Nice
14 People Share How Hope and Empathy Restored Their Faith After Almost Giving Up

In moments of struggle, acts of kindness and quiet compassion can quietly restore hope. Empathy from others often proves that human connection sparks unexpected happiness, reminding us that even small gestures carry immense power to uplift and reassure.
1.
I lied to my boss about why I missed an important deadline, blaming “technical issues” instead of admitting I just procrastinated. I was sure IT would expose me or my boss would dig into it.
When he called me in, I was already bracing for that awkward “we know you’re lying” moment. But he said he’d pushed the deadline back because “everyone’s been overwhelmed lately.” I felt like absolute garbage hearing that.
I ended up telling him the truth, expecting it to backfire immediately. He just nodded and said, “Thanks for being honest, let’s fix it.” I thought I’d get punished, but I got a second chance instead.
Your boss already knew and they were laying the tracks for your forgiveness because your procrastination really was a technical problem just not the way thought. Technically you were feeling overwhelmed and when we feel that way we tend to push the stressful things back for a while which leads us to the procrastination of what is causing us stress and your boss knew that and you have a really cool boss! You are very lucky! But if you hadn't apologized you would have carried guilt and that's just as heavy, if not more and you were already feeling it and your boss gave you the opportunity to release all of that with little to no guilt because they understand that everyone goes through it at some point and maybe you weren't the only one, so just say thank you. That's pretty rare. 💝
2.
When I was 18, my car broke down late at night on a lonely highway in NorCal. I didn’t have a cell phone at the time (was too broke). I knew there was a grocery store a few miles up the road, and a payphone, so I started walking on the side of the road.
A couple pulled over in their car and begged me to get in. I was in tears, and said that I couldn’t take a ride from strangers. The lady started crying, told me that I reminded her of her daughter, and showed me her nursing ID. They told me they couldn’t just leave me on the road at night like that.
So I accepted the ride. And it was safe. Thank you, temporary surrogate parents. You might have saved my life.
Or they could have kidnapped and murdered you. Never get in a car with strangers
3.
I was sitting in my car in the parking lot, bawling, convinced I’d ruined my life by quitting my job without a backup plan. I expected judgment from everyone I knew, maybe even pity, but no one called or messaged me.
Just when I thought I’d hit rock bottom, my neighbor, someone I barely knew, knocked on my window with two coffees and a smile. She didn’t lecture me, didn’t ask why; she just sat there while I cried and talked. By the time I got home, I realized I hadn’t felt seen in months, and that tiny act of empathy reminded me I wasn’t completely alone.
That night, I applied for a position I’d been too scared to try before, and got a reply the next morning. Turns out, the company was run by someone who’d been in my exact spot years ago, and they offered me the job because they recognized the same fear I had felt.
First congratulations! Second but most important, don't ever let anyone judge you and never judge yourself too harshly. Show yourself the same kindness that you would show others. We don't have the right to judge unless we have worn and walked in another person's shoe's and lived their life as them and that last part is very important because not one of us reacts to a situation the same way and we choose to respond differently which changes the outcome so it is never the same for any person so we can never know what anyone is going through because we are all different, we react differently and we respond to a situation differently so nothing is ever the same. We always have to remember to think with kindness especially towards ourselves because then we will see others the same way.
4.
I woke up to an eviction notice on my door and thought my life was over. I expected angry neighbors and humiliation, but when I posted about it online, a complete stranger offered to help cover my rent. I thought they were trolling, but they really did. By the end of the week, I had a roof over my head and a new friend who reminded me kindness still exists.
Eviction notices just don't appear on your door one day. You knew this was coming long before it happened.
5.
I snapped at a cashier after a long day, way harder than the situation deserved. The second I walked out, I knew I messed up and almost didn’t go back in. I expected them to either ignore me or call me out if I tried to apologize.
When I finally did, they looked surprised more than anything. I apologized, kind of stumbling through it, and they just said, “It’s okay, I’ve had worse.” That somehow made it hit harder.
We ended up chatting for a minute, and they told me their shift had been rough too. I left realizing how much a simple apology can reset things.
Yes, it surely does.
6.
Riding my bike on a long trip through Canada. With about 50 miles to go, I had a major mechanical failure. Stuck on the side of the road in a foreign country, within 5 minutes at least 10 cars had stopped to check on me.
One guy loaded my bike in the back of his truck and drove me 30 miles to the border where I could catch a ferry back to the US. Amazing kindness and generosity toward a stranger. He just asked that I pay it forward and to date I’ve helped 5 cyclists who were broken down in honor of that promise.
That's Canucks for ya, eh?
7.
My dog ran out the front door while I was unloading groceries, and I panicked. I imagined him lost or worse.
I posted a local alert, expecting snide comments about “bad pet parenting.” Instead, my entire block joined in, and someone found him two hours later curled up in a neighbor’s yard. I cried from relief and gratitude, realizing my community cared more than I thought.
