Random act of kindness

A random act of kindness is a selfless act performed by a person or people wishing either to assist or to cheer up an individual person or people. The phrase may have been coined by Anne Herbert, who says that she wrote "Practice random kindness and senseless acts of beauty" on a place mat at a Sausalito restaurant in 1982 or 1983.[1][2] Either spontaneous or planned, random acts of kindness are encouraged by various communities. Another story credits much of this phrase to Bakersfield College professor Chuck Wall of Bakersfield, California.[3][4]

Examples of events or groups

In film and literature

Negative Effects

Random acts of kindness are known not to produce good outcomes at times. For example, in the case of the 2014–15 floods in Southeast Asia and South Asia in Malaysia, random acts of donations were not reaching their intended targets, rather being strewn about becoming streetside rubbish that further complicated planning, cleanup, and relief efforts.[15] Additionally, people claiming to help others randomly took selfies on social media,[16] sparking a disaster tourism frenzy of I was there helping,[17] whereby actual relief vehicles were delayed by the excessively clogged traffic, additionally there was some theft of relief supplies by pilferers pretending to be among the helping. This is because those acts were random rather than coordinated with people who are experts in the task with a bigger picture understanding of needs, resulting in unintended consequences.

See also

References