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Anonymous Good Deeds Reign Supreme in Tiny Town. It May Be the ‘Nicest Place’ in US

6 29 2019 10 33 01 AM 10195061 1
6 29 2019 10 33 01 AM 10195061 1

Do you love your community?

We certainly want to hear about it. And so do others!

Last week my town hosted the Walldogs. It was amazing! A major act of kindness. But what about events that aren’t big? And don’t happen once in a lifetime, but happen on a weekly basis. What about that?

That’s where I want Positive News For You and our nonprofit, PN4UINC, to be backing all of them. Anonymous acts of kindness. Years ago, I wrote an article that declared let’s see purposeful acts of kindness. Not just random acts. Purposeful acts. Intentional acts. The story you are going to read about is where acts of kindness happen. Every day. All the time. Who’s in?

I want you to be inspired. Encouraged.

I read this article and I thought, I am going to start carrying bears, bracelets, stickers and more and start giving them out in grocery stores, parking lots and anywhere I am. To remind me people of the good…but anonymously. (Leaving a PN4U bear in a cart with a little child might make everything change.)

What do you think? smiley

This story was submitted as a nomination to the Reader’s Digest “Top 50 Nicest Places in America” contest: a crowd-sourced effort to uncover nooks where people are still kind and respectful in an era of cultural and political divides. Be sure and vote for which story you think should be nominated as the Nicest Place by visiting the Reader’s Digest website.

Crimes of compassion are nothing new in this melting pot, where everyone gets along, no matter what part of the world they came from. {{more}}

Three years ago, when Lydia Clark-Sumpter moved to Harding Park, a blue-collar neighborhood of 236 tidy homes on the East River in New York City’s Bronx borough, there was a big smiley-face balloon tied to her front gate, and no clue as to who left it.

That winter, after a bad storm, Clark-Sumpter opened her door, ready to dig herself out, only to find that someone had already saved her the trouble.

“Not only did they shovel, but they came in the gate and all the way up to the front door,” she says. Later that year, she returned from work to find a bag of fresh-picked tomatoes, cucumbers, and eggplants on her patio.

Clark-Sumpter wasn’t the only victim. Retired NYPD detective Elbin Mena, who has lived in Harding Park for 35 years, also found his walk mysteriously shoveled that winter. He knew to expect such things and was prepared. He has motion-sensor cameras, and when he reviewed the video footage, he was able to identify—and thank—his neighbor.

LOOK: American Ninjas Are Positive People

On that same block, garbage cans are mysteriously hauled back up driveways on garbage day. José Gonzalez, president of the Harding Park Homeowners Association, knows who is responsible: It’s Mena who is sparing his neighbors that little pain. (Until now, Gonzalez had kept Mena’s secret.)

As for the welcoming neighbor who tied a balloon to Clark-Sumpter’s front gate? The perpetrator is still on the loose. When you live in Harding Park, you have to get used to that kind of thing. That’s just life in a high-crimes-of-compassion neighborhood.

Reprinted with permission from Reader’s Digest. To read the full Cedar House nomination, you can visit the Reader’s Digest website.

Amazing, right?

So…

I want to hear about your acts of kindness. A note, an article, a picture, a Facebook post. And we are going to start changing communities with acts of goodness and kindness.

If you think this is a good idea, take the time to share and the time to participate.

Thanks!

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