9
0

The Good Thread at Patrick Dot Net


               
2022 Nov 7, 12:36pm   66,393 views  366 comments

by gabbar   follow (1)  

« First        Comments 361 - 366 of 366        Search these comments

361   gabbar   @   2025 Dec 26, 2:20am  




A Louisiana factory chief proved to be a real-life Santa Claus — giving each of his 540 full-time employees six-figure bonus checks totaling $240 million.

The generous gesture came after the benevolent boss sold the company for $1.7 billion.

Graham Walker, the now-former CEO of Fibrebond, told The Wall Street Journal that he would not agree to sell his company if prospective buyer Eaton did not earmark 15% of the proceeds for its employees — even though none of them owned stock.

The deal, which was completed earlier this year when Eaton acquired Fibrebond, triggered payouts to 540 full-time workers, averaging about $443,000 per worker spread over five years.

Source: https://nypost.com/2025/12/25/business/louisiana-boss-hands-workers-240m-in-bonuses-after-selling-his-company-for-1-7b/
362   MolotovCocktail   @   2025 Dec 26, 8:56am  

gabbar says




A Louisiana factory chief proved to be a real-life Santa Claus — giving each of his 540 full-time employees six-figure bonus checks totaling $240 million.

The generous gesture came after the benevolent boss sold the company for $1.7 billion.

Graham Walker, the now-former CEO of Fibrebond, told The Wall Street Journal that he would not agree to sell his company if prospective buyer Eaton did not earmark 15% of the proceeds for its employees — even though none of them owned stock.

The deal, which was completed earlier this year when Eaton acquired Fibrebond, triggered payouts to 540 full-time workers, averaging about $443,000 per worker spread over five years.

Source: https://nypost.com/2025/12/25/business/louisiana-boss-hands-workers-240m-in-bonuses-after-selling-his-company-for-1-7b/


$10 sez the payouts are conditioned upon them staying employed by the company. A company that will ship their jobs overseas pronto.
363   Patrick   @   2026 Jan 1, 2:15pm  



364   Patrick   @   2026 Feb 3, 10:45am  

https://www.coffeeandcovid.com/p/the-meaning-of-is-tuesday-february/comment/209282613


It’s sometimes easy to think we’re not making much of a difference. We wake up, get the family going, we go to work, maybe help a friend, just our normal routine. The truth is most of life is ordinary. We should never think though, our everyday actions don’t make a difference. Everything we do matters, not just the big things, but the small everyday acts we do. A smile, a kind word, a phone call to a friend that’s struggling, these are the things that have the greatest impact on others around us. In Mathew 10:42 Jesus said “whoever gives even a cup of cold water to one of my disciples, will be rewarded”. This meaning even a small act of kindness done will be noticed and rewarded.

When you go the extra mile at work, even something that goes unnoticed, your hard work, faithfulness, dedication, and the sacrifice you make, is noticed by God. Nothing we do goes unnoticed by him. These moments may seem ordinary but these are the things that have the biggest impact on the people we touch.

I often think of after my mother had passed. I didn’t miss the big things she did, it was all the small things. Every morning we would sit, have coffee and just talk. I missed that the most. I missed her encouraging words helping me to move forward, her positive message telling me I could succeed. I never realized that those small ordinary moments were the things that would one day mean the most to me. We should always be aware that it’s these small things we do everyday that have the greatest impact on the people around us. My mother passed away 33 years ago, more than 1/2 my life, and I still grieve the loss. This shows the impact her kindness had on my life and that grief has no timeline.

We all have many more ordinary days than miraculous ones, but the ordinary days do have purpose, they create the space for God to work and make those miraculous days in our life and those around us.

In the not too distant past I would wake and think maybe today things will start to change. We’ve all been through so much over these past 6 years. One positive thing we can do for those that have helped us is let them know, acknowledge it. thank them. People may never know the impact they had on you if you don’t acknowledge it. Let them know the positive impact they made on you.

I have plowed snow for 40 years. Over those years I have seen the stress caused by bad weather, people afraid they will be left. When I tell them that I will always be there to help them, and that before you know it the weather will warm. The perennials planted around their house will begin to pop and flower again, I feel their stress melting away.

As greedy and as selfish as man can be the earth pays him no attention. In the spring the earth will again tilt back on her axis and begin to warm. Like the earth life has seasons. There are seasons of growth, there are seasons of harvest. The winter is considered a season to connect with our inner self, and with our guardian angels, a time to awaken our spiritual consciousness.

