Austin Fishing

Austin Fishing 36 years of always putting my clients on fish resulting in a very enjoyable experience.

10/11/2025

"My name’s Selena. I’m 84. I live alone above a laundromat in Cleveland. Every Tuesday, I walk to the pharmacy for my pills. Same time. Same route. Same tired face behind the counter.

For 12 years, I watched her, Lena, the young pharmacist with dark circles like bruises. She’d hand me my bag, whisper “Next!”, and never smile. I thought she was cold. Until the day I saw her cry.

It was rainy. I’d forgotten my umbrella. I ducked under the pharmacy’s awning, waiting for the downpour to stop. Through the glass door, I saw Lena. She was alone in the back room, head in her hands. Sobbing. Then she wiped her face, took a deep breath, and walked back to the counter. “Next!”

Something in me broke.

The next Tuesday, I brought her a thermos of tomato soup (homemade, with extra garlic, my husband’s recipe). I set it on the counter. “For you,” I said. “You look like you need it.” She froze. “What?” I repeated, louder, “For you. On the house.” She just stared.

I did it again the next week. A slice of apple pie. Then a pair of warm socks (I knit them myself). Never said a word. Just left them.

One day, she stopped me. “Why?” she asked. Her voice shook. “You don’t know me.”

I told her about my Harry. How he worked 3 jobs after I got sick. How he’d come home exhausted but still fixed the neighbor’s leaky faucet. “Kindness isn’t about knowing someone,” I said. “It’s about seeing them.”

Then she told me her story,
She was raising her sister’s kids after her sister died. Working 60 hours a week. “I haven’t slept through the night in 3 years,” she whispered. “I’m scared I’ll make a mistake.... give someone the wrong pills.”

That’s when I saw it, not the “cold” pharmacist. But a person.

I started bringing her more than soup. I’d sit in the waiting area (even when I didn’t have a prescription) and talk to her when it was quiet. “You’re doing good, honey,” I’d say. “Your sister would be proud.”

Last month, I got a call from Lena. “Selena.... can you come to the pharmacy?” When I got there, she handed me an envelope. Inside, $500. “For your heating bill,” she said. “My kids and I saved it. You kept me going when I thought I’d drown.”

But the real shock came yesterday. I walked in and saw it, a small wooden bench by the drive-thru window. A sign read,

“Sit here when you’re tired. Someone sees you.”

Lena told me, “I bought it with my own money. Now, if a driver’s upset or stressed..... I hand them a cup of coffee and say, ‘Take a seat. Rest.’”

Yesterday, a trucker sat there for 20 minutes. Crying. He’d just lost his job. Today, a nurse sat there, her scrubs stained with tears. Lena sat with her.

This isn’t about soup or benches.
It’s about how one person, tired, invisible, overlooked—can crack open the world for someone else.

You don’t need a fancy project.
You don’t need money.
You just need to see the person in front of you.

And if you’re the one feeling unseen?
Someone’s watching you right now.
Waiting for you to sit down.
Waiting to say, “I see you. It’s okay.”

P.S. — Share this if you’ve ever felt invisible.
Then, do one thing today:
Look someone in the eye.
Offer a seat.
Say, “I see you.”
The world changes one tired heart at a time.”
Let this story reach more hearts....
Please follow us: Astonishing
By Mary Nelson

09/09/2025

"My name’s Ed. I’m 64. Retired librarian. Lived in the same little house in Ohio for 40 years. After my wife and I split (peacefully, just grew apart), it got quiet. Too quiet. I’d sit in my armchair, watching the clock tick, feeling like I wasn’t needed anymore. Like my hands were empty.

One Tuesday, I saw something that stuck in my heart. At the bus stop near the library, a young girl, maybe 15 sat alone. Head down, shoulders shaking. Not crying hard, just... quiet tears. People walked past her. Some glanced, then looked away fast. Like she was invisible. My chest hurt. I remembered Ruth, my ex-wife, saying, "Ed, sometimes the world forgets to see the quiet hurts."

