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What's the nicest thing a complete stranger has done for you?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Some nice stories here. If you'd like to get one in your mail regularly, visit www.heroicstories.com and subscribe. No spam, no garbage, no advertising, just a true life 'heroic' story every week or so. It's one of the bright lights in what seems sometimes to be a dim and murky internet wasteland!
Word of warning though - if you're a bloke, read them when you're alone... wouldn't do to let the women folk see you sniffin' back a tear!
In my early twenties I was divorced with two kids under 3 years, no job and no money, and living in mums front room. Dad was on sick pay, which wasn't much in those days. Christmas was four weeks away. The man in their corner shop was selling up and the week before Christmas he came round with several bags of toys he had in his shop and gave them to me for the children.
I will never forget his kindness and should I get the opportunity to do anything for him then I would be happy to do so. I try to do the same to help others when I get the chance.
Quite a few, happily, & I always hope something kind I did made someone's day.
I was dashing to get the train which was already at the platform and found when I got to the car park ticket machine that the price had gone up since the last time I'd been there, and I was 20p short. A guy nearby took the money from me & urged me to catch the train. When I got back, I found the correctly priced ticket stuck under my windscreen wiper. Thanks mate.
I have two stories which still give me a bit of a lump in my throat when I think about them.
When my daughter was about six or seven, a Pools representative knocked on the door and as I opened it, my daughter fell down the stairs and was crying her eyes out as she'd hurt herself. The man looked really concerned and had tears in his eyes. He returned about half an hour later, with a bag of sweets in his hand, to cheer her up. My daughter soon felt better!!
I was in Asda, trying to persuade my special needs son to try on a pair of slippers, but he was having none of it. He was screaming the place down and everyone was doing the usual gawping thing. I was getting really stressed with it all, until another shopper came over to me (I was expecting her to tell me to 'shut the child up') and started chatting to my son and stroking his hair, while I managed to successfully put the slippers on his feet. I finished my shopping calmly and with a big smile on my face!
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