12 Workplace Moments Where Kindness Brought Someone Back From Giving Up

People
3 weeks ago
12 Workplace Moments Where Kindness Brought Someone Back From Giving Up

Most of us spend more time with coworkers than with our own families. And yet, work can feel like the loneliest place in the world when things get hard. That’s what makes these 12 stories so powerful — they capture the exact moment when someone’s kindness pulled a colleague back from the edge of quitting. Sometimes one person caring is all it takes to change everything.

1.

Our department had a new hire everyone ignored. She ate lunch alone, asked questions nobody answered, and looked more defeated every week. I started inviting her to the coffee shop. She barely talked at first.
After 3 months, she told me she’d been about to quit that time. She’s been here 4 years now. She runs the onboarding program and makes sure no new hire ever eats alone.

2.

I worked at a daycare where one teacher was constantly criticized by parents—her accent was too strong, her English wasn’t perfect, the kids couldn’t understand her. The director was about to let her go.
I started pairing up with her during circle time just to help. The kids loved her—she was warm and patient. She stayed. 10 years later, parents specifically request her.

3.

I made a mistake that cost the company a mid-sized client. I expected to be fired or at least publicly blamed. Instead, my director said everyone makes mistakes, and the measure of a professional is what they do next. She didn’t minimize it, but she didn’t destroy me either.
I spent the next 6 months working harder than I ever had. I brought in two clients bigger than the one I’d lost.

4.

The woman who answered the phone had been there forever and everyone talked past her, not to her. I learned her name, asked about her grandkids, remembered when she mentioned her anniversary. Basic human stuff.
When I was going through a rough time at home and kept showing up late, she covered for me without being asked. She said I was the only one who talked to her like a person.

5.

My first week as a line cook, I burned a whole tray of prep during the dinner rush. The head chef screamed at me in front of everyone. I was ready to walk out.
The dishwasher found me in the alley and stood there with me until I calmed down. Then he helped me re-do the prep before anyone noticed. I stayed another 3 years. I always helped with dishes when I could, even though it wasn’t my job.

I've worked as a chef the last 7 years and I feel this story 100% there needs to be more cooks like you! As long as you can actually cook though lol

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6.

My supervisor had a reputation for being cold. I was nervous around her. Then I noticed she stayed late on Fridays, and once I asked if she wanted company. She was surprised but said sure.
We talked for 2 hours. Her husband had left, and Fridays were hard because weekends felt empty. I started staying late on Fridays when I could. We never became close friends exactly, but she warmed up.

And all other colleagues stated hating you from this day since you do everything to please the bosses

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7.

My first year as a stylist, a woman left in tears because I’d cut hair too short. I wanted to quit. My boss told me that she’d accidentally dyed a girl’s hair green and she had to be a bridesmaid the next day. She said every stylist has horror stories, and we should learn from them.
I’ve been cutting hair for 15 years now. I tell that green hair story to every new stylist.

What on earth did she ask for if it came out green? I’d be horrified if that happened to me.

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8.

I cleaned hotel rooms for 3 years. Most guests treated us like we were invisible. But there was one regular, a businessman who came through every month, who always left a note thanking us by name and a tip that actually meant something.
It sounds small, but in a job where you feel invisible, being seen matters. I kept one of his notes in my locker the whole time I worked there.

I really hate it when people treat cleaners as though they were invisible. Without cleaning, catering and maintenance staff, society would collapse.

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9.

A mom at the preschool where I taught was always late for pickup, apologizing. Teachers complained about her. I started keeping her kid to “help” me so there was no stress if she was a few minutes behind.
At the end of the year, she wrote me a letter saying she was a single mom working two jobs and my small flexibility was the only reason she hadn’t pulled her daughter out of the school.

You're very kind but even if your a single mom you have to respect others and not be late! I understand it might be hard to raise a child on your own but it's your responsibility to show up on time! No one has to wait for you!

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Sometimes, no matter HOW HARD YOU TRY, you must do one thing, to PREVENT LOSING EVERYTHING. This lady HELPED HER. IF she had lost either job, she would not, have been able to afford, daycare.

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2 weeks ago
The comment is deleted. The party is over.
2 weeks ago
The comment has been disarmed.

