NO ONE WANTED TO SERVE THE BLIND ELDERLY MAN AT THE CAFETERIA… UNTIL THE WAITRESS DISCOVERED WHO HE WAS…
They laughed when the blind old man asked for a table… and that laughter died in their throats minutes later.
The Aurora da Serra cafeteria, in Petrópolis, was where Anselmo Ferreira entered, wearing a worn cane, a gray coat with frayed elbows, and sunglasses.
— Excuse me… do you have a free table?

The waitresses exchanged glances and went back to polishing cups. A tourist clutched her bag. An executive whispered, “This isn’t a shelter.” Anselmo stood still. The air seemed to hold everyone’s breath.

Livia, the waitress, saw the scene. Mauro, the manager, gestured for her to ignore it. She went anyway.

— Come with me, Mr. Anselmo. It’s quieter in the corner, near the window.

She guided his arm, pulled the chair back, and adjusted the napkin. Anselmo touched the table, inhaled the aroma of the coffee, and asked:

Why do you call me by my name?

Because a name is the simplest way to remember that someone is a person.

At the counter, Mauro pulled Lívia aside and spoke softly, fiercely:

— Are you going to serve this man? He doesn’t look like he’s going to pay. You’ll scare away customers!

Livia held the tray firmly.

— If he asks, I’ll serve. If he fires me, I’ll accept. But I don’t fire anyone just because they look poor.

She brought a piping hot black coffee and two steaming cheese breads, with complimentary butter. When Anselmo cupped the cup in his hands, his voice came softly:

Thank you for not pretending I don’t exist. You get used to being invisible… but it never stops hurting.

Lívia swallowed her tears. She thought of her mother, who cleaned offices and came home without ever hearing a “good morning”.

The room filled up, and the whispers turned into judgment. “He’s lost his composure,” “he lets anyone in.” Lívia waited on tables, but always returned to check on Anselmo.

Then the door bell rang again. Two security guards entered, followed by Caio Vilar, a well-known businessman in the city. Mauro ran in smiling.

— Doctor Caio! What an honor!

Caio didn’t answer. He went straight to the corner, stopped in front of Anselmo, and knelt down.

— Dad… I’ve been looking for you all morning.

Silence fell like ice. Anselmo touched his son’s face and said:

I just wanted to experience how people treat those they deem worthless.

Caio stood up and stared at the room.

This is Anselmo Ferreira, founder of the Vilar Group. He lost his sight years ago, but he won a test. Today, only one person passed.

His eyes landed on Livia.

– Your name?

— Livia.

He gave her a card.

— Tomorrow, at eight o’clock, come and talk. People like you shouldn’t be hiding behind an apron.

Then he turned to Mauro:

And you’re fired. Now.

When father and son left, Caio left one last sentence for all to hear:

From today onwards, part of the profits here will go to a community support project. Because good coffee without humanity is just bitter water.

Lívia stood there, trembling, with the card in her hand and the certainty that kindness sometimes returns in the form of an open door.

“If you believe that no pain is greater than God’s promise, comment: I BELIEVE! And also tell us: which city are you watching us from?”