Anonymous wrote:Here’s the thing. Kindness counts, but the lady who paid got scammed. I’m super glad if you and she feel super swell about it all. Maybe these people will meet cute later on, and become BFFs as the reminisce about the time when….
Her money would have been better placed helping people that she wouldn’t share space with. But because this was a well dressed woman who felt like an equal, she feels super great about being kind! Nothing that she would feel about getting scammed by one of those unwashed, soup begging poors in the other thread.
I suspect many are going to come to this thread and pat the payer on the back in this thread, while putting the OP in the other thread down for helping the crazy and soupless. The fact is, the other OP also abused a privileged position without realizing how much damage and exploitation of a vulnerable person her donation may have let to.
And come on, you talk about God and the like… is the Message really to help the rich at the mall, or the truly downtrodden?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This doesn't seem like a believable story. Like the woman hung back crying so you could ring up the person behind her and then you just left the register to walk with the crying lady and tell her about God's blessings?
Op. It happened. I was there witnessing the transaction.
I’m amazed at how jaded some of you are. Maybe that’s why I shared that I rarely see acts of true kindness like this in the dmv.
It wasn’t as sensational as you are trying to carve it out as. Two customers making purchases, one chips in to pay for the other, no strings attached other than “pay it forward.”
I help customers daily with purchases that mean a lot to them. Many share confidences. Some are there with significant others and are arguing or ask me for advice.
What I witnessed was a random act of kindness from one stranger to another.
But it’s just like the dmv to want to tarnish that sincerity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What was the item?
I ask because I routinely pay of people are short on groceries, but not for lingerie.
Me again. I decided I would pay it forward whenever I could when I used my last five dollars to get a all day pass to get to dc from Virginia for my pmf interviews in 2001, not realizing you couldn't use them until 9:30. Someone just put a token (remember those) on the turnstile so I could go in. I'm now a member of the SES and I have never forgotten that kindness.
Anonymous wrote:This doesn't seem like a believable story. Like the woman hung back crying so you could ring up the person behind her and then you just left the register to walk with the crying lady and tell her about God's blessings?
Anonymous wrote:Here’s the thing. Kindness counts, but the lady who paid got scammed. I’m super glad if you and she feel super swell about it all. Maybe these people will meet cute later on, and become BFFs as the reminisce about the time when….
Her money would have been better placed helping people that she wouldn’t share space with. But because this was a well dressed woman who felt like an equal, she feels super great about being kind! Nothing that she would feel about getting scammed by one of those unwashed, soup begging poors in the other thread.
I suspect many are going to come to this thread and pat the payer on the back in this thread, while putting the OP in the other thread down for helping the crazy and soupless. The fact is, the other OP also abused a privileged position without realizing how much damage and exploitation of a vulnerable person her donation may have let to.
And come on, you talk about God and the like… is the Message really to help the rich at the mall, or the truly downtrodden?
Anonymous wrote:Here’s the thing. Kindness counts, but the lady who paid got scammed. I’m super glad if you and she feel super swell about it all. Maybe these people will meet cute later on, and become BFFs as the reminisce about the time when….
Her money would have been better placed helping people that she wouldn’t share space with. But because this was a well dressed woman who felt like an equal, she feels super great about being kind! Nothing that she would feel about getting scammed by one of those unwashed, soup begging poors in the other thread.
I suspect many are going to come to this thread and pat the payer on the back in this thread, while putting the OP in the other thread down for helping the crazy and soupless. The fact is, the other OP also abused a privileged position without realizing how much damage and exploitation of a vulnerable person her donation may have let to.
And come on, you talk about God and the like… is the Message really to help the rich at the mall, or the truly downtrodden?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What was the item?
I ask because I routinely pay of people are short on groceries, but not for lingerie.
Anonymous wrote:What was the item?