How Would You React? a Learning Topic About Gratitude

Updated on October 29, 2012
V.W. asks from Atlanta, GA
17 answers

5 years ago, we moved back to our old neighborhood after a few years overseas. We enrolled our girls in an elementary school. They where then in 3rd and 4th grades. Our 4th grader was rather a shy girl, not big crowd type. We were thrilled when she came back home the first day of school with what she call a big request. As soon as she jumped into her seat, she said "Mom, guest what".. You had a great day, I said. Yes, but I need your help... I thought of a list of school supplies that her teacher might need. No, her request was different, a really big one. The Principal had just told them about a little girl whose Mom has MS (Multiple Sclerosis) and could not drive; the parents were in need of someone to help them get their girl to school. My daughter had not waited for my answer, she had volunteered to do it on my behalf and reassured her principal that I would do it. I was a stay-at-home mom of 4.
That was my daughter major request; I did not hesitate one minute, but I wanted to meet the parents first. It was Thursday and the next day, I went to meet the principal. She phoned the parents and within a few minutes, I was at their doorstep. The father was at work, but the Mother was thrilled to have someone volunteer. The girl's dad I would learn works early hours and can't afford to be late for his job.
The following Monday (it was end of August 2007), we stopped as promsed, 7:25 AM and picked her while her little sister waved goodbye. We did the same trip everyday, we will pick her up at the same time and would drop her on our way back to our home. We were never late, never got to school late, kids got perfect attendance awards and things went well until Feburary 2008. I had a meeting that went 15 minutes overtime. I called the school to notify the teachers that I would be late, may 12 or 15 minutes and that was not a big deal. I called our litle friend Mom to reassure her that I might be late, but that she would not be worried. As I raced to get the kids and pulled in front of the school main entrance, I noticed that one girl is missing, my children were sitiing under a tree with one teacher who actually volunteer to stay with them; I rushed to apologize to the teacher, she reassured me, but explained that my other girl has been picked up by her grandmother. I was surprised, but not shocked, I just thought that the parents may have asked a neighbor to pick the girl. When I drove to the house to make sure that she had actually been dropped as I was told, I was welcomed by an out-going lady, she introduced herself and Mrs.... M and grandmother of the house, she lived just a few miles (7 or so) from her son house.. she asked if I were the lady who drove her granddaughter to school everyday and then she added..."good for you..."
As I reopened my car, my mind started spining... what should I do, keep my commitment or not.
The next day, I resumedmy duty without regret and until the last of school, I picked her everyday and dropped her every afternoon.
The parents never said thank you, I met the father a couple of times, at my request... But I can never forget the teachers, the principal and my daughter, who were all grateful that for one year, I have help a little girl go to school. We were protected by many angels, The last day of school, I dropped her and thanked her Mother for letting me carry her daughter in my car, even taking her home when there was no one to open her door. I did not repeat the experience the next year.
I will later learn from the school that the year before, another parent had volunteer to do the same thing, but decline to repeat the experience. Not only was the grandma living a few miles away, but she had an older sister aged 22 at the time, also living in the same area.

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So What Happened?

Thank you for your input. The situation has not changed who I am, but has helped me readjust and
I have learned a few things out of it.
I have advised my children never to volunteer again on my behalf
I would ask more questions before getting involved in a situation like this one; it did not occur to me once that their were closed family members in the same neighborhood; we all are busy one way or another, we just lend out hands to assist others when there is a need, but the first people we expect to help are family members
I did not expect a thank you, but Thank you is a magic sentence that we all, young and old need to say, it is a way of showing appreciation.
This story is another story is my life, I can't just pretend it did not happen this way, it is a learning moment for me and my family.
A little girl went to school on time every day and the school did not have to worry about her and her school work.

Again thank you for your comments.

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B.F.

answers from Dallas on

I know what you mean. I took one of my son's friend home from school everyday for 9th grade, I sometimes fed him and took him back for band commitments (my son's commitment also). Did I get a thank you? No. Did I get a drop of gas money? No.

