helping others.
- gaymen2
- 1 day ago
- 6 min read
Sent to us by CF:
Being curious and concerned, I walked towards the sound and saw some people whispering and looking back to the end of the next aisle. When I walked down that aisle, I saw an older lady had hit a shelf and many things had fallen to the ground and broken. She was kneeling on the floor embarrassed, frantically trying to clean it up.

I felt so bad for her because everyone was just standing there staring at her ! So, I went over and knelt beside her and told her not to worry, and started helping her pick up the broken pieces. After about a minute, the Store Manager came and knelt beside us and said,
“Leave it, we will clean this up.”
The Lady, totally embarrassed said,
“I need to pay for all this first.”
The Manager smiled, helped her to her feet, and said,
“No Ma’am, we have insurance for this, you do not have to pay anything!”
If you have read this far, I would like for you to give me a minute.
Wherever you are, close your eyes, and imagine God doing the same for you !
Collecting the pieces of your broken heart from all the blows that life has thrown at you. The cost for your mistakes, sins, and errors has already been covered by God who is poised to mend all your wounds. S/He wants to gently lift you to your feet again, help you clean up your mess, and pick up all the broken pieces.
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Far out at sea, five miles from shore, sailors spotted something impossible,- an elephant fighting to stay alive, its trunk rising and falling through the waves. It had been swept away while trying to cross a lagoon, carried deep into open water and too tired to swim back.
The Sri Lankan navy rushed to help, launching a rescue that would last twelve grueling hours.
Divers surrounded the struggling giant, speaking softly as they looped ropes around its body and slowly towed it toward land. Every movement was a race against time and the elephant’s will to live never wavered.
By dusk, its feet touched sand. With one final surge, it stood tall, trunk raised high, before disappearing into the forest.
The rescuers watched in silence exhausted, awed, and humbled. That day, one elephant’s fight for life became a reminder of something larger: that compassion, when it meets courage, can pull even the heaviest soul home.
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You might look at this picture - below -
and see a granddaughter comforting her grandfather in a hospital bed, but the truth is, the woman in the picture is a police officer. She met Bob just two years ago while she was on duty.
Lawrenceville Police Officer Dena Walker Pauly’s life changed forever when she was called to a local pawn shop, where the staff didn’t know how to help Bob.

Bob’s life has been full of struggles. He’s been on his own since childhood and has no known family. He was homeless for most of his life, and a stroke later left him unable to speak. His life has been marked by poverty and loneliness.
When Officer Pauly arrived at the pawn shop, she wasn’t sure how to help Bob either, but she could tell he needed assistance. She offered to take him home so he could show her what he needed. What she saw when she got there shocked her.
Although she was called there by the police, we believe she was truly sent by God. She quickly addressed Bob’s terrible living conditions and taught him basic skills, like throwing trash in the trash can instead of leaving it on the floor. She made sure he had food and began regularly cleaning his small apartment.
Officer Pauly eventually became Bob’s Power of Attorney for medical care. He’s been in the hospital since May, and today was an important day for both Bob and Dena.
Officer Pauly made the tough decision to start hospice care for Bob. She held his hand and told him over and over that she loved him. It’s very likely that she’s the first person to ever say those words to him.
This photo shows the true heart of law enforcement. We join this profession because we care. Sometimes the work is painful, but it’s also rewarding. We see a lot of bad, but sometimes we also get to see the good. And we have the chance to make a real difference in people’s lives.
Like Bob.
Officer Pauly, your dedication to your job and to helping others truly shows what it means to be a police officer. Stories like this happen every day, but they often go unnoticed because they don’t fit the usual narrative.”
Credit: Georgia Law Enforcement
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Love is patient.
For days on end, she slipped through busy streets like a ghost, weaving between cars, vanishing behind trash bins, flinching at every sudden noise. Human voices sent her running. No one could reach her. Bowls of food were placed at a distance, but whenever footsteps approached, she disappeared again—nothing left behind but frightened eyes and tangled fur.
Until one quiet moment changed everything.
A woman pulled over, stepped out of her car, and chose stillness over pursuit. She lowered herself onto the grass and waited. No calling. No grabbing. Just calm, steady patience. The dog stopped. Hesitated. Watched.
Time stretched on, and then, inch by careful inch, the stray moved forward—pulled by a feeling she barely remembered: safety.
When she finally rested her head against the woman’s open palm, the weight of fear seemed to dissolve in an instant.
Now she is Luna. She sleeps on soft blankets, eats until she’s full, and belongs to a family that cherishes her. The woman who once knelt silently in the grass now wakes each morning with Luna tucked beside her, warm, loved, and no longer alone.
From surviving to belonging—proof that sometimes, love doesn’t chase. It waits.

A woman and a man collide head-on in their cars. The impact is so great that both vehicles are completely destroyed, but incredibly, neither driver is injured.
After getting out of their respective cars, the woman says:
“But look at what’s become of our cars!”
"And miraculously, we don't have a single scratch!"
"This must be a sign from God for us to get to know each other, to be friends, for the rest of our days."
The man, captivated by the woman's beauty, replies:
"Oh yes! I completely agree with you. This is a sign from God."
The woman continues:
"Look, another miracle. My car is completely destroyed, but this bottle of wine didn't break. Surely God wants us to drink it and celebrate our good fortune."
The man, completely in agreement, uncorks the bottle, makes a toast, and drinks half of it. Then, he hands it back to her so she can drink too.
The woman takes the bottle and puts the cap on it.
The man, puzzled, asks him:
"Aren't you going to drink?"
The woman replies:
"No, I prefer to wait for the traffic police to come and give us the breathalyzer test."
MORAL OF THE STORY:
Women are and always will be more calculating and manipulative than beautiful !!! And more so than men. And trusting men are, and always will be, their victims, - as men are stupid when it comes to a pair of tits.
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