While we may imagine men and women in the U.S. military as always being somewhere else in the world, most are stationed somewhere in the United States often right next to neighboring towns and cities. They may not be deployed, yet they appreciate gestures of gratitude from the civilian population they protect all the same.
In a restaurant in Holly Pond, Alabama, a father and son, Johnny and Levi Lawrence, happened to witness a member of the public letting a large group of soldiers know that they were valued by paying for their meals.
Lawrence later shared the incident on Facebook. “He bought about 12 meals not including his own family’s,” he wrote. The act of generosity struck both Lawrences. Levi let his admiration be known on Facebook. “WE NEED MORE PEOPLE LIKE YOU SIR!” he wrote.
Thousands of social media users who saw the picture online agreed with his sentiments.
This is hardly an uncommon scenario among the American public who are an appreciative citizenry. A picture of a North Carolina man stepping up to treat members of the military to lunch at Chick-fil-A went viral in March 2019. The good Samaritan, in this case, Johnathan Full, was acting in memory of his late brother Joshua, who had served in the Marines. After struggling with post-traumatic stress disorder, the brother had taken his life.
The Full brothers happened to have their sons with them and used it as an opportunity to teach them about gratitude to people in the military.