Where I used to work they would regularly order breakfast from one of the local eateries. nothing formal. Place your order pays your money.
So I got in cahoots with the woman who did the ordering and would once or twice a week pay for someone else's breakfast. Anonymously. They'd draw name from the list and that person would have a surprise that day. Cost a few extra bucks but it always made that person's day.
After a few months I noticed the winners would then start paying it forward as well, buying for someone else (but not anonymously).
It was 4 years before they finally figured out it was me.
So I love this story.
Don't forget to pour the wine for your friends.
God Bless old Fezziwig
MSNBC:
Mystery pair at diner spark cascade of giving
Couple pay another table’s tab, and chain reaction of generosity lasts hours
By Danielle Johnson
NBCPhiladelphia.com
updated 5:09 p.m. ET, Mon., Dec . 14, 2009
PHILADELPHIA - It played like a scene from a holiday movie — a mystery couple, who didn’t leave their names or numbers, walked into a restaurant, finished their meal and then set off a chain reaction of generosity that lasted for hours.
That’s just what employees at the Aramingo Diner in the Port Richmond section of Philadelphia said a man and a woman did during their breakfast shift Saturday morning.
“It was magical. I had tears in my eyes because it never happened before. I’ve been here for 10 years, and I’ve never seen anything like that,” said Lynn Willard, a waitress.
Willard and other waitresses told NBC Philadelphia that the couple started the chain reaction by paying double: for their own meal and for the tab of another table of diners at the restaurant. There's no evidence that one group of diners knew the others.
“I could not believe it. And it continued and continued — it was very nice,” said Willard. “They asked us not to say anything until they left, say, ‘Merry Christmas, that person picked up your check.’”
For the next five hours, dozens of patrons got into that same holiday spirit and paid the favor forward.
The diner’s manager said not one person was concerned about price of the check — which ran between $12 and $30.
“It was a surprise to all of us; the girls were even taken aback,” said the diner's manager. “Those who took the check also tipped the waitress. So nobody had to do anything other than pass it on, and that’s what they did. They just passed it forward.”
It’s a true holiday story that proves how a small gesture of kindness can create some magic.
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