15 Stories That Remind Us to Stay Kind, Even When the World Isn’t

People
2 months ago
15 Stories That Remind Us to Stay Kind, Even When the World Isn’t

In a world that often feels fast and harsh, stories that touch the heart remind us what truly matters. This collection brings together inspiring tales of compassion, hope, and the power of small acts of goodness and patience. Each story shows the beauty of staying gentle, no matter how hard life gets, proving that kindness still has the power to change the world.

AI generated image
  • I was using my husband’s laptop and I discovered that he is on a dating site. He was talking to women. I made a fake profile and started to flirt. He said, “My wife is dead. I’m looking for love!”
    I fell apart; this came as a true shock after 9 years of marriage. But I didn’t confront him right away. I decided to talk to a lawyer and started to plan my divorce quietly. In the meantime, I started to treat him coldly.
    But days later, he came home from work and brought a guest. He introduced me to this colleague from work, Greg. He said, “You will love him. He’s a great guy!” When I saw Greg, I was confused. But then, it all started to make sense.
    Turns out, Greg had lost his wife two years ago. He’d finally decided to try dating again, but had no idea where to start or how to talk to women after so long. So he’d asked my husband for help.
    The profile wasn’t my husband’s after all—it was Greg’s. My husband had just been helping a friend. In that moment, I realized how close I’d come to destroying everything over a misunderstanding. I just wish I’d given him the benefit of the doubt.
  • Winter 2019. I was stranded at a gas station after midnight, my car dead, my phone at 2%. A group of loud guys came in, laughing, and one of them noticed I was shivering.
    He took off his hoodie and said, “Here, man, I’ve got another in the truck.” I tried to refuse, but he just left it on the counter.
    The tow truck took hours. I ended up wearing that hoodie for the next two winters.

If it was THAT EASY to believe your husband was cheating, perhaps you need some counseling for perspective. I'm glad you found out before you pulled the trigger and killed your marriage. On the other hand, did you tell your husband what you did? What will you do when he finds out, and he WILL FIND OUT? There is a WHOLE LOT OF ROOM FOR IMPROVEMENT here.

-
-
Reply

Everything that person writes is twatty and Karen-y. You can tell she's one of those unhappy single old women with an overfed dog that she buys outfits for and wonders why noone calls or talks to her. The kind that parks directly in front of "no parking" signs because nothing applies to HER and the neighbors duck down from hoping not to make eye contact.

-
-
Reply

Instead of calling awful humans a Karen, I'll be using a Cheryl from now on because based on your comments you are a horrendous cold poor representation of what a person should be. I'll bet you call yourself a Christian while locking your doors if a person of any ethnicity walks by. If you have a husband, he's in my prayers for having to live with you.

-
-
Reply

My first husband was Black, my current husband is Mexican, Spanish and Portuguese. I am Caucasian and most people who SAY they are Christian, don't know the meaning of the word. I only lock my door when people like you are out front. I don't use the term KAREN, because it is disrespectful to women with that name. If you want to call them a CHERYL, be my guest, since I am not afraid of using it. Since this particular thread has 15 stories in it, I am not sure what you are objecting to. My husband and I just celebrated 23 years together. I was widowed twice and I don't have children because I couldn't carry them. Anything else you need to know about me? Or are you just going to name call because you lack enough intelligence to make a competent statement?

-
-
Reply

I'm not sure why you've brought up Christianity into this, why not muslim...we've seen how they misbehave (to put it mildly!) and create no-go zones which bar other ethnicities...open your eyes eh...

-
-
Reply

Creative username. You are a Karen, indeed. YOU cast shade, call people names, and cast assumptions based on what? YOUR ill perceived accusations and opinions. YOU'RE the type of person that takes great joy in popping other people's hopes, joys, and dreams. CHERYL'S story is uplifting and holds all to a high level of compassion and respect. YOU on the other hand, just showed how negative we as a people have become. Personally, I choose to be like Cheryl and reject your attitude and rude behavior. I pray that you learn respect and good manners, something you failed as a child to learn from your parents.

-
-
Reply
6 days ago
This comment got punished.

Look, I have to agree with Cheryl that seeing the dating profile and immediately going to a lawyer for a divorce without discussing it with her husband is hinky. It's like a stupid movie plot device, the kind where you wonder why the two main characters don't try talking to each other instead of going off and doing the stupid thing. Why didn't she talk to her husband? Why? That makes no sense! If I found that my husband had a dating profile I'd be talking to HIM about it! As far as I'm concerned, I've got a great husband I don't want to lose; ONE thing could not make me go see a divorce lawyer because I love him too much to throw away over twenty years of love without at *least* asking him what happened! If he were sneaking around and lying and generally being a terrible husband, I could understand getting a lawyer involved, but from finding a dating profile? Talk! To each other. There are definitely issues if a lawyer is your first priority, and Cheryl rightly sees that there *must* be more to it than that. Tl;dr? It's not *that* long.

-
-
Reply

I would like to say thank you for understanding what I wrote. I have no problem if people don't like my replies, but on THIS PARTICULAR post, I can't understand what they DON'T like. All I said was the wife should have Talked TO and WITH her husband. Sorry I didn't mean to ramble at you. Thanks again for knowing what I meant.

-
-
Reply
6 days ago
Oops, the admin pressed "delete".

She did not start a divorce. She went for legal counsel. That was wise. Then she waited for more information and chose not to pull the lever.
She chose and acted as a sensible, wise steward of her assets. If he were a "bad guy", letting him know she was angry and considering divorce before she knew what she needed to know would work against her in every way. SHE herself expressed gratitude that it turned as it did. Knowledge is important to not becoming a victim and a drain on society. She shared this story as a cautionary tale.
Odd that people jump on her without considering that the situation could have been avoided if her husband had discussed his plan with her before doing it. Together, they might even have come up with a better plan.

