Had Unbelievable Consequences

Life moves fast, and we’re all just trying to get through our own problems, so it’s easy to ignore the struggling stranger in front of us. Maybe you’ve bought someone coffee, helped carry groceries, or just offered a kind word when someone looked like they needed it. These stories show what happened when ordinary people took a few minutes to help others, not for reward or recognition, but just because it felt right. Turns out, kindness is the best investment you never planned to make.
- I drove an elderly woman to her doctor’s appointments for six months because she had no one else. After she recovered, she left me her piano. I sold it to pay for my daughter’s first year of college.
- A man’s wallet fell out of his pocket at the coffee shop. I ran after him to return it. Two years later, he was my realtor and remembered me. He spent extra time finding properties in my budget instead of pushing expensive ones.
- I let someone with two items go ahead of me in line when I had a full cart. He thanked me genuinely. A year later, he was the electrician who came for an emergency repair and only charged me for parts, not the Sunday call-out fee.
- I gave accurate directions to a lost delivery driver instead of just shrugging. He remembered my address. When my own package was marked “undeliverable” by his company, he went out of his way to bring it to me personally.
- A woman ahead of me was short $3 at the pharmacy. I covered it without making a big deal. A year later, she was the apartment manager who accepted my application despite my credit score being just below their minimum.
- I stayed late to help a coworker finish a project she was panicking about. She never forgot. When I was wrongly accused of something at work months later, she backed me up to management with specific details proving my innocence.
- At the grocery store, a young woman approached me crying, begging me to pay for her cart. She’d just been fired, and her kids hadn’t eaten in two days. I returned half my groceries to cover hers.
Three months later, she called me. Turned out she was the new HR director at the company I’d been applying to, and she remembered my kindness. She personally walked my resume to the hiring manager.
- I gave my lunch to a homeless man instead of just spare change. He told me about a shortcut route. Weeks later, that shortcut helped me avoid a massive traffic jam and get to an important meeting in time.
- A woman’s stroller wheel broke at the mall. I helped her carry her stuff to her car. A year later, she was the HR person processing my maternity leave and made sure I got every benefit I was entitled to.
- Our waitress was crying while taking our order. I asked what was wrong. Just fired, drowning in her kids’ medical bills, she couldn’t make rent. Tomorrow she’d move into a shelter. I left a huge tip and my card.
Three months later, she called. Turned out she’d gotten back on her feet and wanted to pay me back. I told her to keep it, but she insisted on taking my daughter out for coffee as a thank-you, since they were the same age.
- A woman’s card was declined buying diapers. I paid the $20 difference quietly. A year later, she worked at the daycare I was desperately trying to get my kid into. She made sure my name moved up the waiting list.
- An elderly man was confused at the ATM. I patiently helped him without making him feel stupid. Months later, he was ahead of me at the post office and let me cut in line when he saw I was rushing to make the last pickup time.
What happens when you babysit your grandchildren and your daughter-in-law demands you pay for food you ate while being at her house? Find out in our article: I Refuse to Pay for Food I Ate While Babysitting My Own Grandchildren.
Comments
I don't mean to sound cruel, but I probably wouldn't have believed the woman who needed someone to pay for her groceries because she lost her job. Myself and friends or family members have heard stories that sounded questionable, and I've seen a few things while working at grocery stores. Sometimes that person "needs money for groceries" because they want to spend more money on beer and cigarettes. On a related note, baby formula is sometimes locked up at stores because people steal it to sell online or at flea market places, or they mix it with cocaine. Not always because desperate parents are stealing to help their children.
Lily, I hear where you're coming from but sometimes a person just needs to do the charitable thing and not be skeptical. I think you justify your selfishness by pointing out the possibly fraudulent scenario. Be kind, be generous, if they blow your $20 who cares. You've probably blown $20 on something silly too. I know I have.
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