Every week, while putting this together, I find myself thinking the same thing before I even start writing. There is no shortage of noise in the world right now. And somewhere in the middle of all that, it becomes very easy to believe that maybe kindness is becoming rare, or at least harder to notice.
But then you come across stories like these.
Just small, real moments where people, and sometimes even animals, respond in a way that feels instinctively right, without overthinking it.
This week, I couldn’t pick just one story. Both of these stayed with me in different ways, and it didn’t feel right leaving either of them out.
So this week’s Kindness Report has two stories.
One where people came together without knowing each other. And one where a group of dogs stayed together when they could have easily gone their own way.
In the city of Almaty in Kazakhstan, a moment unfolded that, on the surface, lasted only a few minutes, but somehow ended up staying with people far longer than that.
A dog had fallen into a fast-moving irrigation canal, the kind where the current doesn’t give you much time to think. Anyone who has seen water like that knows how quickly things can go wrong, and how difficult it is to pull anything or anyone out once they’re caught in it.
People nearby noticed. And then something very simple, but very rare, happened.
Nobody waited.
There was no hesitation, no standing back to see who would step in first, no crowd forming just to watch. Instead, people began moving toward the edge of the canal, reaching out, positioning themselves, and without any formal coordination, they formed a human chain.
One person held onto another. Then another joined. And then another.
Strangers — complete strangers — trusting each other enough to lean in together, to stretch just a little further than they would alone, until finally someone was able to reach the dog and pull it out of the rushing water.
The video of this moment went viral later, but if you watch it closely, it doesn’t feel like something that was meant for the internet. It feels like something that just happened because, in that moment, it was the most natural thing to do.
What makes this story even more meaningful is what happened after.
The city of Almaty decided not to let that moment disappear into the endless scroll of viral clips. Instead, they chose to turn it into a public art installation, a statue capturing that exact human chain, freezing that brief act of unity into something people can walk past, pause at, and remember.
Not because it was extraordinary.
But because it showed something, we often forget that when the moment calls for it, people are still capable of coming together without being asked, without being told, without needing a reason beyond “this needs to be done.”
The second story comes from China, and it feels completely different on the surface, but somehow lands in the same place.
Seven dogs had been kept in captivity, far from where they originally belonged. The details around how they ended up there aren’t the important part here. What matters is what they did next.
They escaped.
And once they were out, they had a choice: whether to scatter, to run in different directions, to fend for themselves in an unfamiliar place where nothing would feel safe or known.
But they didn’t do that. They stayed together.
All seven of them.
And then, somehow, and this is the part that’s hard to fully explain, they began making their way back home. Not for a few minutes, not for a short distance, but for nearly 17 kilometers (about 11 miles). In fact, if you look closely at the video, one dog was bit injured, but the other dogs didn’t leave him behind. They waited and helped him to keep on track with them, so they could stay together.
Through roads they didn’t know. Through spaces that weren’t familiar. With no one guiding them, no map, no instructions, just something internal that kept them moving in the right direction.
And they didn’t leave anyone behind.
All seven of them made it back home.
The story quickly spread online, gathering millions of views, because it was quietly unbelievable in a way that doesn’t need exaggeration. There’s something deeply moving about the idea that even in uncertainty, even in unfamiliar surroundings, they chose to stay together and somehow found their way home.
The people now also demand movie production houses like Pixar to make a movie for this unbelievable but wholesome story.
If you put these two stories side by side, they almost feel like reflections of each other.
In one, humans instinctively came together for a life that wasn’t theirs, forming a chain without knowing where it would end, just trusting that together they could reach a little further.
In the other, a group of dogs chose not to break apart even when it might have been easier to do so, moving together through uncertainty until they reached something familiar again.
Neither story is trying to be symbolic. But they end up saying something anyway.
That maybe, beneath everything else, there is still something in all of us (human or animal) that leans toward connection instead of isolation, toward helping instead of stepping back, toward staying instead of leaving.
And maybe we don’t talk about that enough.
Maybe kindness isn’t something we need to create or force or remind ourselves to practice all the time.
Maybe it’s already there, in the way we respond in moments that don’t give us time to overthink.
A few strangers formed a chain without being asked.
Seven dogs refused to walk away from each other.
That’s not planned kindness.
That’s instinct.
And maybe that’s what makes it feel real.
