Wonderful!I flew 110 missions for Angel Flight West, taking patients to and from their distant appointments. I paid for the flights out of my own pocket. The gratitude I got from the patients was very rewarding.
That is a good one, we don't have trash pick up in my village, but two days a week we can take to central point (where it goes in huge bins taken down to the city. Residents pay a half dollar for each bag (most of us use the 30-40 gal heavy duty black bags.). With just 2 of us we usually only have 1 bag every 10 days. We recycle what we can, flatten or fill anything we can't so there aren't a lot of air pockets. But i make it a point to be pleasant to the workers there, and if ever we get a 'trash day' (Weds and Sat) that is super hot i'll stop and buy some cold water on the way. Thanks for the idea.Just a little something I do is to give a bottle of water to the people who deliver flyer bundles or do garbage pickup. It costs little and on a hot day they appreciate it.
I've picked up the tab a few times like that myself. I'm not the biggest fan of Ruby Tuesday's but as you said, sometimes choices are limited. I hope that their kind deed might have been just the thing to make up for any Blue Monday's that your uncle and cousin may have recently had. I'm in Ohio and there truly are some good people here. It feels like "down home" in many places.I visited my aging uncle in Ohio about 8 years ago. I picked him up where he was then living at the time and drove him and my cousin “down home,” as we call it, because they wanted to have what turned out to be, one last look around the old homestead and also to visit the family grave. We had a great day together, just the three of us. We visited a few friends, made new friends, even went to an unexpected car show being held in the village. Just a really great day, even though my uncle had to use a scooter and my cousin needs a walker to get around. My uncle has since been deceased.
So, at the end of this long day, my uncle asks if we could all go to a restaurant and have dinner before calling it a day. I said absolutely. We decided to go to Ruby Tuesdays. In a small town, our choices were limited. As we sat there waiting for our order to be served, we reminisced about the day. Unknown to us, the couple sitting in the booth behind us must have been listening to us. When we were ready to leave and asked for the check, the waitress informed us that there would not be a check forthcoming. She told us that the couple in back of us paid our bill as a “random act of kindness.”
I'm a retired mailman and believe me, as one who's been the recipient of such kindness as yours. Those acts of kindness are priceless!!Just a little something I do is to give a bottle of water to the people who deliver flyer bundles or do garbage pickup. It costs little and on a hot day they appreciate it.
You reminded me: When i was a single mom and clipped coupons to stretch my budget i'd clip ones for things we didn't use and wedge them between the items on the shelf so people who did use the products could use the coupons.It's been a while but I used to take a few dollar bills, ones, not fives and punch a hole near one of the short sides. Then I'd go into a local Dollar Tree store (everything's a dollar!) and in the toy section, I'd take a couple of the first few toys hanging on a peg and put one of the dollars there, on the peg, before replacing the toys. I'd do that with a few, in different spots. Anyway, it just made me feel good to think that some little boy or girl would find one of those dollars and be able to have something that made them happy, even if only for a minute. Sometimes some of the people that I saw shopping there looked like they didn't have much money to spare for "silly" things like toys or balloons so it made me feel a little warm inside. I've also dropped a few quarters at local elementary schools and public playgrounds. It never set me back much but it makes me happy to think that I may have made someone else happy too!
Well........are you fully vaccinated?I don't set out deliberately to do random acts, but I hope I show kindness in lots of ways to those I believe need it.
That is a bunch of bull****, there is no other word for it.Woman Who Fed Parking Meters Is Convicted of Obstructing Justice.
A 63-year-old grandmother of 10 was convicted of obstructing official business Thursday for what she considered a random act of kindness: plunking a dime and a nickel into two overdue parking meters so the cars parked there wouldn't be ticketed.
Other people did this & also got in trouble. To discourage others, they fined her $750
The city doesn't like to lose money. Thieves don't like competition. $60.00 fines for each expired meter adds up.That is a bunch of bull****, there is no other word for it.
Tickets for parking meters do nothing, but irritate the people.
Well........are you fully vaccinated?![]()