And I'm not doing this to make ME feel good. I just thought it would put a smile on someone else's face.
In the past year I have:
Donated items to a no-kill, donation ran pet shelter
Wrote cards to soldiers and nursing home residents
And currently hold a drive to donate money to Mississippi tornado victims
Donated items and toys and money to a donation run youth home
Even given coupons and freebie tickets to people in line at stores.
I don't do ANY of this to make ME feel better. I do it to make OTHERS feel better and that they are cherished as a person on this earth.
To be honest I don't think you need to give dollar store trinkets to strangers who already are having a great day visiting the MK. If you have some money burning a hole in your pocket and want to help out others I would give a donation to a homeless shelter or Children's Hospital. They are the ones needing to 'brighten their day" not a family at an expensive theme park. BUT if you do want to do something nice at the parks just do stuff like offer your seat on the bus, let others go before you in line, say good morning to people at the bus stop, etc. That kind of thing.
This kinda makes me sad for grammimouse. She gave your child a gift and considered it a nice thing and now it's notWell, looking back through grammimouse's old posts (since she is a rather infrequent poster, I'm afraid she won't come back into here), I have confirmed that we were at Disney during the same time in October 2012. We were approached by an older lady at The Little Mermaid show at DHS and asked if she could give our daughter a porcelain doll. We said that was fine, and she did present us with a porcelain doll. So, I guess I'm one of those people who looked like they couldn't afford to be at Disney.Though she told us it was because our daughter looked sweet and was well behaved.
Grammi, it was a nice gesture, but all I have to say is...I think your perceptions of other guests are kinda off. I can assure you that Disney isn't a financial strain on us, we do indulge our kids at Disney (probably too much), and we take at least yearly trips to Disney. That day was a rough day for us for a couple of reasons, and our (then) 2 year old was definitely acting like a 2 year old that day, it was super hot, and I'm sure we seemed a little...ragged. But we're not paupers, by any stretch. It's a little eye opening (and embarrassing) that we apparently put off that vibe though.
I'm going to go crawl in a corner now. Though I think that DH will find humor that the "porcelain doll lady" (as we refer to her) gave us a doll because we looked like we couldn't afford to buy one ourselves.![]()
This kinda makes me sad for grammimouse. She gave your child a gift and considered it a nice thing and now it's not. I guess this highlights how giving strangers gifts can backfire on you.
If all parts of the story are true, maybe a lesson can be learned that if you truly want to help people that are less fortunate, looking for people who look poor (and thinking you can determine someone's financial situation by their looks) at an expensive vacation destination isn't the way to do it.
Oh, I can assure you it's true from my side. I can describe the doll and everything (brown hair, red and navy striped outfit with a little white...it looked kinda 4th of July-ish). I would post a picture but we did get rid of it in the last pre-Christmas toy purge at our house.
I don't mean to call you a liar or anything, I just tend to always put that disclaimer whenever I hear something like that on the internet. Never know, you know?
And by the way, I don't think you're the one who needs to feel embarrassed about this story. I think we've all had our days of looking a little ragged in the parks, I think most people realize that's nothing out of the ordinary in a theme park and don't make assumptions about the family.
FYI I have asked that this thread be shut down. Originally it was good for an exchange of ideas about spreading joy. Now the trolls have taken over and turned it into nothing more than a board for them to express their pious feelings.
Have you read other posts than yours? Some sound quite rude and hostile.
Apparently nobody else's parents let them watch Bambi and taught Thumper's most important rule:
IF YOU CANT SAY SOMETHING NICE, DONT SAY NOTHING AT ALL .
Absolutely. But I think it's also be a lesson on giving strangers things and trinkets in general. YOU may think you are spreading "pixie dust" and feeling really good about it, but the recipient may not really feel the same way. Even if they accept the gift since since it's rather rude to turn a gift down.If all parts of the story are true, maybe a lesson can be learned that if you truly want to help people that are less fortunate, looking for people who look poor (and thinking you can determine someone's financial situation by their looks) at an expensive vacation destination isn't the way to do it.
I agree with this too and I didn't mean to pick on jtowntofloridaAnd by the way, I don't think you're the one who needs to feel embarrassed about this story. I think we've all had our days of looking a little ragged in the parks, I think most people realize that's nothing out of the ordinary in theme park and don't make assumptions about the family.
I did like the suggestion of offering to take pictures so that a whole family could get in a shot.
Otherwise, you all do realize the OP asked for suggestions for non-creepy things to do for adults, right? Honestly, if someone started offering to sprinkle me with glitter or hand me stickers and dollar store trinkets, I'd either be walking the other way or saying a polite "no, thank you".
I wouldn't be embarrassed at all. I am guessing she meant that she wasn't being frivolous with her money and giving dolls to people with Birkin bags or something. That she was just looking for nice families who seemed like they'd appreciate a gift.
I think some of the posts in this thread regarding donating time or money instead of giving gifts to strangers at WDW may have made her sensitive, but I am sure she didn't think you looked like Disney paupers (although I am almost always a Disney pauper by the end of every trip).
Instead of being embarrassed, I'd look at this as a cool six-degrees-of-separation kind of thing. What are the chances of finding (and being able to thank) a stranger who did something for you a year and a half ago?
I would hand them a card saying that a donation in their honor has been made to the Human Fund.