-
-
Reply
6 days ago
The comment was deleted. Go home guys.
2 days ago
The comment wasn't about avocados. Sorry, we had to remove it.

my first question was why was she on that dating site herself...lol HE obviously had a legit excuse, so what could she say about her own reason...?

-
-
Reply

What was she suppose to think. Why did her husband tell her about Greg and how he is helping him to find love again. You can not say you would not have thought the same thing if it was your husband ( if you got one ). They were both in the wrong and maybe this is a conversation they both need to have. Just saying and not let's judge other's. 😄😄😄

-
-
Reply
6 days ago
A cleaning lady accidentally wiped away this comment.
2 days ago
The comment has left, but promises to come back.
  • I worked at a grocery store. A man came in, bought every single bouquet, and said, “Can you hand these to anyone who looks sad today?”
    Later, an elderly woman cried when I gave her one. She’d just left her husband’s funeral. I never saw the man again. But that day, the whole store smelled like hope.
  • I used to work the early shift at a coffee shop. One morning, I noticed a woman sitting at the same table for over an hour — no drink, no phone, just staring at the floor.
    When I asked if she was okay, she said, “I don’t know.” I poured her a latte anyway and said, “It’s on the house.”
    She came back a week later, smiled, and ordered two drinks — one for her, one for me. She said, “That free coffee cost you nothing, but it gave me a reason to show up again.” I still think about her whenever I see someone sitting alone too long.
  • Last month, I sat in a coffee shop and pretended to cry — just to see if anyone would notice. I wasn’t trying to trick people. I’d been feeling invisible lately.
    For twenty minutes, people glanced and turned away. Then an older woman put a muffin on my table. She didn’t ask questions, just said, “Eat something warm.”
    That broke me. I started crying for real. She didn’t flinch — just sat across from me and said, “You don’t owe anyone an explanation.”
    I went home and called my mom for the first time in months.
  • When I was 23, newly graduated, I messed up a major project and thought I was getting fired. My boss called me in, closed the door — and handed me a coffee. She said, “Everyone fails. The good ones learn.”
    I still work there. I also try to be that kind of boss now.
  • When I was 17, I became a single mom. Once, I went into a store, counting coins to buy diapers. The cashier quietly scanned a gift card and covered the rest. She just smiled and said, “Pay it forward someday.”
    I never forgot. Just yesterday, I did the same to a young mother at the supermarket.
  • I was walking home after work when I saw a wallet in the gutter, IDs soaked from the rain. Inside were 50 bucks and a photo of a kid holding a baseball bat.
    I drove to the address on the license. The guy who opened the door looked exhausted. He said,
    “I didn’t even realize it was gone. I’m a single dad — that fifty was lunch money for my kid’s field trip.”
    He tried to pay me a reward, but I noticed the baseball photo again and said, “Just use it for the trip.”
  • I work as a delivery driver, and I kept getting an order from the same address — small stuff, like bottled water or dog treats. Every time, an old man would meet me outside, never saying much except, “You’re quicker than the others.”
    Then one week, the orders stopped. A neighbor waved me down and said, “He passed away last weekend.”
    Days later, I got another order from that same account — dog food. His daughter had reopened it. She said, “He told me you always said hi to the dog. She still waits by the door.”
    Now I bring her a treat every time I pass the street.
  • In high school, I tried to check out a book but owed $18 in late fees. I told the librarian I couldn’t pay. She looked at me for a second, then stamped it “paid” and handed me the book anyway.
    That book was about scholarships. I’m now the first in my family to graduate college. I still have that library card.
  • Last fall, after my dad died, I couldn’t bring myself to do anything. For weeks, my neighbor mowed my lawn. I thought it was pity.
    Months later, he told me his son had passed away years before. He said, “Someone did it for me then.”
  • When I was 16, I skipped class and climbed onto the school roof to be alone. There was another student already there, sitting on the ledge, crying quietly.
    We didn’t talk much. I just sat beside him and handed over my water bottle. He didn’t say anything, just took a sip and nodded.
    The next day, he wasn’t at school. A week later, a counselor told me he’d checked into therapy after “a classmate sat with him that day.”
    I didn’t tell anyone it was me. I didn’t even know his name. But that day, doing nothing — just being there — mattered more than I ever realized.
  • I used to ignore the stray dog near my building. One rainy night, I found him shivering under a bench. I took him in, “just for the night.”
    Three years later, he’s still here. Turns out, rescuing him was the easiest way to rescue myself, too.
  • The hotel messed up my booking, and I ended up sharing a table at breakfast with an elderly man who’d also been displaced.
    I was clearly upset at first, but then he told me about losing his wife last year. I told him about my divorce. We split pancakes, swapped stories, and laughed like old friends.
  • At the checkout, I tapped my card and realized I’d paid for the wrong cart — the woman’s in front of me. She had three kids, looked exhausted, and her face went pale when I told her.
    Before I could fix it, she burst into tears. Her card had just declined, and she didn’t know how to tell her kids they couldn’t get dinner that night. She hugged me like I’d saved her.
    I didn’t. It was a mistake. But sometimes mistakes are the universe nudging you to show up.

Unfortunately, kindness isn’t always returned. After working at her firm for nine years—and being one of the most dedicated and longest-serving employees—our reader discovered that she was actually the lowest paid. Feeling hurt and unappreciated, she decided it was time to take action.

Comments

Get notifications
Lucky you! This thread is empty,
which means you've got dibs on the first comment.
Go for it!

Related Reads