One morning, I was standing in line at my usual coffee shop, half awake and scrolling through my phone, when I noticed the woman ahead of me becoming increasingly anxious. She swiped her card several times, but each attempt was declined. The line fell quiet as her face turned red with embarrassment.
Leaning toward the cashier, she quietly said, “I just started a new job, and my first paycheck hasn’t arrived yet. Could you cancel the drink? I’m really sorry.” The worry in her voice stopped me in my tracks. Before she could step away, I told the cashier, “Add her order to mine.”
She turned around with tears in her eyes and whispered a shaky “thank you.” I smiled and told her it was nothing, assuming we would never see each other again. A week later, I returned to the same café and was surprised when the barista handed me my usual latte before I even ordered.
When I looked confused, she slid a small sticky note across the counter. It read: “From the woman you helped.” Standing there with that warm cup in my hands, I realized something important: kindness has a way of finding its way back to us, often when we least expect it