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From Being Kind

How to Be Kind[edit]

I'm Kyle Smith. I've been a hospice chaplain for fifteen years.

I sit with people who are dying. Not sometimes—every day. I hold hands that are cold and thin. I listen to final words. I witness the last breaths. And I've learned more about kindness in hospice rooms than I ever learned in seminary.

Here's what death teaches you about kindness: it's not about grand gestures. It's about presence. It's about showing up when showing up is hard. It's about the small moment of connection that says, "You matter. You're not alone."

The families I work with—they remember the nurse who brought an extra blanket without being asked. The aide who took time to brush their mother's hair. The doctor who sat down instead of standing. The kindnesses that cost almost nothing but meant everything.

I write about kindness because I've seen what happens without it. And I've seen what happens with it. The difference is everything.

Where to Start[edit]

If kindness feels hard right now:

If you want to be kinder:

If you're dealing with difficult people:

If you want to understand compassion:

A Note on This Wiki[edit]

I've cried more in the last fifteen years than I did in the forty before them. I've held people as they died. I've sat with families in the worst moments of their lives. And somehow, instead of burning out, I've found meaning.

What I've learned is that kindness isn't about feeling good. It's about acting good—even when you feel terrible. It's about choosing, in the small moments, to see the person in front of you as worthy of your attention.

This wiki won't teach you to be a saint. I'm not one. But it might help you be a little kinder. And in my experience, a little kindness goes a very long way.

Explore[edit]

Kyle Smith, holding space