I didn’t know what to do. I’m not a "fixer" like those folks in the news. But I had an idea. Simple. Stupid, maybe. I went to the library where I used to work. Talked to Mrs. Alvarez, the new manager. "What if," I said, voice shaky, "we set aside one hour a week? No phones allowed. Just… talk. Or listen. To whoever shows up?"

She looked confused. "Like a support group?"
"No," I said. "Just... human time. No rules. No fixes. Just here."
She sighed. "Okay, Ed. Try it. Room 3 on Thursdays, 4 PM."

First week, I sat alone in that empty room. Felt foolish. Like an old man talking to walls. Second week? Still empty. My son called "Dad, maybe it’s not your thing." I almost gave up.

Then, she came back. The girl from the bus stop. Sarah. Eyes red, hands twisting her worn backpack straps. "I saw your sign," she mumbled. "My mom’s sick. Real sick. And I.... I just need someone to hear it."

I didn’t hug her. Didn’t say "It’ll be okay." I just sat. Listened. Really listened. For 55 minutes, she talked about hospital bills, missing school, feeling scared to cry in front of her little brother. I said, "That sounds so heavy. Thank you for telling me." Her shoulders dropped. Like she’d been holding up the sky.

She came back the next week. Brought her friend, Maya, whose dad lost his job. Then Mr. Henderson, the retired mailman, showed up. He hadn’t spoken to anyone since his dog died. "Just.... miss the quiet company," he whispered. We didn’t give advice. We just were there.

People started calling it "The Quiet Hour." Not fancy. Just chairs in a circle. A pot of weak coffee. No one paid. No one fixed anyone. But something shifted. Sarah stopped looking at the floor. Mr. Henderson brought cookies. A young mom, exhausted, cried softly while we held her baby so she could sip her coffee. No judgment. Just space.

Then, last month, the power went out for three days. Ice storm. Cold. No phones working good. That Thursday at 4 PM? The library room was full. Not for heat, though it was warmer inside, but because we knew we’d be there. Sarah brought soup from her mom’s stove. Mr. Henderson shared his thermos of tea. We played cards by candlelight. Laughed. Told dumb stories. A man who’d just lost his job said, "Funny.... I feel less alone in the dark."

That’s when I got it. We weren’t fixing broken things. We were remembering we’re all human. Bruised. Scared. But together, lighter.

Now, the library has "Quiet Hours" every Tuesday and Thursday. Other towns are trying it. Not because I’m special. Just because I finally used my empty hands to hold space, not solutions.

Sarah’s mom is getting better. She gave me a hug last week. "You saved her," her mom said.
I shook my head. "No. She saved me. Showed me my quiet hands still matter."

Here’s what I learned. You don’t need to solve the world’s pain. Just sit in it with someone. That’s how hope starts. One quiet hour at a time."

Let this story reach more hearts....
Please follow us:Astonishing
By Grace Jenkins

09/05/2025

Nobody has asked the question What did choir boy Prescott say that got him spit on ?

09/01/2025

FOUND DOG: She would really like to go home as she has been very scared. Please share and help us get her back to her human. If this is your dog, or you know whose dog she is please call us at 956-772-1171.

08/16/2025

FOUND DOG: Found near 2000 Padre Blvd. Wearing a collar and had a lead on. He is a young pup. If this is your dog or you know anything about this dog please contact us at 956-772-1171.

08/13/2025

Abby's bakery in Los Fresnos this is what happens when you don't give the police a free doughnut. LOL

07/24/2025

UPDATE: Reunited with Owner. Thank you for posting.

FOUND PUPPY: FOUND AT THE SPI LODGE. HELP US GET THIS BABY BACK TO ITS OWNERS. OUR 24-HOUR HOTLINE IS 956-772-1171.

07/15/2025

Twonks

07/15/2025

UPDATE: Human found and is coming to get their pup.

This little one was just brought in by a concerned local who found the pup at Laguna and Retama. The dog is microchipped, the phone number is no longer in service and last known address is in San Antonio. If this is your dog please call us at 956-772-1171 or stop in at 4908 Padre Blvd. Please share this post.

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102 S Garfield
Port Isabel, TX
78578

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