“Don't regret having a good heart; all good things come back and multiply.”
About this quote
Don't regret having a good heart; all good things come back and multiply. That sentence calls for steady, practical generosity — not naivety. Stop confusing kindness with weakness: give where it matters, set boundaries where it's abused, and demand reciprocity when needed. Keep being kind, but keep rules too; generosity plus accountability produces real, multiplying returns.
When to use it
- When you're about to cut someone off because you're tired of giving, set clear limits and keep helping where it counts — don't regret having a good heart; all good things come back and multiply.
- Use it as a rule at work: offer support, then expect results. Generosity without standards gets wasted.
- After forgiving someone who changed, remind yourself you chose better — watch goodwill return when actions match words.
- Before saying yes to another favor, ask: am I protecting my kindness or enabling harm? Give with boundaries and let the benefits grow.