Hey, don't think people born prior to 1960 didn't have empathy that's not fair, I was born in 1948 , my parents taught me and my sister and brother not only empathy but to be kind and understanding, yeah some weren't I taught my daughter the same she taught my grandkids the same so did my sister and brother teach their kids. Have you noticed the "ME" generation over the past years?

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Excuse me? Just because someone is "a Boomer" doesn't make them a-holes. Maybe you should get to know more boomers, what about your parents or grandparents? Being old does not automatically make somebody a bad human.

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Your NEVER late? The mother working two jobs is doing the best she can under the circumstances and the teacher knew this and helped and YES sometimes someone has to wait for you.

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Of course i’m late occasionally but this single mother was using her situation as an excuse to be late and i don’t like it

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2 weeks ago
Hidden for the greater good.

You assume negative, you choose to see and be negative. Therefore negativity is your life and that is all you will receive, unless you make changes

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WHAT EXCUSE? She WAS AT WORK, in one of TWO JOBS. Maybe staying a little later to HELP this mother, she HELPED the DAYCARE CENTER keep that income, too

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Agree and the teacher who shared this story was genuinely kind
I just don’t think it’s right to use the fact that you’re a single mom as an excuse to be late

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Jobs can sometimes cause you to be late. She was struggling, this lady understood and helped. She was probably one of those dreadful boomers! The nerve of her to have compassion!

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That teacher helped for sure but in fact she stayed overtime and probably without pay just because that single mom didn’t bother to arrange her schedule and be on time! She paid for the teachers kindness with disrespect
There’s a lady at my gym who’s almost always late for group workouts and it’s simply annoying. Why everyone has to wait for you?

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2 weeks ago
This comment is in the X-files.

WHEN was the LAST TIME YOU WORKED TWO JOBS AT A TIME? YOU CAN'T JUST ARRANGE IT AWAY. OR YOU WOULD BE SAYING, "SHE'S SHORTCHANGING THE JOB". NO ONE HAD TO WAIT FOR HER, THE TEACHER CHOSE TO WAIT, OUT OF KINDNESS, YOU IMBECILE. STOP PROJECTING YOUR ISSUES, ONTO THIS STORY.

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There are times when you have a boss that refuses to let you leave on time. That you HAVE to wait for the the next shift. If you need the job, that is what you do. ESPECIALLY if you are a single parent.

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I understand and single parents are superheroes no doubt about that
But I truly believe that being late is disrespecting others no matter what your reasons are. Ok that woman is a single mother but still it looks like she’s simply using her situation like an excuse and no one has to feel sorry for her. That teacher probably also had HER OWN KIDS waiting for her at home and she had to stay late because someone just can’t be on time.

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2 weeks ago
The comment has hidden itself outside our galaxy.

10.

My coworker constantly “forgot” her wallet at lunch. I paid for a year—nearly $800. She got promoted over me. When I asked about openings, she said, “We don’t need charity cases.”
Next day, she walked in and froze. Her team gathered around my post about being laid off and looking for work. It went viral in our industry. I got 4 job offers and took one that paid more than her promotion.

We don't need charity cases? Wow! She's the freeloader and she said THAT to you? I would have said "That's funny! You were a charity case for lunch for a full year!".

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11.

I worked the serving line in a hospital cafeteria. Same food, line, routine, every single day. I was burnt out and ready to quit. One night, a nurse came who I’d served a hundred times.
She said she always tried to come through my line because I was the only one who smiled like I meant it, and it helped her get through her shift. I hadn’t realized anyone noticed. I stayed another five years.

12.

My coworker experienced hardships and her sales numbers were terrible. Our manager wanted to fire her. I started passing her easy customers, giving her credit for sales she hadn’t really closed, covering when she needed a break.
I’d been in a bad place once and someone had done the same for me. She pulled out of whatever it was. She’s the assistant manager now. She doesn’t know what I did.

What goes around really does come around — and these stories prove it. From shocking plot twists to perfectly timed payback, these 11 moments will make you believe in karma all over again. Read 11 Times Karma Came Back When People Least Expected It and prepare to be amazed.

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