What I did get was my child seeing my compassion. I got another boy who calls me mom. I got to show a boy with a very strained parental relationship another kind of relationship between mom and child.
A year of driving, expensive. A year of giving, priceless.

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L.F.

answers from San Francisco on

You did an awesome thing. Some people feel entitled. It sounds like this family did and didn't have the decency to thank you properly. Its very sad because they have taught their child that you don't have to say thank you for anything or to be appreciative. You gave them a huge gift.

The grandma and or the older daughter should have been stepping up to help---the very least they could have done is say thank you on behalf of the parents etc. Or gave you some $ for gas.

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☆.A.

answers from Pittsburgh on

Ok---so I think your point is that this family requested help from a stranger rather than to have the older sis or grandma do it, right?
But the thing is that we have no idea if the sister worked or attended school, or if the grandmother worked or had an irregular work schedule that would not allow for the commitment you made time-wise.
You did a wonderful thing.
You did it for the right reasons and you made a real and significant difference in their lives that year!

3 moms found this helpful

E.A.

answers from Erie on

I'm not sure what your question is but I don't help people to receive gratitude. I do what I can to the best of my ability, don't do what I cannot do, and try to do right by everyone I try to help. I try not to judge based on what I see because there is no way I could know all of the details that lead someone to need help.

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K.H.

answers from Richmond on

the uninvolved grandmother is probably why they asked for your help in the first place..keep the commitment, you will thank yourself later
K. h. as a disabled person i can say quite clearly that i have never become numb or expected help from people, i have however gotten tired of the rudeness of some people who expect a long drawn out explanation of my injury, i mean, i was in walmart for go#s sake! go ahead LOOK, take a picture if you feel the need, but dont expect me to talk to you for twenty minutes about a thirty three old injury! and dont give the "oh, i am sorry" i am not! my younger sisters carseat broke my shoulder but saved her, small price to pay, wouldnt you say?now if you will excuse me, i gotta find my toddler

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C.V.

answers from Los Angeles on

I don't help people to receive gratitude, but I sure as hell do judge when they don't show it. Oh yes I said it, I judge when they don't show it and I can't help but wonder where are their manners?? That's pretty sad that she couldn't even say thank you not even once. And the grandma saying 'good for you'?? What a joke.

Once a couple years ago in my daughter's class a letter was sent home about a boy's mom who was going to have surgery and would be unable to cook dinners for a while. So the letter was asking for parents to donate dinners for a month. I volunteered and had pizzas and sodas delivered to the family. This was a family of 6 or 7 by the way so it wasn't cheap. Never got a thank you note, email, nothing. I'm assuming neither did any of the other parents.

Sorry but having a disability or injury is not a free pass to be without manners. I'm sure these are the same people who want to be treated equally or no different than others. I do think some of them feel entitled or become numb to all the help they receive, just like this mom probably has someone driving her child every year so she's come to expect it.

So to answer your question I probably would've resigned from being their personal driver well before the year was over. I'd also remind my daughter to always get my permission before volunteering me for anything. Although her heart was in the right place, it would've been awkward if you had to say no for some reason.

Also it doesn't matter if we don't know all the details, it only takes a second to say the words 'thank you' or to type out a quick email, or to have your husband make a quick call and say it for you, or write a short note. Really no effort at all. There's no excuse for no manners.

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R.K.

answers from Appleton on

Think of Karma as a balance scale. The good side of your Karma scale greatly outweighs the bad side of your Karma scale. If you send out good thoughts, ideas and energy -- you get good thoughts, ideas and energy sent back to you, not always by the same person. If someone lets you get ahead of them in line at the grocery checkout, or in traffic that is the good coming back to you.

This little girl may never say thank you to you but she will never forget you either. One day she will do something really nice for someone you may never meet. That is called paying it forward.

This family is probably simply overwhelmed. Put yourself in the place of a young mother who has just been given a death sentence and there are no appeals.