Give the people around you a call. Let them know you will be there for them if they need you. Don’t let people think they are alone. Share the gifts that God has given to you. It’s those small things we do that can have the greatest impact on those around us. J.Goodrich
365   Patrick   @   2026 Feb 4, 11:05am  

https://www.coffeeandcovid.com/p/weird-stuff-wednesday-february-4


"I was at my son's high school graduation ceremony, sitting alone in the back row. My son was valedictorian, but I was the only family he had. His father had died when he was ten, and we had no other relatives. I watched other graduates surrounded by parents, grandparents, siblings, all cheering and taking photos.

My son kept looking back at me with sad eyes, clearly wishing he had more people there for him. As he walked across the stage to give his valedictorian speech, I heard someone sit down next to me. Then another person. And another.

I looked around and saw five elderly people I'd never met settling into the empty seats around me. One woman leaned over and whispered, 'We're here for your son. What's his name?' 'Tyler,' I said, confused. 'Go Tyler!' she shouted when he took the microphone.

The others joined in, cheering and clapping like proud grandparents. After the ceremony, they came down with me to take photos. They posed with Tyler, hugged him, told him how proud they were. My son was beaming.

As they were leaving, I stopped them. 'Why did you do this? You don't even know us.' An older man smiled. 'We're from the senior center next door. We saw the graduation setup and asked the principal if any students didn't have family coming. He mentioned your son.'

His voice was gentle. 'We all have grandchildren who are too busy to visit us. Today, we got to be grandparents again, and your son got a family cheering for him. Everybody wins.' I hugged each of them, crying.

Tyler still has those photos on his wall. He calls them his 'graduation grandparents,' and he visits them at the senior center every month." 4/4 —Angela T., Tampa, FL
366   gabbar   @   2026 Mar 2, 11:39am  

In the spring of 2007, James Bowen was living in supported housing in Tottenham, North London, after years of homelessness and heroin addiction. He was on a methadone program, trying to rebuild his life one careful step at a time. By day, he busked in Covent Garden, earning just enough to get by. By night, he returned to a small flat that felt more like survival than stability.

One evening, he noticed an injured ginger cat curled up in the hallway of his building. The cat was thin, scratched, and clearly a stray. James fed him, treated his wounds as best he could, and assumed the cat would move on. Instead, the cat stayed. He followed James out the door, even boarding a bus with him as he headed to work. James named him Bob.

Keeping Bob meant responsibility food, vet visits, safety. For someone still fighting addiction, that responsibility mattered. James later said caring for Bob gave him a reason to stay clean. The cat rode on his shoulders while he busked, calmly watching the crowds. People were drawn to the unusual pair. What began as quiet companionship soon became something visible and magnetic.

When James started selling The Big Issue, more people stopped to talk. Tourists filmed them. Photos circulated online. In 2010, a local newspaper told their story, which led to a book deal. A Street Cat Named Bob was published in 2012 and quickly became an international bestseller. It was translated into dozens of languages and later adapted into a film, with Bob appearing as himself.

For years, their story was told as a modern parable: a stray cat saves a homeless man, and both find a new life. James credited Bob with helping him complete his recovery program. The attention brought financial stability, global travel, and a platform to speak about homelessness and addiction.But real life did not follow a perfect arc.

In June 2020, Bob was found dead near their home. He was at least fourteen years old. The loss devastated James. In the years that followed, he faced financial strain and personal setbacks. He relapsed, lost his home, and struggled again. The neat redemption narrative unraveled.Yet the story did not end there.

By 2023, James became clean again. He returned to advocacy work supporting homelessness and animal welfare charities. He continues to speak openly about addiction and recovery not as a tidy transformation, but as an ongoing process.

James and Bob’s story is not simply about a cat rescuing a man. It is about purpose, responsibility, grief, and the reality that recovery is rarely linear. For thirteen years, they relied on each other. Bob offered companionship and structure. James offered care and protection.

Their bond changed both of their lives and touched millions of readers who saw in it a reminder that even small acts of compassion can alter a human trajectory.

Sometimes love pulls you out of the dark.
And sometimes, after that love is gone, you have to find the strength to keep walking on your own.



Credit: Martin Butler, Ph.D.

« First        Comments 361 - 366 of 366        Search these comments

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   users   suggestions   gaiste