http://www.philly.com/philly/blogs/what_happened/Magic_at_the_Aramingo_Diner.html
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Magic at the Aramingo Diner


Last Saturday, Dec. 5th, something startling and wonderful happened at
The Aramingo Diner in Port Richmond.

The 52-year-old landmark restaurant at 3356 Aramingo Ave. is open 24
hours a day, so it's always a-bustle. But the place really hops during
weekend breakfast and lunch time. Last Saturday was no different, and
both wings of the diner - the booth area and the bigger dining room -
were lively.

The manager on duty, Linda (who asked that I not mention her last name
here, for reasons I can't get into but let's just say everything
worked out okay...), tells me that a couple in their 30s paid their
check at the register, then asked the cashier to let them secretly pay
the check of another couple in the dining room - a couple they didn't
know.

"They just wanted to do it," she said. "They thought it would be a
nice thing to do."

When the unsuspecting patrons went to pay their check, they were
floored to find out that strangers had picked up their tab. So they
asked the cashier to let them pay another table's check, also
anonymously.

When that table's patrons approached the register, they, too, decided
to pay the favor forward for yet another table of unsuspecting
strangers.

You know where this is going, right?

For two hours, delighted customer after delighted customer continued
to pay the favor forward. And a buzz began to grow. Not among patrons,
who had no inkling what was going down at the register, but among the
dining-room wait staff  - Marvin, Rosie, Jasmine and Lynn - and other
Aramingo workers moving in and out of the room.

"We were amazed," says Linda, adding that neither she nor her staffers
that day recognized any of the participating patrons as regulars.
"Nobody knew each other. But once they found out someone paid their
check, they got excited and wanted to do the same thing for another
table."

The checks weren't huge, says Linda. They varied between about twelve
bucks and $30 (many of the sneaky do-gooders even included tip money
in the gift).

But the impact made an out-sized impression on the staff, who marveled
at how that initial, single act of generosity kept repeating itself.

Says Linda, "In thirty years working here, I've never seen anything
like it. You might have someone pick up a check for another table, but
usually it's because they know them."

All in all, about 20 checks were "paid forward" (a term coined by
author Catherine Ryan Hyde, whose 2000 book, Pay It Forward was made
into an earnestly schmaltzy Hollywood movie).

The lovely cycle finally ended, two hours after it began, when a lone
diner, clearly unacquainted with the "pay it forward" concept, seemed
befuddled that someone had picked up his check. He simply accepted the
favor, grunted, and left.

Notes Linda, "He didn't even leave a tip."

Which didn't diminish the day's sweetness, which has lingered among
the Aramingo staff. Linda herself decided to pay the lesson forward a
few days later, when she was standing in line at the Wawa.

"There was a cop behind me. I said to the guy at the register, 'See
what's in his hands, and charge me and not him.' It was a cup of
coffee. I told the guy not to tell the cop I paid for it. I didn't
want it to look like a bribe."

The cop figured things out, though, and gave Linda a wave and a smile
when he got outside, which made her feel good.

Says Linda, "It was a nice thing to be part of."

So, on the off-chance that the first pay-it-forward couple at the
Aramingo Diner is reading this, please know that your gesture of
kindness didn't end when you walked out the door.

It morphed into hours of additional kindnesses. And who knows what
kindnesses those gestures prompted?
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