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A.B.

answers from Dallas on

That's a big commitment to have made, and it should have been asked of the parents not the children (i.e - they shouldn't have given a child an adult problem or adult responsibility). Since you were ok with it though, sounds like it worked well. As for the Grandma, you do not know what the grandmother's situation was in terms of being available all the time to take the child to school or had other kids that needed help, etc. I do think it's sad that the child's parents never said thank you, but I think your actions helped a child and were pleasing to God.

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S.H.

answers from St. Louis on

I'm not seeing a problem here...you volunteered, they accepted.

When we give, it should be from the heart without any expectations of thanks/approval. To expect any response negates the giving. To expect recompensation for your efforts....also negates "giving".

I applaud your daughter. What a wonderful child. Kudos to you for helping the other family. For myself, I would have continued the volunteer transportation as long as it was needed.

& as for the grandmother.....perhaps her time is filled with work, her own responsibilities, & providing for the Mom.

& with the 22yo daughter.....perhaps her time is filled with work, school, & her own life. My older son is 25, & his time is not "my" time to fill in.

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T.M.

answers from Tampa on

You did a great thing and you helped a child get to school all year long. That is huge and you had far more patience than most of us would have had in the same situation.

Yes, it does seem as though they were ungrateful...a thank you would have been appropriate for sure.

Bottom line is that you know that you put yourself out there and did a great thing...you have to just be proud of that.

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K.F.

answers from Salinas on

Why did you write this. I'm confused is there a question?

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M.P.

answers from Portland on

Why are you still thinking about this? It's been 4 years since you did this. I would've wanted them to thank me but I'd let it go long before now.

Later; Know that you did a good thing. You were helping the child. Yes, it appears that the family could've done more but the child would not be able to enlist the families help. Focus on the fact that you were helping a child and you did make a difference for that child.

It would be good to get a thank you. At the same time realize that we do good things for people, not for the thanks but because it's the right thing to do. We are helping ourselves when we help other people.

Later: You do not actually know that family members could've helped by driving her to school and picking her up. It just looks that way.

I feel sad they you're not going to volunteer to help anyone else because you had a bad experience with this one child/family. The lesson I would learn is to get more information before doing something and to be assertive about asking for thanks when that's important to you.

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D..

answers from Charlotte on

I'll bet the family members refused to do it.

Your experience sounds like it was ingratitude all the way around with the family and a sense of entitlement. I'm amazed you kept at it all year, to be honest.

I know that it would have been hard for you to do, but telling them how you felt about the fact that they never once thanked you would have been appropriate.

Dawn

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C.B.

answers from Houston on

You can't control other people's behavior. It is unfortunate that the family appeared to be ungrateful but you can focus on and feel good about helping someone in need and being a good example to your children as you showed compassion and dependability. And a lesson about how others will sometimes let you down but you continue to stand up is invaluable to your kids.

1 mom found this helpful
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M.B.

answers from Austin on

I think, rather than a topic about gratitude, you were able to teach your daughter compassion for others......

You already had a big-hearted little girl, one who would volunteer her mother, and know her mother WOULD help out others....

But this gave you the chance for your daughter to share you for that year..... this gave your daughter a chance to see YOUR compassion for a person you had never met.

That is the biggest lesson you can teach your child... compassion for others, no matter what their circumstance.

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C.B.

answers from San Francisco on

You did a great thing and God will bless you for it. But you have jumped to conclusions thinking that there were family that could have helped.

My first thought about grandma is perhaps she is on dialysis or something of the sort and so is unable/unavailable to take the child to school on a regular basis. You would not know that by just meeting her.

Also, perhaps the sister also has to be out of the area early for her own job or perhaps she is on dialysis or something of the short rendering her unavailable on a regular basis.

There may be MANY reasons why the family could not do this for themselves.

Don't second-guess your generosity and don't assume you've learned lessons that were not meant to be taught.

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❤.M.

answers from Los Angeles on

You did a great thing and you taught your children that in doing so.
You went above and beyond.
Good things will come back to you.

Having said that, I hope you told your daughter never to volunteer your
services without checking with you first then YOU will do the volunteering by calling the school that afternoon. :)

Wonderful act of kindness & role model.

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