I lost my cat once. And i really did get the bad pet parenting comments, kicking me while i was down 😔 I avoided that neighbor ever since till we moved away.
8.
I failed a final exam that I’d studied for months for and thought my academic career was over. I expected my professors to think I wasn’t serious, but one emailed me with advice on retaking it and suggested tutoring resources I hadn’t considered. It wasn’t pity, it was genuine support. That email changed my outlook and gave me a second chance I didn’t know I deserved.
I lost my daughter mid semester in 2020. I SNAPPED at my professor. The dean emailed... I read the email, and cried. " I lost my child too, a year ago. Lets meet. No expectations." I met with her, over warm coffee. I told her my story, not even holding it together. She put her hand on mine, and said, take your time. Im putting you on the at yoyr pace program for a year.
I graduated 6 months later my bachelors degree. She wrote my reccomenadation to the compny that hired me. Love you Mrs. T!
9.
I was around 6 years old and went out to ride my bike. My parents were behind me walking and I was going ahead and coming back to them every 5-10 minutes. But I forgot to turn around and realized I was lost so I started crying after some unsuccessful attempts to find them.
One kind man, probably in his 60s, stopped and asked me multiple questions about what happened and who were my parents. It turned out that he knew my grandpa. He contacted him, got my parents’ numbers and called them. They decided where to meet and after 20 minutes we were there.
I was so happy and relieved and thanked the old man. He lives in the same block of flats as my grandpa and I sometimes help him by carrying the groceries or fixing something in his house. I would never forget this act, because things could have gone wrong for me.
10.
I accidentally sent a super personal text to the wrong person and prepared for embarrassment. But the person responded with empathy, sharing that they’d gone through something similar. We ended up having a long conversation that night that actually made me feel less alone in my struggles.
11.
Alternator died while I was driving home from university. Engine died as I exited the freeway in the middle of the night in a not-so-pleasant part of town in the days before cell phones.
As I’m pushing my car out of the intersection, a guy in a truck comes up and offers to push my car to my neighborhood, a good three miles away. He does so, and as I’m pulling into my neighborhood, he simply gives a wave and drives off into the night. I never even had a chance to thank him.
Apparently he didn't feel the need to be thanked so maybe you can pass his kindness to you on to someone else and don't expect a thank you. Do it anonymously in his memory and who knows, you could be helping someone he loves. This world is a big place but it's not really that big because we are all brothers and sisters looking out for one another. Pass it on.
12.
I ghosted a group project for days because I was overwhelmed and embarrassed that I hadn’t done my part. By the time I checked back in, I was sure they’d kicked me out or reported me.
I opened the chat expecting frustration or at least passive-aggressive comments. Instead, one of them had written, “Hey, we divided your part up, just focus on getting back on track.” No blame, just a solution.
I apologized and they asked if I could handle a smaller piece. I thought I’d burned that bridge, but they made room for me anyway.
13.
I messed up a simple order at a restaurant job and blamed it on the kitchen to avoid getting in trouble. Later, the cook confronted me, and I thought it was about to get heated. I was already defensive before they even said anything.
But they just asked why I didn’t tell them directly so they could fix it faster. That caught me off guard. I admitted I didn’t want to look incompetent. They just shrugged and said, “We all mess up.” I expected tension in the kitchen after that, but it actually felt lighter.
I worked in food insldustry foe 20 yrs. I messed up a 15 top so miserably one time. All thebfiod came.out at once, salads, appwtizers, diners... the head chef heped me deliver. I admitted my mistake at the tavle. One of the ladoes looked at the chef and said, Well, if I worked w such a handome fellow, I woukd have made the same mistake, Good God hes gorgeous...
Thwy have been married now for 20 yrs.
14.
I work at a cell phone repair kiosk in the mall. I’m used to cracked screens, water damage, and impatient teenagers.
Last Wednesday, an 80-year-old woman handed me an ancient, water-damaged flip phone. Her hands were shaking. “Can you turn it on?” she asked. “Just one more time?” I looked at the corroded charging port. I told her the motherboard was completely fried and it was beyond repair.
She put her hands over her face and started to sob right there in the middle of the crowded mall. “My husband died last week,” she whispered through her tears. “His very last voicemail to me is saved on that phone. I just need to hear his voice one more time.” I tried my best and spent three hours working on my own time.
I managed to bridge the fried circuits just enough to get it to power on for exactly two minutes. I quickly played the voicemail and recorded the audio onto a flash drive. When I handed it back to her, she hugged me so hard I couldn’t breathe. Technology changes every six months, but a memory is supposed to last forever.
You were so good to do that, may Jesus bless you for it.
These moments show that even the smallest acts of kindness and empathy can spark lasting happiness. Quiet gestures of compassion prove that hope and connection are never truly out of reach.
Read next: 14 People Who Lit Up Someone’s Worst Day With Nothing but Quiet Kindness
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