Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Police Officer Goes Viral After Photo Shows Her Breastfeeding Malnourished Baby

Police Officer Goes Viral After Photo Shows Her Breastfeeding Malnourished Baby
via Facebook

Social media is praising her kindness.

An Argentinian police officer is being celebrated all across social media after a friend snapped a picture of her breastfeeding a malnourished baby when she noticed hospital staff were too busy to care for him.


Officer Celeste Ayala was on guard duty at Sister Maria Ludovica Children's Hospital in Buenos Aires, Argentina when an overwhelmed mother of six brought in her youngest child.

The baby boy was suffering from malnutrition; the mother had been struggling to provide him the care he needed. According to the officer's friend, hospital staff called the baby "smelly and dirty."

When officer Ayala noticed the overloaded staff was too busy to help she took matters into her own hands. Ayala approached the medical staff and asked if she could hold and breastfeed the boy. The baby who had been screaming and crying calmed down as soon as Ayala began feeding him.

"I noticed that he was hungry, as he was putting his hand into his mouth, so I asked to hug him and breastfeed him. It was a sad moment, it broke my soul seeing him like this, society should be sensitive to the issues affecting children, it cannot keep happening."


As Ayala was breastfeeding the baby her friend Marcos Heredia snapped a photo and posted it to Facebook with this caption;


"I want to make public this great gesture of love you made today for this little baby who you did not know, but for who you did not hesitate to act like a mother. You did not care if he was dirty or smelly, which is what the hospital staff called him. Good job mate."


Hospital staff called the baby "smelly and dirty" but that didn't stop Ayala.


After asking the staff for permission Ayala breastfeed the malnourished child.




Heredia's post quickly went viral, reaching over 100,000 shares, and others were as touched as Heredia by officer Ayala's act of motherly love.

Those sharing the story had words of praise for officer Ayala.







Officer Ayala also volunteers for the local fire department in her spare time. When her fellow firefighters heard about Ayala's act of kindness they were eager to join others in praising her.

"We want to congratulate the voluntary firefighting cadet Celeste Ayala who yesterday in her job as police officer whilst she was on guard duty at the Hospital, breastfed a young child who arrived crying. Actions like these fill us with pride and obligate us to redouble the effort, the work and the solidarity with our community."




In a time when negative stories about law enforcement are far more likely to make headlines, officers like Celeste Ayala deserve recognition for their selfless behavior.

H/T - Indy100, The Sun

More from Trending

Screenshot of Sanae Takaichi and Donald Trump
MS Now

Room Goes Silent After Trump Makes Super Tone-Deaf Joke To Japanese Prime Minister About Pearl Harbor In Shocking Video

The audience in the Oval Office went silent after President Donald Trump made a tone-deaf joke about the attack on Pearl Harbor to Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi following a question about why he kept his attack on Iran a "surprise."

Trump was wrapping up a Q&A with reporters during a bilateral meeting with Takaichi when a Japanese journalist pressed him on why key allies—like Japan—were not notified ahead of the attack on Iran on February 28.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @torimosser's TikTok video
@torimosser/TikTok

Woman Says Stranger On TikTok Helped Save Her Life After Dangerous Medical Misdiagnosis

It is far too common for women's health concerns to be dismissed in the United States, especially when it comes to chronic conditions and pain levels.

Diagnosed with several chronic conditions, 23-year-old TikToker Tori Mosser reflected on years of painful stomach cramps and painful episodes when she finally was able to share that she'd received a diagnosis: Cyclic Vomiting Syndrome (CVS).

Keep ReadingShow less
Images from u/South-Basket-887's post in the 'Mildly Infuriating' subReddit
u/South-Basket-887/Reddit

Landlord Sparks Debate After Warning Tenant About Leaving Small Appliances Plugged In

Many of us have had to live in a rented space at some point in our lives and had to deal with landlords, some of whom can be very imposing and let the power of having tenants go to their heads.

But most of us probably didn't receive special notes from our landlords detailing the little observations they noticed about our lifestyles while doing a surprise inspection.

Keep ReadingShow less
Mark Zuckerberg
Celal Gunes/Anadolu via Getty Images

Meta Is Shutting Down Its VR 'Metaverse' After Spending An Obscene Amount Of Money Building It—And People Are Roasting Mark Zuckerberg Hard

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg was roasted online after Meta announced they'll be shutting down Horizon Worlds, part of their virtual reality "Metaverse," this summer after spending close to $80 billion on the project.

The news comes five years after Zuckerberg declared the metaverse to be the future of Facebook, even renaming the company Meta to reflect that vision. In recent months, Meta cut roughly 10% of the workforce in its "metaverse" division and signaled a shift away from virtual reality for its flagship platform, Horizon Worlds, where users interact through avatars.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots of Rand Paul and Markwayne Mullin
C-SPAN3

Video Of GOP Senator Picking A Fight With A Witness Replayed During Contentious Senate Confirmation Hearing

Kentucky Republican Senator Rand Paul confronted his GOP colleague, Oklahoma's Markwayne Mullin, President Donald Trump's pick for Secretary of Homeland Security, over his "anger issues," even presenting video evidence.

Earlier this month, Trump announced he will replace Kristi Noem as Homeland Security Secretary with Mullin. Trump said Noem will instead take on the role of Special Envoy to the Shield of the Americas, a newly created organization intended to foster a right-wing alliance across South America.

Keep ReadingShow less