Disabled Vet Hitchhikes To Walmart For Bread, Then A Stranger Sees His Combat Boots And Helps

As Americans, it's important that we recognize those who fought for our freedom.

Many American veterans fall on hard times once they return home and, without any help, it can be impossible for them to get back on their feet again.

This is something that Morgan Wheeler witnessed firsthand during a trip to Walmart in West Virginia.

Wheeler was pulling out of her parking spot when she noticed a disabled veteran struggling to propel his wheelchair forward.

Wheeler threw her car into park and got out to help the grumpy old man. He reluctantly accepted her assistance and the two began talking.

Wheeler learned that he'd hitchhiked to the store for just four items: bread, soup, bananas, and peanut butter.

The young woman put these items in his basket and added some more essentials for good measure before paying for his food and a cab ride home.

He was so grateful that tears came to his eyes.

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Facebook / WLBT 3 On Your Side

Morgan Wheeler is a young woman from West Virginia. While pulling out of her parking spot at Walmart one day, she noticed a man in a wheelchair behind her car. She stopped to let him pass and realized that he was missing part of his right leg and was wearing an old pair of government-issued combat boots. He also seemed to be struggling a great deal. It was then that Wheeler decided to put her car in park, take control of his wheelchair, and start a conversation with the old man, who at first appeared grumpy. As she explains on her Facebook page:

"He interrupted me and said that he only needed help to the door, to which I picked up where I had left off before he interrupted me. I told him about Fayetteville, and my horses, and my nephews (I had parked a good ways away from the doors). And when I reached the doors, I continued to push him and talk. We reached the produce area and I asked him to tell me about himself. He reluctantly looked at me and began telling me that he lived in Sod- Lincoln County, and that he just recently lost his wife."

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Facebook / Morgan Wheeler

"I asked him if he was a veteran, to which he replied that he was – but with pain on his face, so I changed the subject and asked if he had made a shopping list. He handed me a list with only four things on it: peanut butter, soup, bread, and bananas. So we began shopping and I continued to talk… hard to believe – I know. Once we had gotten the items he needed, I asked if he needed the essentials: milk, eggs, butter. He told me that he might not make it home, without them going bad. So I questioned how he got to the store. He told me that he did what he was doing in the parking lot until he got to 119 and then hitch hiked with a trucker to the parking lot."

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Facebook / Walmart Supercenter Sioux Falls

"So I called a taxi for him and grabbed the essentials plus a few other things and put them in the cart. After placing a gallon of milk in his cart he was crying. People were passing by us, looking sideways at him. I knelt down and asked him what was wrong and he replied, that I 'was doing far too much for an old man that I barely knew.' I told him that where I am from, and from the family I was raised in, we help one another, no matter the task and that I had never met a stranger. I also told him that he deserved everything I was doing for him because he fought for my freedom and sacrificed so much. We made it to the check out line and I paid for his groceries, against his request."

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Wikimedia Commons

"When we got outside, we waited for the taxi together. He thanked me over and over again and appeared – to me – to have been in a much better mood than when I found him. When the taxi arrived, I helped him load his groceries and wheelchair into the taxi and asked the driver to take him home and help him into his house with his groceries. I gave him the only cash I had on me – $44, also against his will. I told him thank you for his service before closing the door. Tears formed again and he thanked me one last time and said, 'God bless you'."

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Facebook / Morgan Wheeler

"I returned to my car, and could not help but cry. This is the world we live in today. How many people passed him and would have continued to pass him while he struggled? How many people are willing to give their money to Vanity Fair to read all about Bruce Jenner and not help a veteran pay for his groceries? Today was a truly humbling experience for me, and I consider myself extremely blessed to have the capability of understanding what is truly important in this world. THAT man was a HERO, and far too many will say otherwise. I am sorry that this post was so long, and if you have read it to this point, I hope you are as humbled as I was. God bless the men and women who have fought for our right to view the wrong people as heroes, and thank God for the people who know better."

If you think that Wheeler's good deed is as amazing as I do, please SHARE this story and encourage others to step in for veterans in need!