There was nothing extraordinary about the story, but something about the image touched me.
The 54-year-old man in the hospital bed is in an intensive care unit. Just a few weeks ago, he had a liver transplant. The man giving him a shave is his son-in-law. The man’s daughter posted the photo along with her brief explanation.
“Tenderness between men,” she wrote on Reddit. “My husband with my dad in the ICU, giving him his first shave in weeks after a liver transplant. I was so grateful for this moment.”
We put up statues and monuments to the wrong people. We name buildings and roads after politicians. We love winners and those who have achieved some sort of big success. But we humans are at our best when we’re doing “little” things — every time one individual takes the time and makes the effort to do something kind and loving for another.

Healthy partner will always ask, ‘Who do you really want to be?’
If you’re still able to read this site, Harold Camping is wrong yet again
Food addiction means you’re missing something important that you need
How miserable does someone have to be to ‘troll’ a cute dog picture?
Social media can be dangerous for those of us raised by narcissists
Public discourse is distorted by constant outrage over anecdotes
We’re neither friends nor enemies, just strangers who share the past
Society needs storytellers to help make sense of a changing world
My bad teen poetry suggests I’ve always hungered for missing love