About 10 years ago, I was working as a waiter at a small restaurant. We offered a set lunch at a reasonable price, and one day, an elderly man came in and asked about it. After hearing the price, he sighed deeply and seemed ready to leave. He looked like he couldn’t afford it, and I felt a pang of sympathy for him. Without giving it much thought, I decided to help him out. I quietly fed him the meal and, to my surprise, I paid for it myself, not wanting him to leave without eating.
Later that day, when my manager found out what I had done, he was furious. He scolded me harshly, saying that I shouldn’t have given away the meal because it would set a precedent and they would keep coming in expecting free food. His words stung, but I couldn’t undo what I had already done.
I simply hoped the man appreciated the meal and that my small act of kindness had made a difference in his day.
However, something unexpected happened later that evening. A man, who looked fairly ordinary, came in and had a meal.
When he finished, he left me a tip. It wasn’t just any tip—it was an incredibly generous one, far more than I had ever received before. I stood there in shock, unsure of how to react, but I realized this could be a life-changing gesture.
My rent was overdue, and I had mounting debt that I was struggling to pay off. I had been feeling the weight of it all, wondering how I was going to make ends meet. The tip left by the ordinary-looking man was exactly the amount I needed to cover my rent and pay down my debt. It was as if the God had sent me the help I desperately needed, all thanks to that one act of kindness.
I couldn’t help but reflect on how everything had unfolded. That moment of compassion toward the elderly man, despite my manager’s disapproval, had led to something beyond what I could have imagined. It felt like the God had a way of balancing things out. I had given a little, and in return, I had received much more than I could have hoped for.
Even when it seems risky or goes against the rules, can lead to unexpected rewards. The experience taught me that kindness, no matter how small, has a way of finding its way back to you when you need it most.