A heartwarming act of kindness was reported after a man found out that his pet was stolen by a drug addict, but instead of calling the cops, he paid for her rehabilitation.
Brayden Morton of Cranbrook, B.C., shared first on social media in June that his Shar-Pei, Darla, was stolen from his yard in an old blue pick-up truck.
The post ended up getting shared about 30,000 times and he offered a $5,000 reward which resulted in his phone getting blown up with calls.
A person called him from a blocked number and all he could hear was a young woman crying, he felt it must be the same person who had Darla. “She wasn’t talking yet, I could just hear her crying and I said to her ‘listen, I’m not mad at you, I’m not anything,'” Morton said.
“‘I’ve messed up a lot in my life. Let me go home, I’ll grab the cash reward for you and I will come meet you. Where do you want to meet?'” He met her at a mall parking lot and immediately realized that she was addicted to drugs.
“As soon as I saw this young girl I knew she was addicted to drugs,” he said. “I walked up to her and gave her a hug and told her it was alright and I wasn’t mad because I understand what she’s going through all to well.”
“I am a recovering fentanyl addict who has been in recovery for just over six years and I am a Drug and Alcohol Interventionist now.”
“I was living the exact same way as she was six short years ago. I told her about my past and how messed up I was we talked for about 20 mins she told me she didn’t want the reward money she just couldn’t live with herself for taking Darla.”
“She knew how many times my post had been shared and felt like shit about what she assisted in. I asked her if I could pay for her to go to treatment and this poor young girl and I just cried together and she finally said yes.”
After this incident, he met a man as a result of this ordeal: the man in the blue truck. Morton found him but learned he had nothing to do with it.
“I had to pull over and talk to him as I felt bad for my reaction when I initially found him. He was trying to sleep in his truck and had two dogs with him. I told him I apologized for the way I acted and I’m sorry for accusing him.”
Posted by Brayden Morton on Saturday, 19 June 2021
“He started telling me about the way his life has gone the past few weeks and how he ended up homeless and in Cranbrook. I gave him a hug goodbye and was leaving. When I was driving I knew I couldn’t leave him there with those dogs outside.”
“I went back and told him to follow me and I went and got him a hotel for a week. We went and got him and his two dogs in a room. The pic above is myself and him.”
Morton shared a Facebook post describing this whole encounter, and five of his friends offered to chip in and got him another week. Apart from that they helped get him set up with a job, and he had his first day shortly after.
“I would say honestly, more than anything it was humbling and it was exactly what I needed in my life at that point in time, those people helped me immensely,” Morton said. “Those people don’t know what they did for me too. I have some personal stuff on the go and those people really warmed my heart and humbled me.”