24-Year-Old Delivery Driver Feeds Strangers From His Own Pay
Akash Saroj works grueling hours as a Swiggy delivery agent in Delhi, yet he sets aside part of his modest earnings to feed animals, repair broken rickshaws, and distribute blankets to people sleeping on streets. Despite losing his father last year and facing crushing debt, this 24-year-old refuses collaboration money from betting apps because he won't mislead people for profit. ##
Most of us wait until we have extra money to help others. Akash Saroj doesn't have that luxury, but he helps anyway.
The 24-year-old Swiggy delivery agent in Delhi spends long hours on his bike, racing between restaurants and doorsteps to support his family. Between deliveries, he watches for people who need help.
He's bought meals for hungry rickshaw pullers and paid to fix their broken vehicles. He's distributed blankets to people sleeping on footpaths. He feeds stray animals from money he sets aside each month, even though his own income barely stretches to cover his needs.
"Life as a delivery agent is extremely tough," Akash says. "There is constant pressure, and hardly any time to eat or rest. Calls keep coming in continuously, and work takes priority over everything else because survival depends on it."
His social media posts documenting these acts of kindness have attracted attention online. Companies have reached out with collaboration offers that could ease his financial burden. He turns most of them down.
"Most collaboration offers that come to me are related to gambling or betting apps, which I do not want to promote," he explains. "I do not want to misguide people for money."
Akash learned generosity from his father, a laborer who passed away in 2024. When his father fell suddenly ill while working in Vijayawada, Akash borrowed money to fly there immediately. The hospital provided minimal treatment and refused to transfer him to Delhi.
Desperate, Akash borrowed βΉ2.5 lakh to book a train ambulance equipped with doctors and emergency care. His father died on the journey near Nagpur. Akash is still repaying that debt.
"I kept asking myself if there was no humanity left in the world," he remembers about those difficult days in Vijayawada, where he struggled with the language barrier and had almost no money for food.
That experience could have hardened him. Instead, it deepened his commitment to showing others the kindness he wished more people had shown him.
Sunny's Take
Akash's story reminds us that generosity isn't about having extra. It's about choosing to share what little you have because you understand what it feels like to need help. While carrying the weight of his father's death and significant debt, this young man still looks beyond his own struggles to see who else might be hurting. He proves that the size of your heart matters far more than the size of your bank account.
HOPEFUL CLOSE:
In a world that often measures worth by wealth, Akash measures it by the warmth we give each other.
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Based on reporting by Times of India - Good News
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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