

My mom’s been ever searching for a vehicle for me so when I
fly back to Calgary in a few weeks, all I need to do is register and insure it.
I’m also very much happy about this serendipitous flight, as I haven’t really
been back in Calgary since I move up North, and so I’ll have food-truck
adventures and Italian Market dates to attend to with close friends and a mum
and sister to visit! Josie currently resides at the Kal Tire parking lot, where
they said it could stay until I move it, and it was another close friend who
drove me home on the night of the breakdown – a little soggy after a shower at
10:30 in the evening as she was preparing to turn in. I’ve had various people
offer to lend me their vehicles, some of whom I was very much shocked at such a
grand gesture.
I couldn’t be more appreciative for such kindness. I promise
that all of these generous offers and deeds will not go unnoticed and will
absolutely be paid forward. These last few weeks have really made me realise now
grateful I am for My People.
Ultimately, at the end of the day and when given the
opportunity, most people want to do good in the world. I don’t think it’s
because they’re expecting something in return, or that the underlying reason
was simply in case the same situation rises in reverse, I really think it has
to do with just being nice and having good souls. I don’t think we are
genetically coded to be shitty humans or that it all comes down to survival of
the fittest. I think it has to do with humans being social creatures; it takes
a village to raise a child and as Jack Johnson explains, we’re better together.
Most Kindly,
Kirstin
And I figure, maybe just believing in goodness generates as
tiny bit of the stuff, so that being so foolish as to believe in our better
natures, if just for a day, we actually contribute to the sum total generosity
in the university. - Julie Powell, Julie & Julia
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