Missed the Previous Kindness Reports? Read it here:
The Kindness Report #2: A Small Moment in 1999… That Found Its Way Back 25 Years Later
The Kindness Report #1: A Postal Worker Who Drove 52 Miles Just to Return a Lost Wallet
Seen something kind around you?
If there’s a small, real moment of kindness happening in your community, send it our way. We’d love to share it in a future Kindness Report.
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Thank you, Ritish, for the wonderfully inspiring stories!
Joanna
Thanks for Joining in for this week's kindness report, Joanna. appreciate it.
These are very inspiring stories, thanks for sharing! I've seen other instances of people forming chains to rescue animals, I believe they learned from watching previous stories, which allows people to be empowered to successfully make the rescues. Love these!
Yess, I love when people do such things. One small act of kindness create a ripple effect that just goes on and on.
Thanks Tamara for your lovely comment.
I loved these stories! It’s so refreshing to read about happiness in our world that seems so embroiled in turmoil. And, I love dogs!!
Thanks Dennis. Love knowing and writing about these wholesome stories. Ofcourse you love dogs. Give my love and pet to Maggie ❤️
I am re-blogging to hopefully encourage kindness in others. Thank you for an inspiring blog today.
That honestly means a lot, thank you. The fact that you’re sharing it forward is kind of the whole point of this series… just letting these small stories travel a little further. Really appreciate it.
Great stories, Ritish! It was smart of those people to form a chain to rescue the dog. It kept the one who did the rescue from falling in the water. It's nice that those dogs escaped captivation and went home. It makes me wonder why they were captivated.
Yeah, those humans did an amazing job. And I've searched for it about why the dogs were kept like that, and I found they were stolen and escaped from the butcher's truck. Corgi, one of the 7 dog became the leader and brought all of them back home safely.
Wow, Ritish! 😲
Wow...tears over here. Thank you so much. I can't think of two stories that could be better when paired together. Lessons here...and so much love. Thank you, Ritish! 💝💝💝
I’m really glad you felt that, Vicki means a lot that it connected with you like that. Always love sharing stories like these ❤️
Don’t stop! We need the goodness.
❤️❤️❤️
Love these beautiful stories, Ritish. Your conclusion that "And maybe we don’t talk about that enough." is so true! Thank you for reminding of that and getting the conversation going with these amazing stories!!
Yes, Wynne I kept thinking about that while writing that how these things are happening all around us, but we don’t really pause to talk about them enough. So in a way, comments like yours are already doing exactly that… continuing the conversation. Thanks!
No shortage of noise in the head either. Bless the animals, we'd be so lonely without them. Thankful for those who see them as fellow souls. That is who they are...frogs, lizards, birds, dogs... they complete the world, they complete us . This is a beautiful post
I absolutely agree with your words, Dawn. They are the fellow souls that complete this planet. The human consciousness knows how important they are to us and us to them, but there are few individuals among us who knowingly goes against it. I hope stories like these will serve as a reminder for them.
Warning: This post is amazing and really got me thinking. I just spent all this time sharing those thoughts, so I'll hit the send button, but feel free to not read it, as I have just ranted. This is time you can't get back if you continue onward.
I just researched these stories. It's rewarding to see love in every land. Perhaps I didn't know love for animals existed everywhere. Why is that?
Maybe because I've seen people stabbing live creatures with eating utensils & eating them raw, like the brilliant and ancient octopuses, Maybe.
I know how cows & others live & then are killed here, & I want no part of it.
But, I don't trust soy & whatever governments are doing to our food sources... reactivating the pesticide-free garden here soon. Strange that love and hate seem to be a YinYang level of equal strength.
But the love, compassion for others who are just here, same as us (insects too)... may it win.
Maybe we all chose an incarnation here, maybe not, we should stick together in the experience regardless. I don't even want to eat plants because I've done a lot of research about how they communicate with one another, how they have awareness... look at vines... how the h*** do they know where the nearest thing is to cling onto for a stable life?
I didn't create this world where things eat one another, & I'm not happy about it, but I've no choice to be compliant to the design to some degree.
With that, an X video stated that those dogs were stolen to be food, how all from the same family escaped is beyond me. Supposedly, they made it home. I hope that is true. I don't know why it's okay to eat some animals, but not others. A cow is a hamburger, so it's alright to eat, but a dogburger is evil... where do we get our standards? I read a story about two smart pigs escaping from the death house... they weren't ready to be bacon, they wanted to live.