Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Southwest Passengers Step Up For Chicago Teacher After Overhearing Her Talking About Her Low-Income Students ❤️

Southwest Passengers Step Up For Chicago Teacher After Overhearing Her Talking About Her Low-Income Students ❤️
Kimberly Bermudez/Facebook, David Woo-Corbis via Getty Images

A teacher discussing her students on a domestic flight shows us that we can still be amazed by the kindness of strangers.


Kimberly Bermudez, a teacher on a Southwest Airlines flight to Florida, was discussing her job at Carlos Fuentes Elementary and the first grade students she teaches with a fellow passenger. The students mostly come from low-income families and when Bermudez was asked by the fellow passenger what her biggest challenge is, she replied it was when her kids came to school hungry.

The man she was talking to mentioned that his company donated to schools and perhaps they might be able to help her out. That's when Bermudez says she felt a tap on her shoulder and a different passenger said he couldn't help overhearing. That man then gave her a stack of cash with a tip to:

Do something amazing.

As the plane landed, other passengers who had overheard began slipping the grateful teacher more bills. When her mother picked her up, she got into the car and counted a total of $530.

Bermudez told The Washington Post what she said to the passengers:

'I'm not here to solicit money; I really am here on this plane just to see my parents, and one of them said, 'I know. That's why we're giving it to you. Use your voice. Use your gift of talking.'

Bermudez took to Facebook to share the story of kindness displayed by the strangers.


Her post went viral, and the story has since been picked up by major media outlets.



The story touched many.





But for many people, the story only showcases a much larger problem.









We are happy that Bermudez's school received much needed aid, but perhaps it's time to start looking at the larger picture by giving schools proper funding, and teachers livable wages along the ability to write off supplies they pay for out of pocket.

H/T: St. Louis Post, Washington Post

More from Trending

Jonathan Bennett; Jonathan Bennett as Aaron Samuels in 'Mean Girls'
Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images; Paramount Pictures

Jonathan Bennett Reveals He Wasn't First Choice For 'Mean Girls' Role With Wild Story

Most of us have applied for at least one dream job, only for it to be offered to someone else. But sometimes the story doesn't end with the job offer; in fact, we might get another chance at that job or even something better.

And according to Veronica Mars actor Jonathan Bennett, this concept can be applied to acting gigs, as well.

Keep ReadingShow less

People Share Things Their Partner Told Them That Changed The Way They Saw Them

Actions may speak louder than words, but that is not to say that words do not carry power.

In a single moment, how we feel about someone can totally change because of something surprising they have said.

Keep ReadingShow less
Jesse Watters; Person taking a bath
Fox News

Jesse Watters Dragged After Obsessing Over Men Who Take Bubble Baths In Bizarre Rant

The right-wing panic about masculinity continues apace, and the latest chapter in this very weird obsession comes via an unlikely villain: the bubble bath.

Fox News' Jesse Watters had an on-air rant about a government employee who shared a photo of himself working from home in his bathtub.

Keep ReadingShow less
Park Sung-hoon; Sung-hoon in 'Squid Game'
iMBC/Imazins via Getty Images/Netflix

Netflix Sparks Backlash After Casting Cis Male Actor To Play Trans Woman On 'Squid Game'

Netflix has sparked outrage for casting a cisgender male actor to play a trans female character in the second season of the popular survival thriller Netflix series, Squid Game.

In a meet-the-cast special, South Korean star Park Sung-hoon revealed he would play Hyun-ju, a.k.a. Player 120, a willing competitor in the murderous reality game show for a chance to win the grand cash prize to help pay for her gender-affirming surgery.

Keep ReadingShow less
Man in business suit with arms crossed
Aslan Kumarov/Unsplash

People Reveal How Their Boss Managed To Get On Their Last Nerve

Many employees look up to their bosses for guidance.

That is if they are inspirational leaders. Not all leaders are worth looking up to if they constantly look down on employees and view them as cogs in a machine.

Keep ReadingShow less