MrInfinity
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 23, 2012
- Messages
- 2,577
I think you're overplanning. Unplanned niceness is great. But if you want to plan niceness there are more effective ways to donate and people who need it more. Lots of good ideas above that I agree with:
Give a place in line.
Give up a bus seat.
Offer to take a picture.
Give up an empty table if you see someone has food and can't find a spot.
I'm not big on handing out glow sticks. This is akin to taking in sandwiches to a restaurant and handing them out to the patrons. Disney is trying to sell those lightup swirlie things at $25 a pop. Giving out ponchos is similar.
I'm not grossed out by the lightup ice cube things. Nice if it was a random situational thing. If that family bought cubes to try to make eye contact w kids and give them out, gross. But it was a genuine spontaneous moment so it's cool.
And so on. Coming ready with gifts for strangers seems over the top. If something like that happens spontaneously, like your kid runs into the other little girl she waited in line with for an hour, later in a store, and they end up both finding a matching tsum tsum, it would probably be really memorable to buy them each one after talking to the parent. But if you have toys you really want to give away, the local good will can sell them and do more with the money than a parent at WDW.
Give a place in line.
Give up a bus seat.
Offer to take a picture.
Give up an empty table if you see someone has food and can't find a spot.
I'm not big on handing out glow sticks. This is akin to taking in sandwiches to a restaurant and handing them out to the patrons. Disney is trying to sell those lightup swirlie things at $25 a pop. Giving out ponchos is similar.
I'm not grossed out by the lightup ice cube things. Nice if it was a random situational thing. If that family bought cubes to try to make eye contact w kids and give them out, gross. But it was a genuine spontaneous moment so it's cool.
And so on. Coming ready with gifts for strangers seems over the top. If something like that happens spontaneously, like your kid runs into the other little girl she waited in line with for an hour, later in a store, and they end up both finding a matching tsum tsum, it would probably be really memorable to buy them each one after talking to the parent. But if you have toys you really want to give away, the local good will can sell them and do more with the money than a parent at WDW.